i think you're missing my point - you have to discard everything you know about driving - there is no "braking point" in this technique - you only scrub off enough speed to be able to enter the turn at full throttle, but approach is NOT at full throttle - you back off way before the traditional braking point - i am talking about not using the brakes really at all, and power steering through the turns staying on throttle the whole time - you go slower on the straights, but faster through the turns, blasting past the guys who are braking for the turns, cutting them on the inside, and pretty much screwing their line - it's aggressive - it's strategic - it's not popular with many drivers - but, it works - racing is not about being nice - it's also not about lap times - it's about winning, and whatever it takes to do that, including screwing the other drivers - if i can force a guy off the track because you beat him through a corner and messed up his line, or make him mess up, that's a good thing - that is one less guy you have to worry about passing - victory by attrition is still victory - pca guys don't want to hurt their precious little cars, so they don't generally drive that aggressively - i get that - i come from a different perspective - i assume that a race car has a max life of 5 seasons, with body work and paint nearly every race, for one reason or another, and a new engine every season - after that you toss it and build a new car - pca guys frequently have the same car for decades - i tend to look at that as not doing things all the way - but that's why i never liked porsches, and still don't
the 944/968 platform may be too heavy and underpowered for really applying this, and certainly would be limited to shorter tracks, or ones with at least shorter straights, but if you every drove a small british sports car on a track, you would immediately know what i was talking about - you almost never even touch the brakes - it's all done with gears and throttle and steering - heck, in the british arena we actually changed gearing to limit the top end speed, so as to further facilitate this by moving the torque to taller gears that were closer together, so that you could just shift back and forth, stay off the brakes, and just use the clutch and throttle
it's a lot like autocross - you never touch the brakes there if you can help it, and when you do it's because you screwed up - a better analogy though might be ice driving, sand driving, or rallying
again though, this is a technique that is very hard to master, and not everybody can do it - not everybody can surf either - you really need to have a great sense of balance and feel - you need to be able to do things like know instinctively what angle things are at, and how much force is being applied to your body in different directions - the idea is to get the car to "float" through turns, and not be "pushed" or "forced" through them
but, on tracks with long straights, you're going to get creamed, and you'll need to use a lot more brake
but this has now gone WAY off the topic of ROTOR RECOMMENDATION
i like the cross-drilled zimmermans, but i don't use my brakes much, so i don't have cracking issues - the OEM rotors are better suited to somebody who uses the brakes a lot