Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Best Track Setup

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    sorry about the misunderstanding for the engine output its a stock car. However I have already set aside about 9000 for making it into a good track car. I was quoted 350 from a BMW shop in San Francisco with a turbo s50.

    However I want to do all of the suspension and brake work before I do the engine conversion.

    What do you guys think about the Ireland Engineering 330mm brakes

    Or would something like wilwood or ap do a better job. I think the IE is 2 pot and the wilwood and ap are 4 pot. correct me if I am wrong.

    Comment


      #17
      Originally posted by HalexH
      However I want to do all of the suspension and brake work before I do the engine conversion.
      With 350hp, you might want to even think of upgrading to E36 5-lug parts. There is a guy on this board (lukasmotors.com IIRC) and he used the massive M-Coupe brakes and rear suspension on his E30 w/ an M50. I'm guessing if the M-coupe weighs more and it has an S52 or even an S54 powering it, a lighter E30 with the same equipment should stop pretty well, CONSIDERING that you have good gripping tires already.

      With the 5-lug you can run larger wheels, brakes, and tires that can handle the power output adequately. Hope that helped a bit...


      -Brandon

      Comment


        #18
        Originally posted by Mike B.
        The rotor mass and pad size are relatively small, especially when compared to a Porsche SC, which has similar hp/weight.
        Originally posted by IS
        Mike, youre comparing a sports car to an sports sedan. Porsche has always had some of the best brakes out there.
        How does what type of car it is change the laws of physics? Maybe the brakes "know" that it's a sportier car?

        HalexH, you say "track car" like that's all that there is to it. What are you going to do on the track-HPDE, SpecE30, BMWCCA? What is your experience level? You will get better answers if you give these guys some info to work with.
        1973 Bavaria

        Comment


          #19
          Originally posted by Q-ship
          How does what type of car it is change the laws of physics? Maybe the brakes "know" that it's a sportier car?
          Are you arguing for the sake of arguing? Next time, contribute to the matter at hand.
          87 325IS - Delphin Grey/Cardinal

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by IS
            Are you arguing for the sake of arguing? Next time, contribute to the matter at hand.
            I'm not arguing at all, merely pointing out what I feel is a misleading statement. My point was, if you are tracking the car, it doesn't matter if it was designed as a certain type of car. Next time I'll contribute as you have, by regurgitating someone elses advice.

            Originally posted by IS
            With a setup like charlie suggested (albeit there are tons of great pads out there) and sufficient brake cooling, the e30 will brake quite well and be adequately fade resistant.
            Last edited by Brian D; 08-18-2006, 09:38 AM.
            1973 Bavaria

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by HalexH
              sorry about the misunderstanding for the engine output its a stock car. However I have already set aside about 9000 for making it into a good track car. I was quoted 350 from a BMW shop in San Francisco with a turbo s50.
              where is this BMW shop in SF that does turbo s50 swaps into e30's? name of shop?
              IG: @Baye30

              FRONT VALENCE IS ZENDER!!! STOP FILLING MY PM BOX PPL!!!

              Comment


                #22
                Originally posted by golde30
                where is this BMW shop in SF that does turbo s50 swaps into e30's? name of shop?
                Shop will not be doing swap. Just engine work. I am doing the swap in myself. They are just machining the block.

                Comment


                  #23
                  Charlie, what are you using for a rear pad with HT-10's up front? When I planned to run HP+/HP+, I was disappointed to find that only HPS is available for the rear. If you're running HPS rear, how does the car feel under trailbraking?

                  If I were spending the $$ to do a 350hp S50, I would sure as hell do full E36 M3/Mcoupe 5-lug with floating rotors, track pads, and large ducting...and wide rubber. My $.02

                  Comment


                    #24
                    I have hp+ on all 4. Tirerack has them.
                    87 325IS - Delphin Grey/Cardinal

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Originally posted by IS View Post
                      I have hp+ on all 4. Tirerack has them.
                      Excellent! Thanks.

                      CDOC and my local import parts shop only dealt HPS for the rear, though that was about a year ago. Thanks for the info

                      Comment


                        #26
                        [quote=matt;544414]More rotor mass just means your brakes take longer to heat up.

                        {/quote]

                        This is exactly why rotor mass is very important. You don't have brake fade if your not boiling fluid. Rotor mass, pad size, pad compound, fluid and cooling are all important parts of a properly functioning system - neglect one and the whole system is compromised.

                        BBK's aren't necessarily going to stop your car more quickly, but they will allow you to make those same stops over and over again without brake fade.

                        Btw, my comparison of the E30 and the SC is an accurate based on the sizes of the vehicles, braking systems of each vehicles and the intended use of the vehicles (AX's / DE's).

                        As it was stated earlier, "Porsches have some of the best brakes around". What is so different from the SC to the E30? Pad and rotor size.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Originally posted by Stu Mc View Post
                          Charlie, what are you using for a rear pad with HT-10's up front? When I planned to run HP+/HP+, I was disappointed to find that only HPS is available for the rear. If you're running HPS rear, how does the car feel under trailbraking?

                          If I were spending the $$ to do a 350hp S50, I would sure as hell do full E36 M3/Mcoupe 5-lug with floating rotors, track pads, and large ducting...and wide rubber. My $.02
                          I've been running HT10 up front with HPS in the rear. On cold tires it can get a little squirrely under hard braking, but it tends to go away as you get heat in the tires. Now that it looks like the HP+'s are showing up, I'll probably run those in the rear.

                          -Charlie
                          Swing wild, brake later, don't apologize.
                          '89 324d, '76 02, '98 318ti, '03 Z4, '07 MCS, '07 F800s - Bonafide BMW elitist prick.
                          FYYFF

                          Comment

                          Working...
                          X