Originally posted by BarneyBoy
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Mercedes had a service campaign on their drilled rotors for cracking shortly after they released them. The only reason they offer them is because people think they perform better, at the end of the day the manufacturer is going to supply what people want including gaudy colours.
"NO DRILLING! Drilled holes in rotors often used for "show" are prone to cracking and catastrophic failure. The holes create stress risers which will lead to this sort of failure. Additionally, drilled holes do not improve cooling, rotary-vane rotors lose efficiency when drilled because cooling air does not not pass through the rotor circumferentially but is instead prematurely evacuated by the holes.."
No ***** - however Mischa wants bang for buck and not a car to run every weekend in the Australian Production Car Championship. That's why IMO I suggested R32 discs and callipers (undrilled and unslotted BTW!)
Attached: pic of brakes used by Tossers to stop a 2 tonne car from 400kph as inefficiently as possible. Braking described by Gordon Murray (an initial critic of the Veyron) as "phenomenal".

"The Veyron's brakes use cross-drilled, radially-vented Carbon fibre-reinforced Silicon Carbide (C/SiC) composite discs, manufactured by SGL Carbon, which have a much greater resistance to brake fade when compared with conventional cast iron discs. The aluminium alloy monobloc brake calipers are made by AP Racing; the fronts have eight[12] titanium pistons and the rear calipers have six pistons. Bugatti claims maximum deceleration of 1.3 Gs on road tyres."
Unhappily it goes to show that there is no one definitive answer here. It depends on what you need the brakes for. For racing, perhaps slots are the way to go. But racing brakes are a poor choice for the road.
For street use solid rotors with a decent pad. For more more extreme usage including the street use a slotted rotor with a decent pad. Avoid drilled and drilled/slotted unless you're after a tosser look and like to have your rotor disintegrate at some point in the future.
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