MtHam ACR
Enthusiast
Drove Laguna Seca last Friday in the Viper for the first time. The car is 100% stock, I haven't done any mods because I wanted to see what was there. I've heard the comments on the brakes, but I really had no clue how bad they were -- sort of a surprising decision by DC for the caliber of this car.
Now Laguna has a reputation for eating brakes, but I fadded the brakes my on my third time through turn five. It was really unfortunate because this gave me the ******* about my brand new car, and I consequently spent the rest of the day trying to figure out how not to boil the fluid. New pads and a better brake fluid are definitely on the short list before Thunderhill Mar 9-10. What pads and fluid do you track guys with the stock calipersr recommend? (A complete brake upgrade, like stoptech, is not considered right now, I want to learn what is there before I go changing everything out.)
The other beef was the peddal placement -- the throttle is very high in relation to the brake peddal. What are you track guys doing about heel/toe braking? I could kinda roll the foot to get a blip, but it sure wasn't what I am used to -- my Cobra had optimal peddal placement where the brake (under pressure) and throttle were about the same height. Worse on the Viper side is wearing the linings; the brake peddal sinks lower throughout the day.
Other than those two issues the car was a blast. Visibility is better than I expected (around the A pillar), and the handling is pretty dam* phenominal on the stock pilot sports. The adhesion was at least as good as the Cobra on track tires, but then we haven't fully explored the envelope on the viper due to the brake issue. The seats and harnesses are a big plus.
I do think a set of race tires/wheels is in order, the fronts were starting to see some scaloping after 100 miles of track time. What's the hot-setup on 18" race wheels and rubber? Is hoosier the only tire out there?
Eric
Now Laguna has a reputation for eating brakes, but I fadded the brakes my on my third time through turn five. It was really unfortunate because this gave me the ******* about my brand new car, and I consequently spent the rest of the day trying to figure out how not to boil the fluid. New pads and a better brake fluid are definitely on the short list before Thunderhill Mar 9-10. What pads and fluid do you track guys with the stock calipersr recommend? (A complete brake upgrade, like stoptech, is not considered right now, I want to learn what is there before I go changing everything out.)
The other beef was the peddal placement -- the throttle is very high in relation to the brake peddal. What are you track guys doing about heel/toe braking? I could kinda roll the foot to get a blip, but it sure wasn't what I am used to -- my Cobra had optimal peddal placement where the brake (under pressure) and throttle were about the same height. Worse on the Viper side is wearing the linings; the brake peddal sinks lower throughout the day.
Other than those two issues the car was a blast. Visibility is better than I expected (around the A pillar), and the handling is pretty dam* phenominal on the stock pilot sports. The adhesion was at least as good as the Cobra on track tires, but then we haven't fully explored the envelope on the viper due to the brake issue. The seats and harnesses are a big plus.
I do think a set of race tires/wheels is in order, the fronts were starting to see some scaloping after 100 miles of track time. What's the hot-setup on 18" race wheels and rubber? Is hoosier the only tire out there?
Eric