SWB brake upgrade - summary?
I have read many of the treads regarding SWB brake upgrade (front and rear) to vented rotors, but are still a little confused...
Are there of the shelf parts for this kind of upgrade for the 64-68 cars or is it fabricated kits for this(rear)? It would be very helpful if anyone could make a list what parts to use and what has to be modified/machined etc.
Also how to get anti roll bar at the rear on the non-S/L cars, especially the control arm fixing points.
I am greatful for help in these issues!
4 Attachment(s)
As posted on Pelican in 2006
944 Rear Vented Rotor on a 1967 911S
Yes the 1983-86 944 rear rotor can be modified to fit the vented rears on the 1967 911S. The outside dimension is machined to 285mm. The machinist used the brake drum lathe and reversed the cutting head to do the outside (as opposed to doing the inside of a drum brake). Minimal material was removed and it leaves the wear indicators on the outside edge still in place.
The two retaining screw holes need to be repositioned on the 944 rotors to match those on the stub axle of the 67. I brought a stub axel along to the machinist. We wrapped brass shim stock around the studs, slid the new over the existing rotor to center them together and drilled the holes. Then counter sunk the holes to match the metric screws. We roughing them in using a wood screw counter sink bit that was shaped to the correct bevel - and finished with a modified die grinding stone bit, total time to drill, shape and finish maybe 4 min each.
From a second post
This set of regular 944 rear's (1983-1986) have been brought into 1967 911S spec's.
The outside is machined (on a truck brake drum lathe) to 285mm.
Add the two set screw holes in the appropriate locations.
The critical spec of "a" is correct at 65mm. (The wore out S disc measured 64mm?)
The inside dimension for the emergency brake shoes is at the correct 180mm.
The differences are:
the hub face hole is at 102 vs. 90mm - but this does not matter cus to doesn't ride on anything.
That hat surface is 6mm vs. 9mm. It is thinner than the original part, but you get 3mm longer stud contact surface.
The vain openings are inset from the rear edge but the Emergency Brake shoe still has 90% contact.
With the wheel mounted you can't see any of those items.
The weight is 11.5 lbs for the wore out and 12 lbs for the fresh disc. With a thinner face and a larger hole I would have thought it would be lighter - so there is more material in the disk surface for heat sink.
Minimal machine cost allowed this to be a good option for the 1967 911S.
Bob