okay...for a factory 914 /4, the front calipers (piston area wise) are 1.61 larger than the rear....(42mm and 33mm)
for early 911's (up to '84), the fronts are 1.6 larger
from '84 to '89, the fronts are only 1.3 times larger than the rears....then the ratios vary from 1.4 to 1.7 until the arrival of the 1st Twin-turbo, that car has calipers that have piston areas 2X the size of the rears !!!!!
I'm just wondering what combo people have successfully ran.....it's interesting to note that the standard Boxster front calipers if bolted to the front of a 911, the Boxster piston area is only 1.05 larger than the standard 911 fronts.....seems like a darn near equal swap, except for the bigger pads you get with the Boxster calipers
um...stock? I'm gonna wait till my rears rust and reak off
QUOTE (Mueller @ Feb 3 2005, 05:27 PM) |
I'm just wondering what combo people have successfully ran |
944 turbo front
carrera rears
QUOTE (SirAndy @ Feb 3 2005, 06:58 PM) | ||
'84/'85 carrera on all 4 corners ... the fronts in the front and the rears in the rear ... Andy |
QUOTE (Mueller @ Feb 3 2005, 06:04 PM) |
I don't know if the rear calipers would ever work even with an adjustable prop. valve? |
S-Caliper
M-Caliper
T-Fitting
I just went off the hp rating the factory had with the 76 930 (240) and installed that system. I'm planning on my 2.5 S engine to be close to that. (220-240 range)
Front - 4 piston Brembo monoblocks
Rear - Stock with 914/6 rotors
Replaced the prop valve with a 'T'
I have the second option, but I can't tell you how it works because my car is still a pile of parts. I will be using it with a 19mm master cylinder and a tee in place of the prop valve.
I have 964 front calipers clamping cross-drilled and slotted rotors in the front, stock calipers in the rear, a 19mm master cylinder, and the brake line "T" replacing the proportioning valve. Balance and feel are excellent with no fade on open track day events.
Friction is a function of normal force, not of surface area.... so it is just the piston size that matters, not the pad area. ( http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/friction.htm )
I would be a little careful about using the 911 ratios as too much of a data point since their weight distibution is probably a little different (wrong) compared to the 914. The MR2, Elise, Europa, Esprit, X1/9, Ferarri 360 (engine is a little heavy here) might be more interesting though.....
It seems like it is possible to correcly balance everything up to and including A calipers on the front with the stock 914 rears - which is what I am doing. If I were you - I'd probably just go to M calipers....
Don't forget - the other way to increase braking is to reduce weight..... Perhaps some fibreglass decklids would help :-)
Mueller: Sorry for abrubtly ending the phone call - I'll call you back today sometime... I had to do a demo for the board.
'S' calipers front, widened 914.6 calipers rear.
Front= M (911)
Rear=stock (redrilled/5lug)
Prop. valve replaced witha "T"
QUOTE (fiid @ Feb 16 2005, 10:25 AM) |
Friction is a function of normal force, not of surface area.... so it is just the piston size that matters, not the pad area. |
I think you hit the nail on the head.
Pad area would effect wear rate, and I bet it has some thermal effects too - like felxing you mentioned.
If you assume that the braking force originates (on average) from the center of the pad, then a bigger pad and larger radius rotor whould also move the braking force further out, giving it a greater mechanical advantage (of course - larger tire radius would lose you this battle from the other end)....
felxing is the combination of felching and flexing, which happens when you get small animals caught in your brakes.
QUOTE (Mueller @ Feb 3 2005, 06:27 PM) |
okay...for a factory 914 /4, the front calipers (piston area wise) are 1.61 larger than the rear....(42mm and 33mm) |
Boxster Monoblocks up front/Vented rotors
Carrera M (Wide) Rear/Vented rotors
T in place of rear slave cylinder
Monoblocks have light weight with minimal flex. Think of the S calipers but stronger. No prop valve (although i may add one just in case). This of course for 5 lug, but they fit under the 15's.
QUOTE (fiid @ Feb 16 2005, 11:13 AM) |
I think you hit the nail on the head. Pad area would effect wear rate, and I bet it has some thermal effects too - like felxing you mentioned. If you assume that the braking force originates (on average) from the center of the pad, then a bigger pad and larger radius rotor whould also move the braking force further out, giving it a greater mechanical advantage (of course - larger tire radius would lose you this battle from the other end).... |
QUOTE (anthony @ Feb 16 2005, 01:17 PM) |
Most people, when they add 911 front brakes, remove the proportioning valve to make the rear brakes work more. |
QUOTE |
Too bad our bellhousings are so darn small. |
QUOTE (bondo @ Feb 16 2005, 10:44 AM) | ||
Now that I think about it, pad area and heat MUST be very related. If friction is the same for a smaller pad (or nearly the same), the amount of heat energy must also be the same, because dynamic friction is simply the conversion of mechanical energy to heat. So that same amount of heat would be concentrated on a smaller pad area and overheating it sooner. I guess the same thing would apply to clutches. Too bad our bellhousings are so darn small. |
QUOTE (fiid @ Feb 16 2005, 11:06 AM) | ||||
what you said. |
QUOTE (fiid @ Feb 16 2005, 09:25 AM) |
Friction is a function of normal force, not of surface area.... so it is just the piston size that matters, not the pad area. ( http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/friction.htm ) |
QUOTE (Andy @ Feb 16 2005, 12:11 PM) | ||
Then I better hold off on the wide slicks and keep my 55 series for taking the 914 to the track! Just kidding, friction is independant of surface area using the "standard model" which is a simplified system that is pretty far from covering all examples, it does work for most, but for more extreme examples, like tires, it is no longer accurate. This is kind of a pet peeve of mine as most teachers simply teach the standard model and state that it's just counter-intutive and leave it at that, often not even knowing that they're misleading people. I'm not saying that in case of brake pads the standard model would give inaccurate data. In most cases friction is independant of surface area. Can you tell I work in higher education? http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/frict3.html |
thanks! I was wondering about the tire case.
