That's neat! I might have to duck into bunnings... I got 50mm ducting too, 3" looked like it would be a lot more difficult to physically fit.
Printable View
That's neat! I might have to duck into bunnings... I got 50mm ducting too, 3" looked like it would be a lot more difficult to physically fit.
The only thing left to do is get some proper 50mm nickel coated clamps that are rubber lined and can be bolted down in place of the cable ties I have on the control arms. All up though standing back and looking at it, it should actually work. At Bunnings, look in the section where they have the irrigation/drainage fittings rather than the plumbing stuff - there were a few things in there that were contoured better and in the sizes needed. Another option I saw for a flush mount fitting was a plastic shower drain fitting. You could hole saw a front aparon facia, push the fitting through from the outside and then tighten the nut on the back. It had a nice curved entry and about a 60mm outlet - just wasn't going to work with my facia though.
Hi Sam, I'd suggesting wrapping a piece of fly screen between the plumbing fitting and the OE duct. That will stop the larger foreign objects. Plus give the stoppers when inserted something to lean against.
Cheers
Gary
There are so many upgrade brake parts both new and used from the US for Vette's, for not a lot of money. The variety of brake pad material is never ending, again at prices that are way less than anything available locally. I wouldn't be afraid of using more track oriented pads, these days combination daily driver and track day pad compounds are quite common. Since I know them;
http://www.vwwatercooled.com.au/foru...ndtemper-1.jpg
For combo hill climb, track day and time attack I use the Hawk Black or DTC-30 compounds which work from a bit under 35 degrees Celsius (ie; cooler than yesterday's ambient temp) to 600 degrees Celsius with pretty decent CoF's. Keeping in mind that a higher CoF means being on the brakes for less time to achieve the same retardation and less braking time = lower temperature over a lap. That's average over the lap lower temperature in the pad, caliper, rotor and fluid. Blues, Blacks and DTC-30's are a very popular Hawk compound because of their wide operating range, plus they have gentle performance drop off with over temperature, so they give plenty of feedback.
For my son's daily driver Evo (~450 bhp and street tyres) I used HPS which were OK for 5 or 6 laps at Wakefield. Now Hawk have the HP+ which would be a better choice for a majority daily driver, more like 8 to 10 laps.
There are a couple of different calipers on the C3 but roughly price wise they should be not more than $US180 for the HP+, $US210 for DTC-30 and $US250 for the Blues or DTC-50/60/70. We get around 4 shipments a year of race parts from the US and sticking a set of brake pads in the box adds about $US25 to the airfreight bill.
Cheers
Gary
Thanks for the info! Not to sidetrack Sams thread too much, unfortunately I'd already ordered some Carbotech pads a few weeks ago, before reading your comments. I'm definitely not afraid of running a more track oriented pad than whatever junk is in there at the moment. The Evo is not a bad comparison, I have somewhere a bit over 500hp at the engine, about 1550-1600kg, and 295 semis on all four corners - so it is a bit of stress on the brakes. The factory brakes are 4 pot calipers and vented 298mm disks on all four corners, so they work pretty well, and should hopefully be up to the task with some good pads, fluid, and I figure some cooling can't hurt. Maybe I'm a cheapskate, but the brake upgrades seem fairly expensive to me, any sizeable upgrade seems to be more than ~2.5k for each end of the car, and any worthwhile improvement will also mean that the stock 15" wheels cannot be fitted - not the end of the world, but still a consideration.
Nup I love the chit chat and don't mind at all if other cars are discussed.
Thought you two might be interested that the Bathurst hillclimb weekend entries are going to be going up soon. You'll most likely need to be registered as a state competitor to be sure of a spot so step 1 is this: Championship Registration Its only like 50 bucks but gives you the best guarantee of a spot for both days.
read a few things and seen a few interviews where other drivers talk about how Senna used to pulsate the throttle on corner exit rather than just feeding it in cleanly. In his F1 cars as well as this NSX. Found a vid of it: YouTube
contrast that to the throttle traces of Schumacher. YouTube. You wonder if its two different styles or just what Senna needed to do in more rough diamond cars 10 years apart, to get the things to steer.
I registered for the championship last week. :thumb:
sweet!