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  #16  
Old 02-10-2005, 05:29 AM
nialusa nialusa is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

I`ve just read your posts correctly, It seams that there is a little confusion going on here, I`m making a case for drilled discs on a race/big car, slotted on a smaller car, not both on any car, I agree, you probably wont find drilled and slotted discs on a race car, there is little or no need.
I think the origional discussion has long lost any sence. My head hurts now.
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  #17  
Old 02-10-2005, 12:32 PM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

im jsut stating teat drilled AND slotted rotars are actually worse than standard disks...resons being theres less surface area for the pad to grab onto, as well as dissipate heat...this isnt abotu just drilled or just slotted...and keep in minds theres diffrent techniqs to drilling and slotting, proshe actaulyl hads spent thousands of dollards to find a techqniqe on dilled/slotted rotors

in essence
Drilled rotars are for frequent stops over a short period of time due to heat dissipatino properties....but this increases breaking distance and give a much greater pad wear

slotted rotars are for not so frequent stops over a long period of time. hence why F1 cars use them, they dont cool as much as drilled rotars but have less of a stopping distance to them than dirlled and dont wear as fast (but still greater than a solid rotor)

basically it comes down to drilled slotted rotors are usless, they wear pds ALOT fast, decrease breaking distance, and dont dissapate heat as well

drilled rotars are for if you autocross ( quick races with frequent stops, breaks heat up FAST so quick heat dissipation is needed)

slotteed rotars are if you drive ralley style from town to town or do mountin runs or are in a long drawn out circuit race (more than the average heat generated but not a great amoutn like autocrssing would do)

and FYI expect yoru drileld slotted rotors to last about 3/4 as lonf as a normal rotors and about 1/2 as much life outta ur break pads....when you can see chucks of break pad that means your cutting into ur pad like drilled/slotted do

so yeah theres my finla point and post

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  #18  
Old 02-11-2005, 03:49 AM
nialusa nialusa is offline
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Re: Re: cross drilled rotor install

Quote:
Originally Posted by 91 Celica St
slotted rotars are for not so frequent stops over a long period of time. hence why F1 cars use them,
I`m guessing from that comment that you have never watched a formula 1 race, the longest straight on formula one is only 14 secs long, the average F1 track has around 100+ braking points, the average lap is around 2-3 mins, how is that "not so frequent stops"
also F1 cars also use carbon drilled discs. not slotted.
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  #19  
Old 02-11-2005, 09:54 PM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

my bad slotted rotars..i fucked up that one stement about slotted and rilled, its backward
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  #20  
Old 02-16-2005, 09:01 PM
Erik13 Erik13 is offline
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Actually

Saw a guy from Wilwood on the TV explaining the whole theory behind slotted rotors and he said that the whole gas release thing was a myth. The slots are there to shave off a small amount of brake material so you can acheive better brake performance at higher speeds. With stockers they just heat up and melt(glaze) and lose efficiency. I dont know about the cross-drilling but sounds like all it could do is help cool and not remove material like the slotted does. Just tellin you what i was told by Wilwoods "brake specialist"
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  #21  
Old 09-12-2005, 01:18 PM
keita keita is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

You guys are confused. This is the truth.

x-drilling causes a few things:
1) decrease unsprung weight (good), but this is negligible and will not increase performance.
2) decrease mass (bad), because it decreases the heat abosorptive capacity, causing it to heat up.
3) decreases surface area of braking surface (bad), which causes less friction with the pad, longer stopping distance.
4) increased surface area for heat dissipation(good), but this is negligible.
5) allows gas to escape (good), but this is negligible since modern pads don't produce gas.
6) cleans pads (good), to minimal extent, as in deglazing the pad. Probably not quite as well as slotted rotors, but may be helpful in rally applications, not for normal driving.
7) Worst of all, it decreases strength (bad, really bad) and makes it prone to cracking or in worst case scenario, catastrophic brake failure.

in summary, with all the points combined, there is most likely no perfomance improvement with x-drilled or slotted rotors, and there is definitely a sacrifince you are making in terms of the strength of the rotor.
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  #22  
Old 09-12-2005, 06:06 PM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

yea...but thatnks for bringing up a death thread
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  #23  
Old 09-12-2005, 07:57 PM
jaybratt jaybratt is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

