OG Racing: PFC race pads.
#21
Supporting Vendor
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Lake Forest, CA
Posts: 7,951
Total Cats: 1,004
Haha... thanks for that input.
The Miata will not be a daily, I misspoke there. But it WILL be street driven, on weekends, and probably to work once in a while. It sounds like you've answered my question though -- basic street driving is still fine, but it's not a daily pad, which makes sense.
Thanks for the help. I'm obviously not very familiar with PFC (and in the early stages of learning about pads in general) so this is very helpful for me.
The Miata will not be a daily, I misspoke there. But it WILL be street driven, on weekends, and probably to work once in a while. It sounds like you've answered my question though -- basic street driving is still fine, but it's not a daily pad, which makes sense.
Thanks for the help. I'm obviously not very familiar with PFC (and in the early stages of learning about pads in general) so this is very helpful for me.
#23
the dust rusts. the aluminum itself won't rust. once it gets rust it's a real pita to remove. elbow geese won't cut it. the rust embeds itself into the aluminum, paint, power coat, ect.. .
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#24
Haha... thanks for that input.
The Miata will not be a daily, I misspoke there. But it WILL be street driven, on weekends, and probably to work once in a while. It sounds like you've answered my question though -- basic street driving is still fine, but it's not a daily pad, which makes sense.
Thanks for the help. I'm obviously not very familiar with PFC (and in the early stages of learning about pads in general) so this is very helpful for me.
The Miata will not be a daily, I misspoke there. But it WILL be street driven, on weekends, and probably to work once in a while. It sounds like you've answered my question though -- basic street driving is still fine, but it's not a daily pad, which makes sense.
Thanks for the help. I'm obviously not very familiar with PFC (and in the early stages of learning about pads in general) so this is very helpful for me.
try to get a collection going.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#26
they are not as bad as other manufactures. i say they squeak so if they do make noise once in a while customers aren't upset. It a good habit to under promise and over deliver.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#30
our seat selections is best at the sterling location. the inventory at NJ is constantly changing. NJ location will keep helmets and suits for you to try out.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#31
The 2015 Porsche cup car brake kit.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#32
Supporting Vendor
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Lake Forest, CA
Posts: 7,951
Total Cats: 1,004
Bumping this with a question, I'm ordering pads this week.
Planning on PFC 97 on the front (949 11.75 BBK), but what do I run on the rear? I've got sport rear brakes. I don't see a fitment listed above for the sport rears.
Thanks in advance!
Planning on PFC 97 on the front (949 11.75 BBK), but what do I run on the rear? I've got sport rear brakes. I don't see a fitment listed above for the sport rears.
Thanks in advance!
#33
SADFab Destructive Testing Engineer
iTrader: (5)
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: Beaverton, USA
Posts: 18,642
Total Cats: 1,866
Something I just found out is you can run a non sports brake caliper on a sports brake bracket. And its what's recommended in conjunction with the BBK if you don't have big aero.
#34
there is nothing available (padgid or PFC) for sport calipers. many people have been modifying 1.8l rear pads to fit.
An on topic question what tires are you using? i'm a little worried about the 97 compound selection.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#36
for an extreme example, when the DP teams they still had iron rotors. carbon carbon came in after the grand-am ALMS merger. a DP car around Daytona going into turn 1 (200mph- 70mph) had so much down-force that the drivers could stab the brakes with both feet and they couldn't lock the tire. As the car got closer to the apex the downforce would decrease, the tires coefficient of friction would decrease, the driver has to decrease his pedal force to stop the tires from locking up. The trick was balancing out a system that could slow the car fast enough into turn 1 ( a big passing zone) but still have enough usable friction to have good modulation in the slower turns. The difference between our cars and a DP is DP’s have the advantage of cash. That cash pays for wind tunnel testing. We don’t have that cash to achieve the perfect aero balance On our Miata’s the trend is big wings. so our aero balance is going to be heavy in the rear. if you’re on a very fast track that has a majority 60+ mph braking zones I could start recommending higher Tq pad in the rear to take advantage of the down-force. the down side of a set up like this. is when the aero stops being effective (under 60 mph) your braking balance is going to shift to the rear. so to recommend a brake set up I would need to see how your aero is balanced, what track your running, and what you’re looking for as far as balance.
__________________
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
OG Racing
Your Source For Motorsports Safety Equipment
WWW.OGRACING.COM
800.934.9112
703.430.3303
info@ogracing.com
#38
Supporting Vendor
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Lake Forest, CA
Posts: 7,951
Total Cats: 1,004
I was planning on the 97 compound per your recommendation in this thread. These are the tires I'm running: Federal Tyres - UHP - 595RS-R
My understanding is that they're supposed to be comparable to an RS3 or Rival in terms of grip, but I don't really know.
For running the regular 1.8 calipers on sport rotors there's some other adapter needed, no?
I'm not trying to clutter this thread, this is just regarded as the hot brake setup so it'd be good to know your recommended PFC setup. Curly recommended DTC 60s front and DTC 30s rear on these brakes.
My understanding is that they're supposed to be comparable to an RS3 or Rival in terms of grip, but I don't really know.
For running the regular 1.8 calipers on sport rotors there's some other adapter needed, no?
I'm not trying to clutter this thread, this is just regarded as the hot brake setup so it'd be good to know your recommended PFC setup. Curly recommended DTC 60s front and DTC 30s rear on these brakes.
#40
SADFab Destructive Testing Engineer
iTrader: (5)
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: Beaverton, USA
Posts: 18,642
Total Cats: 1,866
I was planning on the 97 compound per your recommendation in this thread. These are the tires I'm running: Federal Tyres - UHP - 595RS-R
My understanding is that they're supposed to be comparable to an RS3 or Rival in terms of grip, but I don't really know.
For running the regular 1.8 calipers on sport rotors there's some other adapter needed, no?
I'm not trying to clutter this thread, this is just regarded as the hot brake setup so it'd be good to know you're recommended PFC setup. Curly recommended DTC 60s front and DTC 30s rear on these brakes.
My understanding is that they're supposed to be comparable to an RS3 or Rival in terms of grip, but I don't really know.
For running the regular 1.8 calipers on sport rotors there's some other adapter needed, no?
I'm not trying to clutter this thread, this is just regarded as the hot brake setup so it'd be good to know you're recommended PFC setup. Curly recommended DTC 60s front and DTC 30s rear on these brakes.