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Project DBA R35 GT-R: Upping Stopping Power with Brembo and Race Technologies

  • Mike Kojima

Project DBA R35 GT-R: Upping Stopping Power with Brembo and Race Technologies

by Mike Kojima

As you can see so far in this series, we are doing a lot of things to fight the weight of the GT-R. At 3800 pounds, the GT-R wheels throw around a lot of mass with a great deal of speed and grace, but it can only do it for short periods of time before the weight takes its toll, mostly on the brakes and tires.

Well, we are working on the tires part with bigger tires, less rotating and unsprung weight and tuneable suspension to get the rubber on the road better. Now its time to work on on the brakes.

One thing about the brakes is that the GT-R already comes with huge brakes, almost the biggest you can stuff in the 20″ wheels. The front brakes are huge 6-piston Brembo units, and the rear are 4-piston. The stock front rotors are large 390mm x 32.8mm and the rear are 380mm x 30mm.  Those are some serious brakes.

However, the GT-R is a seriously heavy, powerful and fast car, and to cope with this, Nissan uses a very aggressive brake pad that quickly wears the rotors and makes horrible dust. We would drive for a couple of miles to dry the brakes after washing the wheels and in that space, the wheels would get dusty again!

Big brakes, aggressive pads or not, you can’t fight physics, and when a GT-R is equipped with sticky tires, the brake will cry uncle after a few laps around the track. So, we will plan some mods that will let us have decent stopping on the street without killing rotors and making tons of corrosive dust, and it will be the biggest thing you can use that will fit in the stock diameter wheels to be the ultimate in stopping on the track with race pads.

Read more about Project GT-R!

 

Since the GT-R is heavily controlled by electronics, probably being one of the most heavily electronically controlled cars produced, we didn’t want to mess with the hydraulic proportioning of the brake system at all, hence our use of the stock calipers.

The system is engineered by Brembo and distributed/supported by Race Technologies LLC, which is Brembo’s performance partner in the USA and other select overseas markets. The Brembo R35 GT-R upgrade consists of 2 piece disc assemblies, caliper spacers, and brake pads.

 


The front Race Technologies rotor is 405mm in diameter and 34mm wide. This is an increase from the stock rotor, which is 390mm in diameter and 32mm wide. The new rotor weighs 29 lbs compared to the stock 26.4 lbs- an increase of 2.6 lbs.

The Race Technologies disc assembly is Brembo’s high thermal rotor, which means that the faces of the rotor are proportionally thicker and the vent air gap narrower to give the rotor a higher thermal mass and more heat capacity. This is one of the reasons why the rotor is heavier than stock.

The rotor is a full floating type with the rotors floating on large steel spacers. This gives a larger surface area for the braking forces to bear on to reduce wear on the aluminum hat. Floating rotors allow the friction ring of the rotor to move freely against the hat. This prevents the rotor from distorting into a cone shape with heat, this giving a harder pedal and better braking.

The rotor bolts have stainless leaf springs that put tension on the rotor to disc interface so the rotor won’t rattle against the hat. This is a good feature on a street car. Race cars don’t use these because who cares about noise!

 

The hat mounts the rotor on pillar vents machined into the hat which allows air circulation between the hat and the rotor. This helps keep heat out of the knuckle and hub bearings.

You can see how narrow the air vents are on the high thermal capacity spec rotor compared to others you might have seen. You can also see how thick the friction faces of the rotor are.

 

Related

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7 comments
  1. Duane Boren says:
    March 3, 2019 at 12:13 pm

    Great article! I can’t seem to find a dealer who sells the kit without including new calipers as part of a big brake kit.

    Would you mind pointing me in the right direction to purchase the set?

    Thanks so much!

    Reply
    1. Avatar photo Mike Kojima says:
      March 3, 2019 at 12:50 pm

      Sure, all you need to do is follow the handy links in the article! The supplier is https://www.racetechnologies.com/

      Reply
  2. Duane says:
    March 10, 2019 at 11:15 am

    Thanks Mike.

    I actually did look at their website and these are the two 405 rotors I found, but they come with new calipers: https://www.racetechnologies.com/products/compare/GT-S-1N-.9543A+GT-R-1N-.9543A

    I could not find the option you showed with 405 rotors that used the current calipers on the GT-R.

    Do you have a specific link to that exact setup?

    Reply
    1. Avatar photo Mike Kojima says:
      March 10, 2019 at 1:10 pm

      https://www.racetechnologies.com/products/brakekits/2014/nissan/gt-r-r35-0?vehicle=9422, check it the top of this page.

      Reply
  3. Duane says:
    March 11, 2019 at 10:10 am

    Thank you. Unfortunately, I have a 2009 and it doesn’t show those as an option on the website for a 2009.

    I am not sure why. It only shows 405s available in a complete kit.

    Do you know why?

    Reply
    1. Avatar photo Mike Kojima says:
      March 11, 2019 at 12:14 pm

      It probably is because the 2008-2012 GT-R uses a 380 x 34mm rotor. In 2012 the front rotor size went to a 390 x 32.8mm rotor. The Brembo rotors will fit the older cars but a thicker caliper spacer (and possibly longer bolts) should be used. I would call Race Technologies and ask them if they have the thicker spacer.

      Reply
  4. Michael says:
    April 24, 2019 at 5:26 pm

    Hi Kojima san! Can you let us know how these brakes have performed compared to stock after real world use? And perhaps if you’ve taken them to the track how that was.

    I’m about to order these same rotors and RT TS20 pads based on your review! Also were the pads noisy or dusty? Hopefully less than stock rotors/pads but curious how they compare to say AP J Hook + Endless MX-72 pads. Thanks!

    Reply

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