QUOTE (fiid @ Feb 16 2005, 01:23 PM) |
thanks! I was wondering about the tire case. |
speaking of pads....from what I have read, if you have 2 different calipers, 1 with 2 pads and the other caliper has 4 smaller pads which equal the sq. inch surface area of the 2 pad caliper, the 4 pad caliper will be more effiecient..it is due to the 4 pad caliper having more "leading edges"
I kinda want to put 944 turbo calipers on, then 914 fronts on the back... (or something like that...) but I really want to be able to have a hand brake...
944 turbo's put the same on the front as they did on the back, and those things stop like a mother!!! (especially with some sticky street tires... aka my street race 205's...)
something to keep in mind...
QUOTE (Andyrew @ Feb 16 2005, 04:35 PM) |
I kinda want to put 944 turbo calipers on, then 914 fronts on the back... (or something like that...) but I really want to be able to have a hand brake... 944 turbo's put the same on the front as they did on the back, and those things stop like a mother!!! (especially with some sticky street tires... aka my street race 205's...) something to keep in mind... |
are you sure the calipers are the same? I know they use the same size pads, but the pistons might be smaller in the rear.....
QUOTE (Mueller @ Feb 16 2005, 03:32 PM) |
speaking of pads....from what I have read, if you have 2 different calipers, 1 with 2 pads and the other caliper has 4 smaller pads which equal the sq. inch surface area of the 2 pad caliper, the 4 pad caliper will be more effiecient..it is due to the 4 pad caliper having more "leading edges" |
Dad doesnt think theres any difference in the front or the rear..
I might look into that rear parking brake system...
hmm..
QUOTE (lapuwali @ Feb 16 2005, 04:59 PM) | ||
Never heard of that. Can't think of any reason for improved "efficiency" (whatever that's supposed to mean) with more than one pad per side. I've seen such arrangements, and the best story I heard was it allows you to compensate for the unequal wear between the leading and trailing edges of one large pad by simply replacing one of N smaller pads, all of which are the same. On some early 6 or even 8 piston calipers, I've seen setups with a small round pad per piston. Another way I've seen to attempt to solve this is to stagger the size of the pistons so the leading edge pistons are smaller, and thus exert less force than the trailing edge pistons. I've seen two-piston slider type (pistons on the same side with a slider "claw" on the other), four-piston, and six-piston calipers made this way. One saw this a lot on bikes a few years ago, and may still today for all I know. Still one pad per side, but presumably it didn't taper so much, and wore more evenly. Perhaps it's "cost" efficiency? Replace only the rapidly wearing leading edge pads, not the whole pair of (presumably tapered) pads? |
QUOTE (lapuwali @ Feb 16 2005, 03:05 PM) | ||
I've never thought of a good tire analogy. Tires somewhat interlock with the surface, and they seem to employ some qualities of actual adhesives. I've had fresh physics majors insist no one can ever exceed 1.0G in a turn because that would mean the coefficient of friction would have to be higher than 1.0, which is "impossible". You can show them all the data in the world showing that modern slicks top out at about 1.3G on a good surface, and they won't believe it. Of course, bees can't fly, either... |
Mike,
I am using a 993 Twin Turbo front on my Teeners front
Attached image(s)
QUOTE (xitspd @ Feb 16 2005, 08:04 PM) |
Mike, I am using a 993 Twin Turbo front on my Teeners front |
QUOTE (xitspd @ Feb 16 2005, 09:04 PM) |
Mike, I am using a 993 Twin Turbo front on my Teeners front |
Bill ran this on his track car, now Neo914...
911T Front Struts / Vented Discs / Calipers with Porterfield R4 brake pads
23mm Front Torsion Bars
Front Brake Ducting
944S Rear Vented Discs / Calipers with Porterfield R4 brake pads
19mm Master Cylinder
Cockpit Adjustable Brake Bias Valve
my upgraded car has 951 calipers front boxster calipers in the rear with (I think I remember) Carrera front rotors and SC rears.
here's the scoop on the 951 calipers front vs rear:
The physical size of the caliper is the same and they use the same pad.
They are both 4 piston calipers, but the rears have slightly smaller pistons.
It took a while to figure it out.
the 951 fronts are great....and I think the rears would be fine on a 914...on the front
Front: Wilwood billet superlites w 11.75x1.25 discs
Rear : Carrera calipers drilled slotted discs
Adjustable bias valve
Hawk blue pads
Mine came with the BMWs on the front, stock rears, and a 19mm master.
I'll do a brake upgrade next year, but when I go to re-bleed the brakes in a few weeks, should I keep the prop-valve, or can I replace it with a T-valve? Any thoughs on settings?
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