Last year at Drag Week, on one of the days, I popped the trans into neutral at the end of the 1/4 to save on engine wear. I had enough brake shake at that speed (115) that it made me uncomfortable, so I didn't do that again. It was never noticeable on the street, at average speeds.
I just took my rotors and rear drums (factory disc brakes on front, 2 1/2" drums rear) to have them turned to eliminate that problem this year. Still, it took quite a bit of brake effort to get the car stopped last year, so I've been looking at aftermarket brake systems. So I have 2 questions...
1: I've been looking at the Wilwood systems, which seem pretty nice. Are there any issues with their stuff that you guys have noticed or experienced?
2: Rolling resistance is quite a bit heavier than new cars. New cars have almost zero resistance when you go to push them. I know on older cars, that rolling resistance has to do mostly with the front brakes and the residual pressure in the system to keep the calipers expanded. I know the residual pressure valves are located in the master cylinder, but is there a way to minimize the effect they have on resistance? I know they sell lower pressure residual valves, like 1 pound deals, but how do you get by the stock valves? Is there a negative to doing this? Or....how do you guys minimize the resistance created by the braking system?
After thinking about it, the rear stock system could easily be managed by removing the automatic adjuster system and just keeping the brakes adjusted so that there is enough gap to eliminate the resistance. That's not a big deal, it's easy enough to pop a drum off and do a quick adjustment once a year. But what about the fronts?
Ok, that's like a dozen questions, but they all fall under 2 categories...new brakes and resistance, so...
And yes, I know resistance is futile
