RonPorter
SHO Club of America
I will pass on the SS lines. The 911 guys, years ago, determined for most uses, they weren't worth it. IMO, they are like getting new tires. Car feels so much better, but compared to what? The old worn out ones. Same with SS lines. Put in new rubber ones, THEN go to SS, and see if you feel anything. Not that they don' have a place on serious race cars with serious speeds.
Rotors are heat sinks. More metal = better heat absorption. Other than the bedding process, pads just don't have the gassing issue, that was back in the 70s and earlier.
There aren't any tests I'm aware of that prove that holes/slots do anything at all. Except add to the new car fund of the folks who sell them.
How do you know what is "good steel"? Or bad steel? I'll wager that the bulk of all blank rotors comes from China, Mexico or somewhere overseas. You, nor I, can tell what is "good quality".
As with SS lines, if you are running a serious race car, with high speeds over long time periods, buy what you can view as being the best. Having to haul down from 200+ mph in the 23rd hour of a 24 hour race is kinda important.
For anything you do on a street car, from the dragstrip to track days, I'll stay with blank rotors and good pads. Been working great for me for 20+ years of track days across multiple cars. As well as for other folks I've run with. I've NEVER seen an issue with blank rotors, the ONLY failures and cracking issues have been with the drilled/slotted. Plus, after about 6 months of driving, the holes are plugged with dust & debris.
Nobody warps rotors on the street! That has been the mantra since the SHO came out. Then, as now, uneven pad deposits. Stop Tech even had an article on it. And from the pre-PDF days, I wish I had saved the R&T tech article about how race cars don't warp rotors, either.
Found the article :
http://www.stoptech.com/technical-support/technical-white-papers/-warped-brake-disc-and-other-myths
Rotors are heat sinks. More metal = better heat absorption. Other than the bedding process, pads just don't have the gassing issue, that was back in the 70s and earlier.
There aren't any tests I'm aware of that prove that holes/slots do anything at all. Except add to the new car fund of the folks who sell them.
How do you know what is "good steel"? Or bad steel? I'll wager that the bulk of all blank rotors comes from China, Mexico or somewhere overseas. You, nor I, can tell what is "good quality".
As with SS lines, if you are running a serious race car, with high speeds over long time periods, buy what you can view as being the best. Having to haul down from 200+ mph in the 23rd hour of a 24 hour race is kinda important.
For anything you do on a street car, from the dragstrip to track days, I'll stay with blank rotors and good pads. Been working great for me for 20+ years of track days across multiple cars. As well as for other folks I've run with. I've NEVER seen an issue with blank rotors, the ONLY failures and cracking issues have been with the drilled/slotted. Plus, after about 6 months of driving, the holes are plugged with dust & debris.
Nobody warps rotors on the street! That has been the mantra since the SHO came out. Then, as now, uneven pad deposits. Stop Tech even had an article on it. And from the pre-PDF days, I wish I had saved the R&T tech article about how race cars don't warp rotors, either.
Found the article :
http://www.stoptech.com/technical-support/technical-white-papers/-warped-brake-disc-and-other-myths