10-05-2008 | #1 |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Leesburg, VA
Posts: 2,713
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Baer brakes installed and working
Rather than continue a 4+ page thread, I thought I'd start a new one. I bled the brakes today with the assistance of my wife. At first the pedal still felt a bit soft, but I wanted to break them in to see if that helped.
To bed the brakes, there's a neighborhood boulevard I use. It's maybe 7 suburban blocks long. I'll go about two blocks speeding up to 45-55mph, then hit the brakes fairly hard down to about 10mph. Then when I get near the end, I make a U-turn and do it again. I probably hit the brakes about 7 times or so like this when I noticed they went extremely soft. I could push the pedal to the floor and not activate the ABS. At first I thought "what crappy brakes", but then thought maybe they were too hot. So I took a long spin around my town to cool them down. Then I didn't try bedding them anymore, but did speed up to ~60mph and hit the brakes hard. I could activate the ABS easily. So apparently they just faded from use. I was a bit surprised though that this happened. FWIW, the fluid I used was Valvoline synthetic, but not their "SynPower", I couldn't find that anywhere. Maybe I need better fluid? Or maybe it's just these stock rotors? In messing around with them so much, they sure are thin. Even the Aurora has obviously thicker front rotors, to my surprise. Though only 12" in diameter. I didn't expect bedding the brakes was that hard on them though. All told the brakes don't seem that different. The pedal feels similar in that it moves a little before anything much happens, but then they come on a little less progressively. They feel good, just not much different. However, here is what I am now wondering about. The brake bias. When I got home, after a reasonable drive (3-4 miles of highway) of no/little braking, the fronts were hot. Heat was wafting out of the wheel. The rears, I could rest my hand on the caliper or the rotor no problem. So do I need to do something to adjust the bias?
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Bob Saveland Former owner of #2517 [IMG]http://a.random-image.net/aurora40/vette.jpg[/img] |
10-05-2008 | #2 | |
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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Bob, when I bed brakes. I do progressive stops. 30-5, 30 -5, 50 -5, 50 -5, 80-5 and then a 100-5. After the last one I cruise around for a good distance and then park the car with out using the pads to come to a complete stop and then park the car overnight. I have very little time between braking as well, just use the acceleration and then back on the brakes. What size are the pistons in the 6SP kit? You may be supplying much more fluid to the front and not pushing enough to the rear, and a bias spring, may not be able to compensate for that. I had to change my brake MC when I added the 4 piston rears to my car. |
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10-05-2008 | #3 |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Leesburg, VA
Posts: 2,713
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
According to Baer's website, the piston sizes are: Front 6-piston diameters are 1.625 / 1.375 / 1.1875 inches.
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Bob Saveland Former owner of #2517 [IMG]http://a.random-image.net/aurora40/vette.jpg[/img] |
10-06-2008 | #4 |
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Spring TX
Posts: 1,348
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
With a fixed caliper...what is going to happend if you warp a rotor? I dont know much about brakes...but I thought all calipers could move a bit.
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10-06-2008 | #5 |
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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10-06-2008 | #6 | |
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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You will not have any issues if you warp a rotor and the caliper is mounted correctly. You will have enough run out room for any warping. An ideally you will be running a thicker rotor with a 4-6 piston caliper. Only way to get a 1.25 or 1.5 inch rotor to warp is severe thermal shock. |
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10-07-2008 | #7 | |
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Leesburg, VA
Posts: 2,713
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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Do you think a bias spring will at least get the rears doing their share? Then it wouldn't be so bad. Right now though it feels weirder than stock. The car pitches forward more it feels like, I really think the rears are doing next to nothing.
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Bob Saveland Former owner of #2517 [IMG]http://a.random-image.net/aurora40/vette.jpg[/img] |
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10-07-2008 | #8 | |
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Northridge, CA
Posts: 1,461
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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I HATE not having enough fluid and a soft pedal. Doesn't that come with age? Oh wait, that's something else....... Seriously, what/how did you upgrade your master for your bigger brakes? Do I remember a Camaro master or something? And pressure is pressure, so why can't the existing system handle the larger calipers by just adding more fluid to fill the volume? Last edited by tf95ZR1; 10-07-2008 at 03:08 PM. |
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10-07-2008 | #9 | |||
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
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Piston size in the current MC. It's designed to push a certain amount of fluid, if the caliper is requiring more than the MC can supply, than you got issues. |
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10-08-2008 | #10 |
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Speedway, IN
Posts: 136
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Re: Baer brakes installed and working
Your car is a 90, in 92 they upgraded the master cylinder to fix the soft pedal. In my 91, stainless brake lines at all 4 corners really helped. I also run the DRM bias spring with GS front calipers. With the larger rear tires, the ZR-1 can take more rear bias than a stock C4, something GM either missed or did not dial in enough.
Pads can also make a big different in pedal feel. I have stock pads in the Vette, but my pickup had the same soft pedal issue with the same factory fix - the following year. Ceramic pads and stainless lines helped a lot. |
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