ddd4114
Member
Just when I thought I had my brake situation figured out...
For the whole year so far, I have been doing track events using Hawk DTC-60 pads on all four corners, 3" front brake ducts, and OEM non-Brembo calipers and rotors. My pad wear has been reasonable, so I didn't have any concerns. The car is a 2011 Mustang GT with Nitto NT05 tires and basically no other performance upgrades. My peak braking is ~1.1g, and the car weighs ~3770 lb with me in it.
This past weekend, I ran a weekend lapping event at Gingerman Raceway. I didn't think I had any issues the first day until I inspected the car later that night. The left brake pads were almost completely gone, and the right pads only had about 30% material remaining on them. I had arrived at the track with about 60% front and rear pad life remaining. The next morning, I replaced the pads and found that I had also destroyed the boots on my front-left caliper, and I had cracked my rear-left rotor. I had luckily brought replacements for both, so I was able to get the car back on track within an hour or two. The car lasted the rest of the day with only a little fade on the braking zone into turn 5. However, I heard a metal grinding/squealing noise at low speeds coming from one of my wheels as I drove home that evening.
Last night, I took my brakes apart to inspect everything, and I found the following:
Aside from the obvious, I had the following failures:
- Both of the front calipers were toast, including the new one I installed at the track. When I tried to push the pistons back into their bores, they made a crunching noise and then shattered like chalk. No, I'm not exaggerating.
- The slide pin boots were all melted and distorted from the heat.
- All front brake pads were basically converted into paperweights. I guess you could say the one pictured has negative material remaining?
- Many of the rotor surfaces are now noticeably concave. The front rotors have minor cracking, but it's not that bad. I think the only reason they didn't crack was because I installed new ones the previous weekend at Mid-Ohio after cracking both of the previous rotors...
The left-rear brake pads had about 10% material remaining, but the right-rear pads weren't bad. Both rear calipers looked mostly ok.
After seeing the carnage, I have to ask myself: what the hell am I doing wrong?
I definitely need to look into decent backing plates for the pads to retard heat transfer to the calipers. I will also start using DTC-70 pads on the front.
Another concern I have is that I always put the car in sport mode during track events. I'm pretty sure I'll be able to handle the car just fine with everything off, but it's nice to have a backup in case something goes really wrong. Is it possible that, even in sport mode, the stability control is intervening much more than I can detect and is therefore heating the pads? Since the vast majority of the damage occurred on the front brakes, I wouldn't think the effect would be significant. It seems more likely to me that the stock braking system is simply not up to the task.
Since I have to replace the front calipers, rotors, mounting brackets, and pads, I think now is a good time to consider upgrading. American Muscle has a GT500 Brembo conversion kit for ~$1200, which is pretty tempting. However, there is no guarantee that I won't toast these parts too, and they're much more expensive to replace. I'm not sure which route would be easier on the wallet in the long run.
What do you guys think? Any feedback from the track rats on here would be really appreciated. I can post a video of my feeble driving attempts tomorrow evening if that would help.
Thanks,
Dan
For the whole year so far, I have been doing track events using Hawk DTC-60 pads on all four corners, 3" front brake ducts, and OEM non-Brembo calipers and rotors. My pad wear has been reasonable, so I didn't have any concerns. The car is a 2011 Mustang GT with Nitto NT05 tires and basically no other performance upgrades. My peak braking is ~1.1g, and the car weighs ~3770 lb with me in it.
This past weekend, I ran a weekend lapping event at Gingerman Raceway. I didn't think I had any issues the first day until I inspected the car later that night. The left brake pads were almost completely gone, and the right pads only had about 30% material remaining on them. I had arrived at the track with about 60% front and rear pad life remaining. The next morning, I replaced the pads and found that I had also destroyed the boots on my front-left caliper, and I had cracked my rear-left rotor. I had luckily brought replacements for both, so I was able to get the car back on track within an hour or two. The car lasted the rest of the day with only a little fade on the braking zone into turn 5. However, I heard a metal grinding/squealing noise at low speeds coming from one of my wheels as I drove home that evening.
Last night, I took my brakes apart to inspect everything, and I found the following:
Aside from the obvious, I had the following failures:
- Both of the front calipers were toast, including the new one I installed at the track. When I tried to push the pistons back into their bores, they made a crunching noise and then shattered like chalk. No, I'm not exaggerating.
- The slide pin boots were all melted and distorted from the heat.
- All front brake pads were basically converted into paperweights. I guess you could say the one pictured has negative material remaining?
- Many of the rotor surfaces are now noticeably concave. The front rotors have minor cracking, but it's not that bad. I think the only reason they didn't crack was because I installed new ones the previous weekend at Mid-Ohio after cracking both of the previous rotors...
The left-rear brake pads had about 10% material remaining, but the right-rear pads weren't bad. Both rear calipers looked mostly ok.
After seeing the carnage, I have to ask myself: what the hell am I doing wrong?
I definitely need to look into decent backing plates for the pads to retard heat transfer to the calipers. I will also start using DTC-70 pads on the front.
Another concern I have is that I always put the car in sport mode during track events. I'm pretty sure I'll be able to handle the car just fine with everything off, but it's nice to have a backup in case something goes really wrong. Is it possible that, even in sport mode, the stability control is intervening much more than I can detect and is therefore heating the pads? Since the vast majority of the damage occurred on the front brakes, I wouldn't think the effect would be significant. It seems more likely to me that the stock braking system is simply not up to the task.
Since I have to replace the front calipers, rotors, mounting brackets, and pads, I think now is a good time to consider upgrading. American Muscle has a GT500 Brembo conversion kit for ~$1200, which is pretty tempting. However, there is no guarantee that I won't toast these parts too, and they're much more expensive to replace. I'm not sure which route would be easier on the wallet in the long run.
What do you guys think? Any feedback from the track rats on here would be really appreciated. I can post a video of my feeble driving attempts tomorrow evening if that would help.
Thanks,
Dan
