TBK
Well-Known Member
How many days/laps did the PMU CR fronts last? Overall thoughts? Very likely going to be my next padALso, this track COOKED my PMU CR fronts. They crumbled when I removed them.
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How many days/laps did the PMU CR fronts last? Overall thoughts? Very likely going to be my next padALso, this track COOKED my PMU CR fronts. They crumbled when I removed them.
Car looks good.More CMP photos from a new friend, someone @DC5UPRA supra brought along.
ALso, this track COOKED my PMU CR fronts. They crumbled when I removed them.
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How much of the pad would you guess was used in a weekend?Car looks good.
CMP is very tough on brakes. I have been running CSG C21/C11s and they had no issues, I've run CMP twice this year. FWIW.
My current C21s in the front have been on the car for 3 or 4 events, and I feel like the pad depth has barely changed. I haven't measured the depth, I should grab a set of brake pad calipers to actually chart it.How much of the pad would you guess was used in a weekend?
Skip the CR and go straight to the 999. Way better of a pad with no downsides to the CR.How many days/laps did the PMU CR fronts last? Overall thoughts? Very likely going to be my next pad
Yep, Rizen is right. I've done endurance stuff here with Lemons in several different cars, time trials, and a couple of HPDEs. It's pretty brutal on brakes, regardless of the platform.CMP is very tough on brakes. I have been running CSG C21/C11s and they had no issues, I've run CMP twice this year. FWIW.
That's the plan next, 999s.Skip the CR and go straight to the 999. Way better of a pad with no downsides to the CR.
You could say that, lolI'll assume you guys enjoyed the kink. It's a great equalizer, and a fantastic way to set up a pass for that next left.
The toyota engineering club team that campaigns the endurance gr corolla buys pmu 999s from Blackhawk Japan just like the rest of usSkip the CR and go straight to the 999. Way better of a pad with no downsides to the CR.
Good to know. Haven't done CMS cuz I always heard it wasn't worth the risk (walls).CMP being my home track means I'm also going to say it's rough on brakes. If your car can do 20 minute sessions and not cook the pads at CMP then you've solved any brake problems you'll have going forward.
The wear rate is roughly double that of VIR or Road Atlanta.
I took my Supra to Charlotte Motor Speedway yesterday, and with the "new" chicane setup used for track nights I think it's close to CMP for brake wear. Lots of blasting down a short straight only to scrub off a ton of speed into a bus stop, then right back on the Roval. I had gotten wheels/tires from TireRack and evidently they don't use the same high adhesion wheel weights I do so the weights all melted on the front wheels after the first session. Luckily I had brought the stock wheels/tires so I swapped to those.
I honestly think CMS is a reasonable track to run now with the way it's setup. It used to be a snooze fest, but the chicanes really break up the Roval and make it more challenging. I'd done a champcar race there prior without the chicanes and it was considerably less fun vs CMP.
No different than NCM in my mind for walls. There are a few sections with basically zero runoff before a wall but it’s also generally not a place you should be out of control if you have any semblance of experience. NASCAR banking is always a hoot though, but can also be intimidating given the consequences of pushing too far there.Good to know. Haven't done CMS cuz I always heard it wasn't worth the risk (walls).
If that was actually true then anyone going to a track day with a viper, ZL1 1LE, Z06, McLaren, etc would be fast. We all know that is very untrue.700whp then sure i'd be faster easily but thats 0 challenge, going for power wars, its like a shortcut