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Upgrading brakes

come on guys i need your help in deciding slotted vs drilled......who's had them before? that give good or bad points

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Old 11-25-2009, 06:08 AM   #16 (permalink)
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come on guys i need your help in deciding slotted vs drilled......who's had them before? that give good or bad points
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Old 11-25-2009, 09:21 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by MYZ34 View Post
come on guys i need your help in deciding slotted vs drilled......who's had them before? that give good or bad points
Based on the quality and durability of the Brembo discs you can pretty much go either way. (I know, this doesn't answer your question at all...keep reading)

We generally recommend slotted discs for anyone who will be tracking their car. The slots on the disc will refresh the pad surface for better initial bite, and will also allow the disc to maintain more consistent operating temperatures which increase disc life during consistent lapping.

A drilled disc will be about an additional 1/2 pound lighter, and will offer a slight advantage towards cooling. This is a major benefit on the street, but can increase the intensity of the heat cycles during tracking.

You really need to decide where you want the most benefit.

With a drilled disc at the track you will want to limit your pad options and not run anything with to great of a coefficient of friction. With a slotted disc on the street you will wear through pads a bit sooner (maybe 10% less life, nothing too horrible) and create more brake dust for your wheels.

If your goal one day is to be able to run "R" compound tires, and consistently focus on reducing your lap times and be competitive with other cars in your run group then you'll want to choose slotted discs. If you will be doing HPDE's to become more comfortable with your cars capabilities, have fun, and drive to and from the track with the same vehicle setup, drilled rotors and a mid grade pad will be the perfect option. I can work with you on pad compounds to suit the brake kit you decide to go with, and match your intended driving style and use.
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I work for Race Technologies, Brembo's sole distributor and representative in the US. I am here as an enthusiast, the opinions shared here are solely mine, & not necessarily shared by that of Race Technologies or Brembo.
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Old 11-25-2009, 10:09 AM   #18 (permalink)
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mate, thanks for your help, yeah the car will be my daily year round with maybe 3 track days per year... so i was thinking the same way as in going drilled rotors. that way in a couple of years etc if i really want to up track time i can just switch to some slotted's





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Originally Posted by Gary_C View Post
Based on the quality and durability of the Brembo discs you can pretty much go either way. (I know, this doesn't answer your question at all...keep reading)

We generally recommend slotted discs for anyone who will be tracking their car. The slots on the disc will refresh the pad surface for better initial bite, and will also allow the disc to maintain more consistent operating temperatures which increase disc life during consistent lapping.

A drilled disc will be about an additional 1/2 pound lighter, and will offer a slight advantage towards cooling. This is a major benefit on the street, but can increase the intensity of the heat cycles during tracking.

You really need to decide where you want the most benefit.

With a drilled disc at the track you will want to limit your pad options and not run anything with to great of a coefficient of friction. With a slotted disc on the street you will wear through pads a bit sooner (maybe 10% less life, nothing too horrible) and create more brake dust for your wheels.

If your goal one day is to be able to run "R" compound tires, and consistently focus on reducing your lap times and be competitive with other cars in your run group then you'll want to choose slotted discs. If you will be doing HPDE's to become more comfortable with your cars capabilities, have fun, and drive to and from the track with the same vehicle setup, drilled rotors and a mid grade pad will be the perfect option. I can work with you on pad compounds to suit the brake kit you decide to go with, and match your intended driving style and use.
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Old 11-25-2009, 10:41 AM   #19 (permalink)
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mate, thanks for your help, yeah the car will be my daily year round with maybe 3 track days per year... so i was thinking the same way as in going drilled rotors. that way in a couple of years etc if i really want to up track time i can just switch to some slotted's
Drilling rotors on the street are for the posers.
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Old 11-25-2009, 08:27 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Drilling rotors on the street are for the posers.
its a little bit different when the cross drilled rotors are brembos, as they are known for not cracking anywhere near what other inferior brands do
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Old 11-26-2009, 10:13 AM   #21 (permalink)
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its a little bit different when the cross drilled rotors are brembos, as they are known for not cracking anywhere near what other inferior brands do
Yes they will hold up better than the cheap brands no doubt. I don't like them on the street as they tend to be noisy, and on the track they don't last as long as their slotted counterparts. But each to their own, I won't judge you
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