Fuzzystig
Enthusiast
Hey folks,
I'm still learning a lot about brakes, so posting to see if I can learn anything from the brain trust here about my last trackday experience.
For some context, I've had about ~6 or so trackways with this car on the stock brake setup but with fancy pads. I've used Ferodo DS2500 and Pagid RSL19 compounds in the past, both with pretty good success. The Ferodo compound isn't as ********, but they worked fine.
Since then I've stepped up to the SRT calipers + larger rotors up front, mostly looking to extend pad life for track days. This last weekend I went out to Thunderhill in NorCal with this new setup using the DS2500 pad compound - my goal was to do a back to back comparison with the new calipers but the same pad compound I've used before.
Pretty dissapointing! I didn't have the brake power I was expecting, and after just 3 sessions this is what my brand new pads looked like. My first thought is that the pad seriously overheating. I have Gen5 ACR brake ducts on the car, it was a cool day (~70's) and I've ran this same setup but with smaller pads and calipers in the past, so I don't think any overheating issues are coming from just driving the car.
So I ask: does anyone know why somethign like this might happen? I've used smaller variants of this same brake pad in the past and gotten ~2 full days out of them + a bunch of street miles, and now I step up to a larger pad and rotor setup and I only get 1 hour of track time, putting down similar lap times. Can a bad bed-in cause something like this? Can running mismatched pad compounds front/rear shift too much of the work up front if the rear's haven't heated up into their operating window? Any tips/discussion appreciated
I'm still learning a lot about brakes, so posting to see if I can learn anything from the brain trust here about my last trackday experience.
For some context, I've had about ~6 or so trackways with this car on the stock brake setup but with fancy pads. I've used Ferodo DS2500 and Pagid RSL19 compounds in the past, both with pretty good success. The Ferodo compound isn't as ********, but they worked fine.
Since then I've stepped up to the SRT calipers + larger rotors up front, mostly looking to extend pad life for track days. This last weekend I went out to Thunderhill in NorCal with this new setup using the DS2500 pad compound - my goal was to do a back to back comparison with the new calipers but the same pad compound I've used before.
Pretty dissapointing! I didn't have the brake power I was expecting, and after just 3 sessions this is what my brand new pads looked like. My first thought is that the pad seriously overheating. I have Gen5 ACR brake ducts on the car, it was a cool day (~70's) and I've ran this same setup but with smaller pads and calipers in the past, so I don't think any overheating issues are coming from just driving the car.
So I ask: does anyone know why somethign like this might happen? I've used smaller variants of this same brake pad in the past and gotten ~2 full days out of them + a bunch of street miles, and now I step up to a larger pad and rotor setup and I only get 1 hour of track time, putting down similar lap times. Can a bad bed-in cause something like this? Can running mismatched pad compounds front/rear shift too much of the work up front if the rear's haven't heated up into their operating window? Any tips/discussion appreciated