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Brake ducting


Guest Anonymous

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Guest Anonymous

Hey guys, it seems the only good way to properly add cool air to my front brakes is by routing a hose through the unibody, in the strut tower area just above the frame rail. Since I don't have any added structual support there, is it a good idea to cut a 2.5--3" hole in the strut tower?

 

BTW, I'm thinking about a vented disc upgrade et al, would a caliper "scoop" be enough?

 

Thanks for yur advice.

 

Jon

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Don't cut a hole in the structure near the strut tower! As stated above, run a 3" duct from whatever air dam opening you have along the lower the inside of the fenderwell. Then route it forward of the strut to a can that surrounds the solid rotor. You need to get air to both sides of the solid rotor or it will warp. If you run a vented rotor, run the air to the center hub area.

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Guest Anonymous

Thanks for the link.

 

I've been looking for a good source for silicone hose, though they appear more expensive than Racer Parts Warehouse or Pegasus.

 

Thanks again...

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Guest greimann

When you do decide where to run the ducting, consider using a proper hose for the job. One source I like to use is industrial supply catalogs like McMaster-Carr, Grainger and MSC. Much better source of fittings and hose than Home Depot.

 

For the ducting check out this source at McMaster-Carr:

 

http://www.mcmaster.com/catalog/108/html/0170.html

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Originally posted by johnc:

Don't cut a hole in the structure near the strut tower! As stated above, run a 3" duct from whatever air dam opening you have along the lower the inside of the fenderwell. Then route it forward of the strut to a can that surrounds the solid rotor. You need to get air to both sides of the solid rotor or it will warp. If you run a vented rotor, run the air to the center hub area.

John, could you elaborate on what you mean by a "can" to surround the rotor? I understand the need to somehow deflect air to both sides of a solid rotor, just having a hard time picturing it in my head - know of any web links that may show this? BTW, I have plenty of "Bud" cans - will they work? cheers.gif
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What Tim posted above...

 

Since the stock front rotors are solid, you need to air to both faces and the only easy way to do it is to build a structure that surrounds the rotor and moves some air from the inside face (where the hose connects), over the outer diameter of the rotor to the outside face.

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