ElDiablo Viper
Enthusiast
I have StopTech Big Brake kit in front. Is it possible to install my stock fronts on the back? I know that it was possible on the Corvette.
There are brackets that will allow you to install the stock front calipers in the rear. I think viperspeed (Bobby Archer) sells them. The problem with doing that is your brake system's MC was not designed with those bigger piston sizes. What you will get is a spongy, long travel brake pedal. I recommend you get an aftermarket MC if you want to do something like that.
To give you some perspective, modifying the rear 36mm single piston caliper to a 40mm single piston gives you pretty close to ideal mechanical balance of front-to-rear clamping force. I think any greater piston area than that (i.e. the front calipers in the rear) would require a proportioning valve screwed down pretty good so you don't have too much rear brake.
Paolo, a residual pressure valve or a proportioning valve? I thought a residual valve was for drum brakes so they didn't require excess travel to reapply. A disc brake wouldn't (or shouldn't) do this since there's no return spring.
ElDi, your proportioning valve normally calibrates the front to rear balance. If you don't like the OEM calibration, you can usually get an adjustable one to dial in more rear brake. But, as we usually complain about, the rear Viper calipers are too small, and for lots of reasons, you shouldn't reverse a proportioning valve and decrease line pressure to the front. So you're left with making the rear caliper physically larger.
Paulo, Understand completely what you have, how it works, and how it would feel. And you can't argue with success, so I'm asking more for the why it works so well. Residual valves on drum brakes were installed so that the return springs didn't push fluid back into the MC; they allowed the shoes to be pushed back by the drum, but the the check valve was there to keep the spring from pushing it back even more. There aren't any springs in a caliper, so theory says you wouldn't need one, and some places say that it might cause a disc brake caliper to slightly drag. Do you recall what pressure setting they are?
Thanks.
Viper Speed sells the brackets to put front calipers on the rear... they are listed on their website...... what I am thinking is keep the OEM front calipers I have... and buy a second set of OEM front calipers for the rear?
Any thoughts?
Paulo, my experience with an aftermarket rear caliper (Wilwood Dynalite) was a spongy, long travel brake pedal. I got the MC from Roe Racing but you can get aftermarket pieces from Tilton, Baer, etc.
Would my stock E-brake work on my 02 GTS? I was told that if I went all 4 Stoptech that I would have to buy an older e-brake to fit it would the same go for stock fronts?