I don't mean this in a rude way. But literally the first post has a giant list of cars you can use to search for.
I mean, it's only 18 cars with specific model, year and rotor size. How do you expect that to help anyone?
Think, man.
I don't mean this in a rude way. But literally the first post has a giant list of cars you can use to search for.
Nope, just bought decal and applied over. Powdercoater recommended against as he said some decals are not really high temp and they’ve had peeling in the oven and stencils were really difficult for the smaller pieces. Decals are like 8 bucks so I don’t mind.Did you paint them to say Brembo?
I guess I should clear up the source of my issue: if you search the caliper part numbers, and look at the list of vehicles compatible on the parts website (ex: https://www.getporscheparts.com/oem-parts/porsche-caliper-front-left-95b615123f), they list the base, GTS, S, and Turbo as compatable, which is not true. These calipers are off of a base model Macan with the 2 liter engine (and maybe some others, but that is the one I confirmed to be true), but specifically NOT off of a Macan S, GTS or Turbo of most years. That's why I initially just blindly searched for Macan pads without confirming that they're the same. I later referenced said list on the first post.I don't mean this in a rude way. But literally the first post has a giant list of cars you can use to search for.
I guess I should clear up the source of my issue: if you search the caliper part numbers, and look at the list of vehicles compatible on the parts website (ex: https://www.getporscheparts.com/oem-parts/porsche-caliper-front-left-95b615123f), they list the base, GTS, S, and Turbo as compatable, which is not true. These calipers are off of a base model Macan with the 2 liter engine (and maybe some others, but that is the one I confirmed to be true), but specifically NOT off of a Macan S, GTS or Turbo of most years. That's why I initially just blindly searched for Macan pads without confirming that they're the same. I later referenced said list on the first post.
Same, whether the even bigger brakes would fit our cars was the first thing that came to mind for me. Then my wallet became scared.Actually, I think you're wrong, depending on year. These were the S GTS and turbo calipers for early model years and the base got the version of these calipers that fit with smaller rotors. These became the base when they increase the rotor size and piston count in the S. GTS and turbo.
I'm curious if the 6 piston calipers would fit our cars.
Same, whether the even bigger brakes would fit our cars was the first thing that came to mind for me. Then my wallet became scared.
Forget the macan. Do as GTIFan had suggested and search one of the other popular cars. I used EVO X as they are popular track cars and pretty much used the same pad throughout the many years of production.Same, whether the even bigger brakes would fit our cars was the first thing that came to mind for me. Then my wallet became scared.
Forget the macan. Do as GTIFan had suggested and search one of the other popular cars. I used EVO X as they are popular track cars and pretty much used the same pad throughout the many years of production.
There are way too many macan years and I did the same thing at first going to Porsche dealership and having been told even a 2016 macan has 16 pad variants.
Porsche parts counter guy recommended using a specific macan vin to look it up. I went out to their used car lot and found a macan with my caliper and took the vin. Then I was told that they didn’t have the pads in stock… back to internet purchase and I got a Z26 power stop for street use.
Does anyone have suggestion on where you purchase PFC / performance friction pads? I haven’t found a online retailer that carry these yet. I am looking for compound 11z
I was having difficulty ordering off of porterfield's website, so I ordered some R4-S's from here: https://www.lpiracing.com/store/pc/...gory=762&make=36&model=2464&year=2003&submit= Came out to cheaper too!https://www.porterfield-brakes.com/categories/Performance Friction/11 Compound.html
Porterfield is the go to source for many different brands of race pads.
Alternatively, I've heard good things about CounterSpace Garage CSG spec race pads as well:
https://www.counterspacegarage.com/
@burgerkong, thanks for the Porterfield link.
I looked through the various applications but they didn't have the 1001.11 part number which is the one we need for our Macan calipers.
@MeltedSolid thanks for the link. I eventually went with the R4's as it is half the price of PFC 11's. Would be a good first race pad to try on these calipers.
Took off all 4 wheels to bleed again and try to fix the loose dust boot. I tried 3 different dust boots and each one kept popping out. I applied some posi-quiet around the dust boot, seated it, and let it dry and that did the trick. All dust boots are seated properly now.
For the bleed I made sure the parking brake was off and bled at 30+psi. Fronts were good, but rears had a lot of bubbles that took a good half liter of fluid on each side to get it all out. Brakes feel amazing now. Overall pushed out about 0.75L to the fronts and 1.25L to the rears.
Very nice and thanks for the write up about dust boot.Took off all 4 wheels to bleed again and try to fix the loose dust boot. I tried 3 different dust boots and each one kept popping out. I applied some posi-quiet around the dust boot, seated it, and let it dry and that did the trick. All dust boots are seated properly now.
For the bleed I made sure the parking brake was off and bled at 30+psi. Fronts were good, but rears had a lot of bubbles that took a good half liter of fluid on each side to get it all out. Brakes feel amazing now. Overall pushed out about 0.75L to the fronts and 1.25L to the rears.
*edit* After driving about 100 miles I'm happy with the upgrade. The brakes feel the way I imagined and can modulate the brakes right when I press the pedal. They definitely feel better than the stock PP calipers.
Very nice and thanks for the write up about dust boot.
curious how did you remove the original boots?
what is posi-quiet? Would red rubber grease do the same trick?