Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I'm still trying to source the control arm air deflectors

Once I've worn everything out, and if my improvements are not enough, I'll invest further in larger rotors / dog bones / new calipers etc by which time I'll be too old for this and sell my GTR for half of what I spent on it.....

p.s. is anyone still interested in this sh*t?

Hell yes, I'm hunting around for a brake upgrade for my Zilla now. I'm currently doing the whole tie rod and rack end thing on her so I can put my Enkei's on (17x9) with out screwing them on the inside. Once they're on I want to put larger rotors on. I wanna keep the GTR calipers (sounds like they are a good caliper), just fill the rim a bit more, and really, these brakes were designed in the 80's. 16 inch was a big rim then.

What I would like to know is:

a: Has anyone changed their brake bias/proportioning valve to suit the greater leverage from the larger rotor? If not, do the front brakes wear quicker?

b: Has anyone looked at changing the rear rotors?

Thanks for everyones words so far

  • Replies 204
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

The hand brake assembly of the R32 GTSt and R32 GTR rotor is the same as the R33 GTR. The brackets for lines and calipers need a little tweak for the caliper, and bolt pitch is different...but hand brake is the same or at least within the range of factory adjustment for normal use

If your mechanic said not to cut the backing plates off due to air flow around the disk I wouldn't take anything he says seriously. All the backing plates are there for is to stop dust and stones and water. Performance cars in the 70's would cut the backing plates off so if the mechanic doesn't know don't listen to him about brakes and would question his knowledge about performance cars. Cutting the plates off expecially the rears as rear rotors crack, is the cheapest brake mod you can do. As for castor rod ducts I just got some cardboard and tape. Bent it all up and made sure it cleared everything then wrapped it in foil to turn it into a mould and fibreglassed over it. Attach it with hose clamps and your done. Same could be done with some 1.6mm aluminium and a few hours. Might cost you $30. I've seen some of the so called caster rod deflectors and there 50mm high and 100mm long and would most likely do f/a for the price.

As for semis the benifit on the street wouldn't be worth it. Spend the money on suspension. My car is maybe 1 or 2 seconds slower on the track on streets but my tyres last 5 time longer and there cheaper. If you are driving to the limit of semis on the steet you'll end up around a tree eventually. My guess is you won't even be pushing the semis to the limit so streets would do atm. A fair few guys at the track don't even push the semis to the limits. They only have them because everybody else does! Do you really need them???

It is easy reading the forums to think you need big and fast everything but really a nice street/track setup isn't that expensive or hard to achieve if you do it right with a gtr as their such a good platform and you already have 300rwkw.

  • 2 weeks later...

Well I went to Phillip Island on Friday and had a ball but the brakes were shite. Set up was:

Brake booster brace

Castrol SRF

Braided lines

RDA slotted rotors

QFM K750 pads

As soon as they got hot, they vibrated to buggery, so I had to drive slow for the day (2.01). Rotors are not warped as when they were cool they were fine. Someone came up with the idea that the pads were depositing on the rotors when they were hot???? causing them to vibrate? Wheels are balanced, all suspension and brakes bolted up how they should be. Small play in upper control arms.

When I say hot, we all know how relatively easy PI is on brakes, and really I never stomped on them as I just couldn't. Only really stood on them a bit at Honda, but even then it was far from full pedal.

Fastest on day was a R33 GTR running massive Alcons which I now envy......Very frustrating not being able to use the brakes to their full extent. I switched out the fronts and went slow and sideways, though, so all was not lost.

p.s. Rowdy, how could you advocate street tyres for the track. They're totally inadequate.

Another thought, I still have some DS2500 pads and I'd be interested to see how these perform and whether it addresses the vibration problem. I won't be able to replicate the problem on the street so need some easy to get to / affordable track time to check out the new pads. Calder / Sandown? Any thoughts on how to most easily get some track time?

p.s. Winton = too far at the moment.

Bought DBA 4000 series slotted rotors front and rear with lucus pads .....pads were $75 front and $75 rear $946 all up for rotors and pads they are rated to 650 degrees are easy on the rotors and ill get 15 laps at mallala in a r32 GTR that runs low 11's down the 1/4 mile and mallala is very harsh on brakes these brakes are awsome could not fault them best up grade I have done hope this helps....

PS: still got stock lines brake lines and no special brake fluid yet so brakes should only get better....

posted this in another section on braking good luck....

Right. So on a track that is hard on brakes, with slightly less invested than my set up, you've had good results. Others seem to be saying they've had great results with a slightly modified std set up too, so perhaps I need to persist.

Thanks for your input.

Right. So on a track that is hard on brakes, with slightly less invested than my set up, you've had good results. Others seem to be saying they've had great results with a slightly modified std set up too, so perhaps I need to persist.

Thanks for your input.

Yeh brakes are awsome id say better than good results and I still have to put braded lines and better brake fluid and they can oly get better this is a fast gtr so they have been put to the test (brakes that is)

Did you bed the brakes in properly?

I think this may be for me? The answer is I think so. 8 hardish stops from 120 - 60, then drove normally on them for 500kms before getting them on the track. How does that sound? Let's assume this is not adeque running in, what now in your opinion?

Personally, you need to do stops from about 140km/h down to about 20km/h. Really get the heat into the pads and rotor and deposit that pad onto the rotor. Problem is 140km/h is speeding, so the idea of sayign Winton is too far ? Well the Winton track days are the ones where i try to line up a pad change as the drive up there is the perfect opportunity to do a crazy amount of stops from 110km/h to basically the speed where i can grab 1st gear again( 10-15km/h). Then cruise for 20mins and let he brakes cool down again, then jump on the bastards a few times more. Fact that you leave Melb at 5am means you get a pretty good run with traffic and can be left alone to do bed the pads. You cant do it on the drive to PI, Sandown etc. So you end uyp sacrificing your first session just bedding brakes.

