I really don't think the MSP is rear biased. It just happens that the rear rotors diameter is larger in the rear. The rear rotors braking surface is still much smaller than the fronts no matter what the diameter.Puckpimp71 said:I'm not calling BS, but what are the advantages of having a FWD car with rear biased brakes? Maybe to help control fish-tailing??? (uhm)
t3ase said:Actually, some protege models have 4 lug hubs, don't they? Just be sure you get the 5 lug.![]()
With a slightly more rear brake bias you would be able to get the lock up of all four wheels to coincide closer in time. Fronts and then back closer in time. Make sense?Puckpimp71 said:I'm not calling BS, but what are the advantages of having a FWD car with rear biased brakes? Maybe to help control fish-tailing??? (uhm)
word, i didn't even catch that.mx3ownzj00 said:that's why i said ES, P5, MP3 and MSP.... the DX & LX have 4 lug hubs
brake biased isn't controlled simply by rotor diameter. the front still has larger pistons.
maybe you should slow down and just drive safely?TheJohnny said:I like big breaks, but I don't like the big price. But you get what you pay for. I push my MSP hard enough to get brake fade quite a bit. My girlfriend hates the way I drive, she thinks that I'm a formula 1 driver when I drive. Hell, this car is so much fun to drive hard I just can't help it. Better brakes would certainly help out. I tell my girlfriend that I need bigger brakes because it's only going to protect her more from my driving... he he!
Big brakes would look so nice with my 18's now. My brakes look so much smaller now, perhaps it's just because I can see them more with my new rims.
Oh, and in Johnny's defense, I have KVR rotors and pads on my show car. (I like big breaks too, I am waiting for my big break into the animation industry. I think he meant big "brakes" though.) (wink) They are leaps and bounds better than any other brakes I have seen on any other car I have ever driven. It isn't even a "big brake kit". I just used cross-drilled/slotted rotors for better cooling, etc. The pads are a carbon fiber/semi-metallic compound, and they are awesome. If you get out of any other car, and hit my brakes, you will send the passenger munching on the dashboard. The brakes are instantaneous, it stops on a dime. They are quiet too, and the rotors don't rust as bad as stock rotors (our MSP are the worst for rust). I will be getting new rotors and pads as soon as I have the money. I like how the cross-drilled or slotted rotors look, they won't rust, and they will stop you much quicker and safer than stock brakes. So it is not that we are crazy drivers and need these brakes to offset our crazy driving style. We just like brakes that perform well, and we are actually being safer using them. The stop and go traffic around here kills brakes, so I need something I can depend on to stop me when someone slams on their brakes or cuts in front of me.TheJohnny said:I like big breaks, but I don't like the big price. But you get what you pay for. I push my MSP hard enough to get brake fade quite a bit. My girlfriend hates the way I drive, she thinks that I'm a formula 1 driver when I drive. Hell, this car is so much fun to drive hard I just can't help it. Better brakes would certainly help out. I tell my girlfriend that I need bigger brakes because it's only going to protect her more from my driving... he he!
Big brakes would look so nice with my 18's now. My brakes look so much smaller now, perhaps it's just because I can see them more with my new rims.
Can you link me? All I see is Rotora cross-drilled disc replacements in the OEM size. They aren't even the correct size for the MSP. Those don't constitute as a BBK...nictlg7 said:My neighbor's company produced a big brake kit for our car. You can find their rotors on Apex Motorsports website. The name of the company is Rotora.