JohnnyT
New Member
I briefly discussed this in the chatbox but I'll spill all the beans here...
The shop that did the work on my C5Z (Doug Rippie Motorsports) posted on the local board saying they're looking for a test mule for a new brake system. Ironically, I was looking at brakes yesterday but certainly nothing expensive as this. I talked to Randy (shop welder with a keyboard) last night and he game me the basics. Alcon is the company that's sponsoring this - I'd never heard of them before but they're basically the top dog in the racing scene. They do $50k kits for Nascar, off road, open wheel, late model and formula car kits. The kit they want to test out is a performance street/track kit valued at $8k and is complete with slotted rotors (14" front and rear), calipers (6 piston fronts, 4 piston rears), pads (street and track variants), brackets, hats, hardware, fluid, etc. The rotors alone are $500 a pop so this is definitely some quality stuff. I believe this is the kit: http://www.alconusa.com/client_images/files/92_593.pdf
Being the 'test mule,' there's a few requirements. Initially, Randy said the car must attend 3 road race events this year. After talking on the phone with him it sounds like he's going to try to either A) do a private test run at BIR or B) head up to Road America and see if Alcon will cover the travel and hospitality costs. Now, I've never done road racing before but that's actually a good thing in this case as rookie drivers wear out brakes quicker. My car's not exactly road race ready, but Randy said he'll slap on an oil cooler for me and we can likely use a spare set of race wheels and tires for the runs. Not only will I gain racing experience from this, but I'll get a killer deal on an incredible brake kit if I decide to buy after testing - Randy said it'll likely cost $2k if I decide to purchase (75% off sounds like a good deal to me).
Being that it's only a few runs I'm not too worried about the wear on the system. It sounds like we'll use track pads and if I decide to buy, they'll slap in the street pads. If I crack a rotor they'll have spares on hand to swap out. They won't leave me in the dark if anything goes wrong - DRM has been good to me since the beginning and I have faith in these guys. I wasn't exactly planning on even spending $2k for a brake kit but this sounds like too good of a deal to pass up....
What are your guys' thoughts? I'd like to get your input.
The shop that did the work on my C5Z (Doug Rippie Motorsports) posted on the local board saying they're looking for a test mule for a new brake system. Ironically, I was looking at brakes yesterday but certainly nothing expensive as this. I talked to Randy (shop welder with a keyboard) last night and he game me the basics. Alcon is the company that's sponsoring this - I'd never heard of them before but they're basically the top dog in the racing scene. They do $50k kits for Nascar, off road, open wheel, late model and formula car kits. The kit they want to test out is a performance street/track kit valued at $8k and is complete with slotted rotors (14" front and rear), calipers (6 piston fronts, 4 piston rears), pads (street and track variants), brackets, hats, hardware, fluid, etc. The rotors alone are $500 a pop so this is definitely some quality stuff. I believe this is the kit: http://www.alconusa.com/client_images/files/92_593.pdf
Being the 'test mule,' there's a few requirements. Initially, Randy said the car must attend 3 road race events this year. After talking on the phone with him it sounds like he's going to try to either A) do a private test run at BIR or B) head up to Road America and see if Alcon will cover the travel and hospitality costs. Now, I've never done road racing before but that's actually a good thing in this case as rookie drivers wear out brakes quicker. My car's not exactly road race ready, but Randy said he'll slap on an oil cooler for me and we can likely use a spare set of race wheels and tires for the runs. Not only will I gain racing experience from this, but I'll get a killer deal on an incredible brake kit if I decide to buy after testing - Randy said it'll likely cost $2k if I decide to purchase (75% off sounds like a good deal to me).
Being that it's only a few runs I'm not too worried about the wear on the system. It sounds like we'll use track pads and if I decide to buy, they'll slap in the street pads. If I crack a rotor they'll have spares on hand to swap out. They won't leave me in the dark if anything goes wrong - DRM has been good to me since the beginning and I have faith in these guys. I wasn't exactly planning on even spending $2k for a brake kit but this sounds like too good of a deal to pass up....
What are your guys' thoughts? I'd like to get your input.