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Author: Subject: Brakes (again!)
NS Dev

posted on 25/2/05 at 09:10 AM Reply With Quote
Brakes (again!)

Just to start another thread on this, I am also thinking about some lighter brakes than my Cortina M16's (which need full recon anyway) and I am just wondering about piston areas.

I see HiSpec Motorsport do a direct M16 fitting two piston ultralight caliper. This has pistons around 4mm(I think) smaller than the std M16 caliper.

Would this have enough braking capacity or would it be marginal. The car will be vauxhall XE engined, but have no screen, heater or any other luxuries.

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MikeR

posted on 25/2/05 at 09:29 AM Reply With Quote
Have a word with Dick Axtel.......

he's a good man when it comes to brakes. If i remember correctly years ago he ran the m16s + 8" rear drums on standard chassis numbers through the girling computer and came up with almost perfect brake balance for road use.

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ned

posted on 25/2/05 at 09:44 AM Reply With Quote
I'm quite confused by all the m16 aloloy replacement's out there, so would be interested to see what you go for. There's the hispec, wilwood, bremsport, racedla, outlaw and I believ an AP caliper that fit, but which one is best/lightest/has dust seals etc etc.

My car is probably similar spec to your, I'm hoping for around 600 and maybe a bit kg's..

Ned.





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Dick Axtell

posted on 25/2/05 at 10:50 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by MikeR
Have a word with Dick Axtel.......
he's a good man when it comes to brakes.

So is JAG - and he's still at work, with access to all the info!

However, re: M16 calipers :-
Piston dia. = 54mm, area = 2290mm.sq.
For 50mm piston, area = 1963mm.sq.
If you use a twin-pot with 2 x 50mm pistons, you then get 2 x 1963mm.sq. hydraulic area.
So is that figure of 50mm correct for the alternative caliper?





Work-in-Progress: Changed to Zetec + T9. Still trying!!

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Dick Axtell

posted on 25/2/05 at 10:51 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by MikeR
Have a word with Dick Axtel.......
he's a good man when it comes to brakes.

So is JAG - and he's still at work, with access to all the info! (Although he's SVA'ing today!)

However, re: M16 calipers :-
Piston dia. = 54mm, area = 2290mm.sq.
For 50mm piston, area = 1963mm.sq.
If you use a twin-pot with 2 x 50mm pistons, you then get 2 x 1963mm.sq. hydraulic area.
So is that figure of 50mm correct for the alternative caliper?

[Edited on 25/2/05 by Dick Axtell]





Work-in-Progress: Changed to Zetec + T9. Still trying!!

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Dick Axtell

posted on 25/2/05 at 10:56 AM Reply With Quote
Brake Balance!!

quote:
Originally posted by MikeR
...he ran the m16s + 8" rear drums on standard chassis numbers through the girling computer and came up with almost perfect brake balance for road use.


Mike, substitute the word "acceptable" for "perfect", and you get a more accurate description.
Lol





Work-in-Progress: Changed to Zetec + T9. Still trying!!

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NS Dev

posted on 25/2/05 at 11:00 AM Reply With Quote
Just had a proper look on Hispec's site, and the pistons on the "Ultralite 2, M16 mount" caliper are 48mm.

So any ideas if this will be enough or not.

Ned, yep, there are a lot available. I will be ringing AP up as a price they gave me at the autosport show was cheaper than Wilwood! I think they got it wrong as it was only verbal, but undoubtedly AP are the best solution, if not the cheapest!

Dust seals are a good idea, but if I can use 2 piston ultralites then I am less bothered. If I went 4 pot then I think I would definitely go for dust sealed ones.

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ned

posted on 25/2/05 at 11:07 AM Reply With Quote
I'm wanting 4 pots eventually, and i have this stupid whim about using vented capri discs which I know are much heavier. Thing is i'd quite fancy the centre of the disc machined out and replaced with a nice alloy bell to save some of the extra weight. Any ideas on getting that done?

I believe the bremsport, racedla and outlaw calipers are also one in the same?

The new wilwoods have dust seals I believe but not sure on any of the above aforementioned..

Ned.





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MikeR

posted on 25/2/05 at 11:10 AM Reply With Quote
Nat, don't forget when you've decided what you want to have a word with me and i'll maybe tag along and buy the same........

perhaps a bulk buy might make the prices more 'reasonable'.

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NS Dev

posted on 25/2/05 at 11:56 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by ned
I'm wanting 4 pots eventually, and i have this stupid whim about using vented capri discs which I know are much heavier. Thing is i'd quite fancy the centre of the disc machined out and replaced with a nice alloy bell to save some of the extra weight. Any ideas on getting that done?

I believe the bremsport, racedla and outlaw calipers are also one in the same?

The new wilwoods have dust seals I believe but not sure on any of the above aforementioned..

Ned.


I am also thinking about using the capri vented discs, they are not that much heavier than the cortina ones really. I would still use 2 piston calipers if ones are available with a suitable piston/pad area. 4 pots are only needed if pad area needs to be bigger than that which can be accomodated behind a single piston.