  • 1 month later...

Well, this saga is likely to end with me buying some tasty and expensive as all get out AP calipers and all the associated bits'n'pieces. I'm sick of rooting around with this so this is the 'final solution'.

My likely set up will be 356mm fronts and I have a choice of 343 or 356 for the rear. The vendor tells me that they have a brake testing rig and on some track Commers they find that contrary to their expected theory, having 'larger than wisdom would suggest' rears gives an overall better balance under hard braking. Hence the 356 option on the rear. He's not trying to up sell as he aint that kind of guy. My query is that perhaps the weight distribution on the Commer is quite different to the old GTR and therefore these results aren't 100% applicable. I'm guessing the GTR is more nose heavy?

Any thoughts on this final choice for me?

Personally, i think get the fronts and then play a game of wait and see. To improve stopping distances tyres and suspension are perhaps more important then the actual brake hardware.

Since you are doing some track work and street driving i think AP 4 pot rears with big rotors is a premature. See how the std rears go with sme good pads and then make the tough decision.

Personally i think the weight distribution, suspension geometry, vehicle weight and CoG is all significantly different between the Commodore and R32 so wouldnt guess that what works for one will work for the other.

What wheels have you sussed? Before paying for the APs touch base with me...i may have a far cheaper and equally good solution :rofl:

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • The hot exhaust light will come on not from just the cat being blocked, but it's just a temp sensor, and it's designed to warn you to not do things like park in long grass.   If you've been pushing the motor a bit, it can cause the light to come on.   Second if the cat is rattling, I'd suspect it's not blocked, but instead falling apart inside.   The easiest "fix" until you can get a cat put back in, is to unbolt your one, bash the rest of the insides out, and then bolt it back in.   For a daily driver/street car, I am in agreeance of put a cat in the car. If it were race car I wouldn't care if it were removed.
    • No worries at all 🫡 I think the most satisfying things to make are the little bits that are just impossible to find or they're no longer manufactured. Generally I always try to replace parts with OEM wherever possible. This little project is also great because it'll never see the light of day, but strengthen these brackets so it's not just relying on the little standard screws in the headlight plastic. As soon as I saw the standard brackets and screws I thought, "well I'm not going to install with just the screws, the plastic tabs will just snap off". It's crazy how expensive everything has become yeah. But I suppose that's supply and demand; granted it's a lot easier to get brand new genuine parts these days which is fantastic 😊, I don't have to get totally reamed at the local Nissan dealer ha ha We sure are lucky we have all these manufacturers making parts these days, a few really great Australian companies too like Platinum Racing Products and Fit Mint Automotive, what a time to be alive ❤️ . I've got my eye on the RB26 head by PRP as mine has a very fine hairline crack, so that'll need to be addressed some time in the future. If you have any requests or odd things to make feel free to let me know and I can have a crack at making replacement parts ✌️
    • Thanks for sharing this, and BTW if your headlights are in good condition they are worth thousands....you might want to consider replacing them with brand new LED ones like this (https://www.nengun.com/78works/full-led-headlights-r32-skyline) and making enough profit to buy a house in Sydney
    • I'm not sure what sort of shops are nearby, but I'd expect any reasonable exhaust shop could put a cat in it that will not restrict the power that engine makes. Otherwise, if you want to remove it, short lengths that replace the cat are readily available online, search for "de-cat pipes" or "test pipes"  
    • Howdy friends, So another weird one today, I was looking into replacing some broken clips holding the front grille for the R32 GTR (part number 01553-03831), and noticed the brackets which are supposed to hold the grille in place were also missing 😑. I do recall seeing this issue many years ago, but didn't fix it at the time. A quick look on eBay and I was able to find the genuine brackets, along with all the screws which suited the headlights (part numbers 26042-08U05,26092-08U05). Happy days!....  Once they arrived however there was an extra nut in the packaging which implied that there should also be a bolt or a stud, and sure enough, after a bit of searching I found this thread from 2013, and @Ants clearly shows a stud should be present. Reading around a bit more, it's possible the headlights on my car are the "povo pack" headlights as mentioned by @funkymonkey in this thread way back in 2008. This could explain why the studs are missing on my set of headlights. Looking at the headlight diagram I wasn't able to see a suitable part number for the stud itself. The headlight did indeed have a recess that looked like it would accept a stud, but interestingly no thread or anything obvious how the stud would be affixed to the headlight, I suspect it may have been glued in, press fit, or melted into the plastic at the factory. Another member may be able to clarify if they happen to have a genuine set of N1 headlamps. The only thing we have to work with within the recess is a keyway which likely is there to prevent the stud from rotating within the recess. In any case, back to 3D printing, I put together a model which acts like a pug with a friction fit inside this recess, making use of the keyway so it doesn't rotate while tightening a bolt. Printing in TPU will allow it to slightly swell making a nice snug fit without cracking the part. I've designed the adaptor it to accept an 20 mm M6 bolt (stainless with a cap head in my case), as opposed to the standard M5 stud and I made use of the standard galvanised split washer that came with the genuine brackets from Nissan. Once the bolt and screws were all in place, giving the bracket a gentle shake gave the classic "shaking the car" feeling, very solid, which gives me confidence this is going to be able to hold on much better than the janky solution which seems to have been here for the past decade or so. Overall I'm really pleased with how this turned out and maybe there are more people out there running these headlights without a centre stud at all! Link to the freely available model on Printables: Click here Regards, Sean  
×
×
  • Create New...