Jonz
Member
Registered: 27th Nov 07
Location: North Wales
User status: Offline
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Looking for the cheepest place to buy quality brakes for my corsa b. I would like sum 4-pots but i dont know. Wot do you think is the best brake setup for a corsa? Wats your experiances of diffrent types. Also thinking of sum V6 Brakes.... Thanks
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IvIarkgraham
Premium Member
Registered: 27th Mar 04
Location: Ellesmere Port, Cheshire
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v6's are cheap compared to 4 pots but 4 pots will be 1000x better
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alexm
Member
Registered: 20th Jul 08
Location: Portsmouth
User status: Offline
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Just curious here...
What sort of improvement are we talking about over standard brakes .. VS. e.g. Cav brakes.
Do they lock up easier at all??
Does it not make it like uneven from front and back??
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IvIarkgraham
Premium Member
Registered: 27th Mar 04
Location: Ellesmere Port, Cheshire
User status: Offline
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brakes are uneven front and back anyway
rears only do about 10% of the braking
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Jonz
Member
Registered: 27th Nov 07
Location: North Wales
User status: Offline
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What brakes would you say is best for a corsa b?
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steve101
Member
Registered: 25th Oct 04
Location: Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, Scotland
User status: Offline
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They do a lot more than 10% - try braking without the rears, you'll see what I mean.
4 pots look good, and stop good. Expensive though. Stick with bigger diam discs and pads/bigger calipers.
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alexm
Member
Registered: 20th Jul 08
Location: Portsmouth
User status: Offline
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Yeah ill second that... I know fronts do most of the stopping.. but when my adjusters were ripped out the drums it was HORRIBLE to brake.. the pedal had huge travel too.
So anything 4stud is interchangable on a vauxhall
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ed
Member
Registered: 10th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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A lot of 4 pots are made from billet aluminium which isn't suitable for a road car. Plus, as they are designed with race cars in mind the seals aren't as hardcore and will need to be cleaned all the time.
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dhdev
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Registered: 22nd Dec 05
Location: Midlands
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by ed
A lot of 4 pots are made from billet aluminium which isn't suitable for a road car.
That's wrong.
Four pots will enable greater clamping force to be applied for the same pedal pressure as long as they have greater piston area than the brakes they are replacing. This will improve braking performance. They will also most likely be lighter than the standard brakes. They will also most likely be stiffer, which will improve pedal feel and reduce displacement (wasted pedal travel). The downside is cost and potentially brake squeal and the need for frequent servicing if you buy a set of calipers designed for motorsport.
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dean101287
Member
Registered: 22nd Jul 07
Location: Cardiff
User status: Offline
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some new vauxhalls have got 280mm disks ect that will bolt straight on.
Mine:



Pic Whore!
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.dean.
Member
Registered: 21st Sep 07
Location: Hindley, Wigan Drives: Like Its Stolen!
User status: Offline
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what do people think of high spec 4pots with 300mm disk for a everyday 2.0 corsa
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stu_c
Member
Registered: 11th Dec 07
Location: Westleigh, Greater Manchester
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by .dean.
what do people think of high spec 4pots with 300mm disk for a everyday 2.0 corsa
they are gay and for ppl with a rich girlfriend!!! 
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.dean.
Member
Registered: 21st Sep 07
Location: Hindley, Wigan Drives: Like Its Stolen!
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by bigboy219
quote: Originally posted by .dean.
what do people think of high spec 4pots with 300mm disk for a everyday 2.0 corsa
they are gay and for ppl with a rich girlfriend!!! 
and i still dont get a let!
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ed
Member
Registered: 10th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by dhdev
quote: Originally posted by ed
A lot of 4 pots are made from billet aluminium which isn't suitable for a road car.
That's wrong.
Four pots will enable greater clamping force to be applied for the same pedal pressure as long as they have greater piston area than the brakes they are replacing. This will improve braking performance. They will also most likely be lighter than the standard brakes. They will also most likely be stiffer, which will improve pedal feel and reduce displacement (wasted pedal travel). The downside is cost and potentially brake squeal and the need for frequent servicing if you buy a set of callipers designed for motor sport.
What you have just said has nothing to do with billet aluminium being unsuitable when it comes to being plastered in road grime, salt and other shit that you get all over the bottom of your car, and the other point being that people with road cars don't strip their brake system down on a regular occasion.
In future, read what people have said before correcting them.
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Mussolini
Banned
Registered: 15th Aug 08
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by ed
quote: Originally posted by dhdev
quote: Originally posted by ed
A lot of 4 pots are made from billet aluminium which isn't suitable for a road car.
That's wrong.
Four pots will enable greater clamping force to be applied for the same pedal pressure as long as they have greater piston area than the brakes they are replacing. This will improve braking performance. They will also most likely be lighter than the standard brakes. They will also most likely be stiffer, which will improve pedal feel and reduce displacement (wasted pedal travel). The downside is cost and potentially brake squeal and the need for frequent servicing if you buy a set of callipers designed for motor sport.
What you have just said has nothing to do with billet aluminium being unsuitable when it comes to being plastered in road grime, salt and other shit that you get all over the bottom of your car, and the other point being that people with road cars don't strip their brake system down on a regular occasion.
In future, read what people have said before correcting them.
I like you
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dhdev
Member
Registered: 22nd Dec 05
Location: Midlands
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by ed
quote: Originally posted by dhdev
quote: Originally posted by ed
A lot of 4 pots are made from billet aluminium which isn't suitable for a road car.
That's wrong.
Four pots will enable greater clamping force to be applied for the same pedal pressure as long as they have greater piston area than the brakes they are replacing. This will improve braking performance. They will also most likely be lighter than the standard brakes. They will also most likely be stiffer, which will improve pedal feel and reduce displacement (wasted pedal travel). The downside is cost and potentially brake squeal and the need for frequent servicing if you buy a set of callipers designed for motor sport.
What you have just said has nothing to do with billet aluminium being unsuitable when it comes to being plastered in road grime, salt and other shit that you get all over the bottom of your car, and the other point being that people with road cars don't strip their brake system down on a regular occasion.
In future, read what people have said before correcting them.
Back in your box! I stated you were wrong, then punctuated with a full stop and started a new paragraph. The next paragraph had nothing to do with your inaccurate information. There is no reason why a caliper machined from billet is unsuitable for the road. They are not commonly used due to cost of machining, but the process of making a caliper from billet instead of a casting does not make it unsuitable.
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