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Hey guys. I've been surfing around and I wanna know 968 racer's opinions on this.
What is better for the track? Cross drill, slotted, or smooth?
(Brake Disks) [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/tongue.gif[/img]
Rich
'93 968 Coupe Cobalt/Grey Devil with a blue dress on
'96 Ford SHO V8 Silver/Grey Rebuilt Winter '13
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Its on cars in general but I wanted people with "real braking experiance" ie track driving.
One of the latest forums I visited stated that "Only people who don't race use cross drilled, when I see a Porsche GT3 with cross drilled I think daily driver."
I am trying to prove him and others wrong with some evidence and proof. Or perhaps I will be enlightened. [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blink.gif[/img]
Rich
'93 968 Coupe Cobalt/Grey Devil with a blue dress on
'96 Ford SHO V8 Silver/Grey Rebuilt Winter '13
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Good question. I track and brake my 968CS with MO30 set up, including cross drilled rotors, pretty hard, and am about to give up on them - I am on my second set recently and they just crack all the time around the drill holes, and are OEM. Going to try the 928 non drilled type next aling with a cooling kit (paragon). My race mechanic, who runs everything from cup cars down, agrees that is the way to go too.
968CS-outright Porsche Australia NSW Drivers Championship winning car 2011, 2012
968CS-Porsche NSW Drivers Championship class winning car 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
911 GT2 - "The Beast"
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Hmmmm.
Good input.
I have been rooting around Porsche's website and noticed that nearly all of their race cars have either slotted or smooth brake discs.
For example the new RS has carbon-fiber disks which are smooth.
http://www.porsche.com/usa/eventsandracing...logyandconcept/
And the new 997 RSR has slotted brakes. (which look really cool btw)
http://www.porsche.com/usa/eventsandracing...logyandconcept/
It seems the consensus is smooth/slotted racing and slotted for concours/showing off. [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/tongue.gif[/img]
This is actually good price wise too. For example I was looking up prices for a set of 350Z brake disks, and a set of OEM's were equivilant to ONE cross-drilled from EBC. OUCH!
Now finding slotted disks for a 968 is another problem. [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif[/img]
Rich
'93 968 Coupe Cobalt/Grey Devil with a blue dress on
'96 Ford SHO V8 Silver/Grey Rebuilt Winter '13
(This post was last modified: 07-25-2009, 11:28 PM by
Lord_Galva.)
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<!--quoteo(post=76129:date=Jul 26 2009, 03:31 AM:name=Torbjorn968)-->QUOTE (Torbjorn968 @ Jul 26 2009, 03:31 AM)
<{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->Regarding slotting: this can often be done by a machine shop with the right skills, buy plain rotors and find the right workshop.
//TL<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Good tip.
Rich
'93 968 Coupe Cobalt/Grey Devil with a blue dress on
'96 Ford SHO V8 Silver/Grey Rebuilt Winter '13
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I use regular non drilled, non slotted rotors on my race car. I tried drilled rotors, and quickly developed severe cracking around the holes, so much so that I was not comfortable running them. Plus they cost more, and provided no benefit that I could detect.
I also tried a set of slotted rotors. One of those developed the most severe crack I've ever had - a giant crack from the hat all the way to the outside edge. Luckily I felt it in the pedal right away and got off the track. I can't directly attribute the crack to the slotting, but it left a bad taste in my mouth. Besides, I couldn't detect any benefit from the slotting and they cost more.
Since then I've come to the conclusion that for me plain old non-slotted, non-drilled factory 944 Turbo S rotors are the way to go. For those of you who have seen any of my videos you know that I don't have any problems making aggressive passes under heavy braking. I view braking as one of my car's primary strengths. Why should I pay more for rotors that don't last as long and provide no detectible benefit?
Jim Child
'94 968 PCA E-Stock/NASA GTS2
'01 Boxster