Cajundaddy wrote:Hello David,
A monster car like that one would benefit from monster brake pads. My personal favorite: Raybestos ST-43. This is a race pad that is good to 1200F, lasts forever, and is pretty easy on rotors. When stone cold driving around town they stop the car just fine but get better when warmed up.
Downside: They are not the cheap and dirty solution and they are sometimes noisy when cold.
Porterfield in Costa Mesa has them and the ST-43 is one of the best pads they sell for the games we play. Check em out.

+1. The ST-43 is a very good choice.
Also, look into the Porterfield brand R-4 and R-4S Carbon-Kevlar pads. The R-4S is a street pad, the R-4 more of a track pad (R-4's squeak a bit on the street). I've used these for years on a 944 and my 911 w/ 930 calipers with great consistency. The R-4 is my personal choice. They are fairly low-dust, handle heat very well, will consistently slow you with very little fade on the track, are "cost-concious" and are easier on rotors than the Hawks. Hawks have a high metal content that 'eat' rotors a little faster. With your 'Heavy-Chevy' going as fast as it does, braking and brake fade are critical issues for safety and fast laps.
Talk to the folks at Porterfield, they are very helpful and knowledgeable.
Hope that helps.

Dan Chambers"It's
just a "well prepared" street car ... or a very, very well-mannered track car."

1983 SC #91 3.6L, "Black Pearl" Livery
1987 944 (gone but not forgotten)