MAN this is like a arguing post. Scorpion, I have drilled slotted and ceramic brake pads and they are awesome!!! Never squeak, totally smooth, never got them hot once. And they cost about as much as turning old rotors but look a hell of a lot better so why not go for it. Get a set that are the same size, get some nice pads and do it!!!
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  #24  
Old 09-12-2005, 10:21 PM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

but hte whole argument is that if you have a 9" rotar, and you replace it with a 9' rotar thats drilled and slotted, you infact will break in LESS time becuase the dissipation of surface area, yes they cool better but the fact taht there is so much area that the break pad is not able to touch slows you down, think about it...tehres about %35 LESS surface area the break pad is able to touch, therefore a loss of breaking perrformance


I DO AGREE HAT THEY HELP COOL BETTER

but they simply DONT outperform a full flat surface rotar, if you want to break in less distance, upgrade your break pads, get better calipers, and get a bigger rotar (i.e. 9 inch rotar to 11 inch)
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  #25  
Old 09-13-2005, 11:25 PM
jaybratt jaybratt is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

Ok 91 I do not want to get into an argument becuz you are right!!! BUT, they do not outperform if you are breaking a lot and they heat up. With flat surface rotors you are screwed when your drilled slotteds wouldn't have gotten hot. A lot of that can be the brake pad too though. My ceramics and drilled slotteds have never started to get warm. My friend and I were haulin in his wolfsburg jetta, like 130 and had to brake and then we kept braking for corners, we came to a 25 corner doin 45, luckily, because had we gone any faster we would been screwed because he hit the brakes and they were so hott they didn't work. We then barely made a stop at a light, only becuz it was uphill and some good compression downshifting did we stop. So that is why I like drilled slotteds...
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  #26  
Old 09-13-2005, 11:50 PM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

to aid in cooling w/out drilled or slotted rotars get better break pads, besides nowadays breaks dont even really give off alot of heat anyway, so drilled and slotted are usless, except for they look good
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  #27  
Old 09-14-2005, 12:03 AM
jaybratt jaybratt is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

Yeah they do look cool, you do know your shizza... cept you spelled brake pads wrong, hehehehe!
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  #28  
Old 09-14-2005, 02:56 AM
91 Celica St 91 Celica St is offline
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Re: cross drilled rotor install

^dude, i have probably one of thes worse online spelling and grammer outof anyone on this site, i tupe like 100 words per minut, but i fuck up, ALOT

and i konly know my shizza becuase ive studied so much and read hella shit online and done tons of hands on work

you know about a year and a half to 2 years ago i didnt know ANYTHING about toyotas or engines, i knew how to change the oiul and stuff but i never knew anything technical like i do now, all you gotta do is learn and research
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  #29  
Old 09-14-2005, 07:23 AM
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blakscorpion21 blakscorpion21 is offline
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Re: Re: cross drilled rotor install

Quote:
Originally Posted by jaybratt
MAN this is like a arguing post. Scorpion, I have drilled slotted and ceramic brake pads and they are awesome!!! Never squeak, totally smooth, never got them hot once. And they cost about as much as turning old rotors but look a hell of a lot better so why not go for it. Get a set that are the same size, get some nice pads and do it!!!
i never even posted on this thread?
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  #30  
Old 09-15-2005, 12:33 PM
nialusa nialusa is offline
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Christ...this old thread again, thought it died off long ago, the good old slotted/ drilled/plain discs post Yey, gatta agree with Jaybrat, now Ive got slotted halfdrilled discs thay brake 200% better than the plain discs, although that might be down to quality, manufacturing process or material type, even though they are slotted/drilled they get just as hot eventually....cool down only slightly quicker.
On the down side thay arnt as smooth in thier application as the plain discs, wear the pads down alot quicker and can have an irritating `click` from time to time, If you have big disks and lots of BHP then they might be worth considering, if not stick with the plain discs they wont let you down if you treat them right. Any disc can be made to overheat be it slotted/ drilled/ ceramic or whatever......anyway, its all blakscorpions fault
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