SoundGuyDave
This Space For Rent
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Posts
- 1,978
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If you DO go there, drop a line to Capaldi Racing, they have them in stock, with the ARP studs pressed in, for less than the dealer wants for a bare hub.
Stock sized apr replacement studs or the 3/8" studs?
Stock studs are 1/2-20. Why would you go 3/8?
Do you mean 5/8?
Stock diameter, but quite a bit longer! Yes, 1/2-20.
Does it do this at all temperatures (street, out lap, cooldown..), or only once things have warmed up after a couple laps?
Length means an easy start to the nut, the little tip is perfectly sized to help prevent cross-threading, the studs are diamond-hard, so they don't wear like the stock studs...
All in all, a far superior fastener. If you get hubs from the dealer, you'll have to press out the stockers and press them into the new hubs. At that point, why not upgrade to something better? FYI, raw parts cost on the ARP studs is right at $100 per axle.
Honestly, based on the high-speed, won't go away comment, it still sounds like uneven pad deposits. I also use DTC-60 with stock rotors, and don't get the shimmy, AND I don't bed them "properly." I just go out for a session, and pound on the brakes until I get the first hint of fade, then park the car.
Are you keeping your race and street sets of pads and rotors segregated, or are you just changing pads for the track? Not all compounds are compatible with each other, so for a dual-purpose car, I would keep a "street set" and a "race set."
Also, what did you think of the ST43 pads? How did they compare to the DTC-60's in terms of initial bite, linearity through the braking zone, release and wear?
is the hub considered this whole assembly?
Ignore the big lump of cast iron, though, that's the knuckle. The hubs are the part starting with the ABS cog-wheel, and running outboard from there.