Being an accountant I thought I would pick the brains of people who do this stuff in the real world to see if I have made any really obvious screwups in my thinking.
Background
My new wheels don’t fit over the factory KP61 Starlet brakes as the caliper sits past the face of the hub and the back of my wheels is very flat. Since I am fitting a 7K and KP rotors aren’t available anyway (or at least very hard to find) I thought it was a good opportunity to do an upgrade. The criteria I had were –
- Must fit my wheels (14x7 neg 17 offset Spitfires)
- Cost effective
- Un-modded consumables (rotors/pads) if possible
- Vented rotors
- Easily available parts
- Must mount to the rear of the Starlet hub
- Simple caliper bracket
- Not too heavy
These criteria put a few restrictions on what I could do, the wheels are the most limiting factor as there can only be minimal overhang of the caliper past the hub face and the 14” size limits the diameter. I looked at a lot different conversions on the net, most were no good as they mounted to the front of the hub. Most callipers also wouldn’t clear my wheels without setting the caliper well back which meant the rotor had to fit over the factory caliper mounts. Basically I had to find some low profile calipers or run a separate rotor hat and Wilwood or similar discs. The only real issue I have with this is I do some pretty high mileage so decided I didn’t really want race style parts.
So a session at the wreckers with a tape measure saw me pick up some calipers and discs from the wreckers, I think they are from a Ford Laser/Mazda Astina (based on the disc dimensions, only had engine and front suspension but definitely Mazda/Ford something). Discs were no good with out modifying (centre bore too small) but the single piston sliding caliper had a very low profile front face. Easy to find decent pads for as they a pretty common size. As a bonus the calipers are not much heavier than the factory ones.
Ford/Mazda Caliper Picture - Click Me
So with some serious measuring and an Excel based copy of the DBA catalogue I dug out some potential rotor options. Nothing was a bolt up fit, mainly due to the small PCD that the factory Starlet rotor bolts on with as well as having the thread in the rotors. Basically came down to a rotor from an E30 BMW which is 260x22mm, 100mm PCD and a 66mm centrebore. The total height of the rotor is 35mm which gives just enough room to get a caliper bracket on the front side of the strut (otherwise you need to machine the back of the caliper mounts flat), it will require the mount to be threaded though as there will not be enough rotor clearance to fit a bolt in. The caliper end will also need to be threaded to bolt the caliper up.
KP Rotor Picture - Click Me
BMW Rotor Picture - Click Me
So the key things I need to know is around the caliper bracket and fitting the rotor to the hub. For the bracket I am looking about 8 to 10mm thick, will this be thick enough to get enough thread into? When I measured up the factory mount that the caliper came off it had a thickness of about 8mm so I presume keeping the same thickness should be safe. The other question is would you just tap a thread in the flat plate or I have seem them done with threaded inserts that are welded to the plate.
For securing the rotor my first thought as a cheap bastard was just machine down the factory rotor, run longer bolts and use it to sandwich the rotor. Deciding not to be that dodgy I have planned on getting a ring made that centres the rotor on the back of the hub (hub 64mm vs rotor 66mm) and is threaded. BMW rotor would be redrilled to fit the PCD of the starlet hub and then sandwiched by the centering ring, seems safer than bolts and nuts as you don’t have the risk of a nut working its way loose.
Any feedback appreciated, have a used rotor on the way to test how good my measuring is and will dummy it up from there.
Callum