If you weigh all the cortina hub "bits" the calipers really are the cripplingly heavy items!!

I'll get the info from AP in the next week or so and post the prices on here. The downside is they certainly don't do an M16 mount caliper, so mounting brackets need machining for a start, which bumps the cost up.

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Bob C

posted on 25/2/05 at 02:02 PM Reply With Quote
In my experience the AP products are good but expensive and comparatively heavy, wilwood (fenced by rallydesign) generally lighter and cheaper. I bought 4 of the dynalite single calipers for £50 each and they only weigh 1.4lbs - incredibly light.
Bob C
PS am gonna use a transmission handbrake

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MikeR

posted on 25/2/05 at 02:05 PM Reply With Quote
just looking at those this very moment! the bore is 44.5mm
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NS Dev

posted on 25/2/05 at 02:46 PM Reply With Quote
For various (personal experience) reasons I'm not keen on Wilwood, but I know plenty use them to good effect.

The ultralite 2 pot jobbies from HiSpec are direct replacements for M16 calipers (so no brackets etc) and are £110 each.

They weigh 925g each, have 48mm dia pistons and a pad area of 76mm x 65mm.

is this a big enough piston/pad to stop a 500-600kg locost reliably and consistently? (note, this is for FRONT brakes!)

[Edited on 25/2/05 by NS Dev]

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chriscook

posted on 25/2/05 at 03:18 PM Reply With Quote
Why not the ultralite 4 calipers with M16 lugs? They are only £10 more than the 2 pots. I've got Ultralite 4's on my Phoenix with same engine as you and should be fine - The kit car workshop put them on their XE Fury and they apparantly work well. I think they'll do spacers for whaterver thickness disc you want?

I would advise buying through Martin Bell at the Kit Car Workshop if going for Hi-Specs! (no connection just happy customer and you get KCW not Hi-Spec customer service)

Chris

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ned

posted on 25/2/05 at 04:24 PM Reply With Quote
ultralite 's look good for me, any idea about probs with not having dust seals for road use? do you just need to clean them every single outing, will the pistons get gunked up?

for the price/weight they seem very good. with a vented disc with ally bell they'd be ideal..

Ned.





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Mr G

posted on 25/2/05 at 05:34 PM Reply With Quote
Just as reference I thought raldes.co.uk were usually cheaper for wilwood's than hi-spec?

Hav'nt looked at the prices lately though.

Edit: Just seen Bob C's comment at the top


Cheers

G

[Edited on 25/2/05 by Mr G]






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Northy

posted on 25/2/05 at 06:27 PM Reply With Quote
I'm also interested in peoples opinions on this one as I'd like to upgrade too





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ned

posted on 10/3/05 at 11:22 AM Reply With Quote
Have done some more research on this, please see my findings below. NS Dev, any news on AP kit/prices/spec?

Ned. Rescued attachment brakes.gif
Rescued attachment brakes.gif






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NS Dev

posted on 10/3/05 at 11:30 AM Reply With Quote
Not yet Ned, been too busy at home to get time to call them outside of work!

Just remembered the other reasons that I don't like the idea of the Wilwoods, the need for separate mounting brackets and the fact that they need odd pads, wheres the HiSpec ones use common production car pads.

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ady8077

posted on 10/3/05 at 05:45 PM Reply With Quote
Hi

Darren at GTS is also doing 4 pot kits, see http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=21940

Adrian

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MikeR

posted on 10/3/05 at 05:50 PM Reply With Quote
eeek, unless i've miss understood darren is doing them for a lot more than ned is quoting.
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ady8077

posted on 10/3/05 at 06:12 PM Reply With Quote
I think Darrens are a complete kit, 2 callipers 2 disks and a set of pads

Adrian

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andkilde

posted on 10/3/05 at 06:58 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by ned
ultralite 's look good for me, any idea about probs with not having dust seals for road use? do you just need to clean them every single outing, will the pistons get gunked up?

for the price/weight they seem very good. with a vented disc with ally bell they'd be ideal..

Ned.



Ned, I don't think the lack of dust seals would become an everyday maintenance item.

If memory serves the AP calipers on my Mini didn't come with dust seals from the factory and they don't seem to have and issues (touch wood).

I think you'd probably be fine giving them a blast of water each time you wash the car.

Cheers, Ted

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gazza285

posted on 10/3/05 at 10:37 PM Reply With Quote
No dust seals on the calipers on my van either, done 230,000 so far without problems.




Wilwoods have stainless pistons as well, clean them when you change pads.

[Edited on 10/3/05 by gazza285]

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NS Dev

posted on 11/3/05 at 08:46 AM Reply With Quote
As I mentioned earlier, though the Wilwoods look good, (and I could be wrong on this next bit but I don't think so) they are designed and made in the USA, and therefore don't use easily available UK car pads. Therefore you have to buy them at some expense well in advance.

The advantage of the Hi-Spec calipers is that they are UK designed and made to take pads that you can buy at Halfords (hope you don't have to though!) shoudl the need arise. The downside (I am led to believe) is that dealing with HiSpec can be a bit of a lottery.........any personal experiences with them?

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