by glenb20V » Thu Nov 01, 2007 10:38 pm
on a track, there tends to be more left than right or more right than left bends, in NZ anyway. E.g. Taupo, more heavy breaking into left hand turns, therefore the right front gets loaded up more. this tends to put more cornering force onto the right front wheel which flexs the hub slightly and wears the pads unevenly on a sliding caliper and floating disk. which means then you can't throw the pads into the other side and expect a good pedel ever again on those pads. the main advantage of four pot calipers is making the braking force even throughout the pad, therefore lasting longer and consistentcy, but this is limited with a floating disk.
On a road car, I reckon standard is fine just use good pads. racing, spend the dollars on pads initially and throw them away when they get uneven, otherwise spend the big bucks and buy some four potters
EVO 3 rally car
3.0T Surf tow wagon
AE82 FX-GT Paddock bash car
AE101 rolla, shopping cart (wifes car)