Black Diamond Pad's ?
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Black Diamond Pad's. Anyone have experiance with these ?
Tar Ox have stopped doing the fast road/track pad for the e30, and the black diamond compound is simular. Need to no if they last well on a track day. Or do they turn to jelly in 5 min's. Also is there a load of dust given out or not. ?
Tia.
Tar Ox have stopped doing the fast road/track pad for the e30, and the black diamond compound is simular. Need to no if they last well on a track day. Or do they turn to jelly in 5 min's. Also is there a load of dust given out or not. ?
Tia.
- Kos
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personaly i think they are more of a gimmik pad for "fast road" use which is never near as hard as track work
EBC reds or yellows are my current choice
EBC reds or yellows are my current choice
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If your ebc experience isn't recent, then they might be worth another look for you as they've changed their compounds in the last year or so.zaust wrote:Kos, I don't like the ecb pad's, Had both yellow and red. Just not for my style of driving. If no one rates the diamonds then I will use the frodo's, Just didn't really want to spend that much..
- Kos
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cutting cost on a track pad is usualy a bad idea
what exactly did you not like about them ?
the reds are spot on for road use and i mean normal road use ( my mum could drive the car with out crapping herself at the 1st set of lights) and they were fine around a track for 50 odd laps, i'll be looking into getting some yellows next time around
DS2500's area gread pad, but thats why they are expensive
what exactly did you not like about them ?
the reds are spot on for road use and i mean normal road use ( my mum could drive the car with out crapping herself at the 1st set of lights) and they were fine around a track for 50 odd laps, i'll be looking into getting some yellows next time around
DS2500's area gread pad, but thats why they are expensive
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- Kos
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yup, agreed
Anything else comparable is twice the price.
Some one I know did a whole season in the kumho championship In a 318is e36 on a single set of yellows, ok the car is a lot lighter than a hearse with a boat anchor for an engine, but a race has is driven a lot harder than a road car.
I'd say the most I'd push my car on the road is maybe 60 to 70 percent of what I do on the track.
Anything else comparable is twice the price.
Some one I know did a whole season in the kumho championship In a 318is e36 on a single set of yellows, ok the car is a lot lighter than a hearse with a boat anchor for an engine, but a race has is driven a lot harder than a road car.
I'd say the most I'd push my car on the road is maybe 60 to 70 percent of what I do on the track.
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It might be worth your while to buy a few sets, if you rate them so highly.zaust wrote:After a little rining round this morning, I gota smile on my face. Shop near luton have set's of the tar ox left. Over the moon now.
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Be careful lwhen you order.. frodo is a hobbit and due to the hairy feet may catch fire under heavy braking.zaust wrote:Kos, I don't like the ecb pad's, Had both yellow and red. Just not for my style of driving. If no one rates the diamonds then I will use the frodo's, Just didn't really want to spend that much..
Ferrodo pads however are very good but cant sing nor dance so less use at parties.
HTH
Can I ask where you got 'em and how much you paid?zaust wrote:
I have just ordered a set of Yellow stuff too. Did not realize how cheap they were. At least I can do a back to back comparison now.
PM me if you don't want to do this on the forum (For the record I think my yellows were either £50 or £54, I can't remember).
- BaldBimmer
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Where are you getting your ebc pads? Everywhere I look for pads for my 1991 318is only do greenstuff or Ferodo 2500. Ferodo's are a bit pricey for me at the minute. 

I don't know if the iS uses different pads than the rest of the range, but this is where I got mine.BaldBimmer wrote:Where are you getting your ebc pads? Everywhere I look for pads for my 1991 318is only do greenstuff or Ferodo 2500. Ferodo's are a bit pricey for me at the minute.
***Click me***
Unless you get enough heat in them, the on-road bite/performance is only adequate and nothing special. Have you tried them on the track?zaust wrote:You can go to ebc direct off the net![]()
I'm not very impressed with them tbh, Will give them another week to make sure but they don't seem to be even a patch on the tar-ox or red dot's.
Me to, but I want your opinion on something (as I think it was you that mentioned it elsewhere). I'm going to add extra cooling, and I think you suggested that this would be a bad thing, but what I meant to say was I'm adding cooling to the disc surface not the pads. As I understand it, even though pads like these need heat they get it from the friction generated and not from the temperature of the disc. So if I add cooling to the disc face it shouldn't lower the operating temperature of the pad, right?AlpineAde wrote:Agreed. Don't assess the Yellows as a street pad. If you can keep heat in them they're OK but their forte is the track. I love mine.
Or, on the other hand, I could be as wrong as a wrong thing in wrong-world on "wrong things go free day"???
- AlpineAde
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Ah, I'm with you now...
There is nothing wrong with what you're suggesting. The last track day I was at had a fellow in a 325iS who had made his own ducting. It was done very well indeed and he was very happy with the performance of it.
There is nothing wrong with what you're suggesting. The last track day I was at had a fellow in a 325iS who had made his own ducting. It was done very well indeed and he was very happy with the performance of it.
I've seen something suitable (silicone I think) and it's not exepensive, so I think I'll give it a go. After reading more about brakes in here I'm also wondering if there maybe work I can do on the linkage/servo too. I can live with a relatively low powered engine (150k 325) but I'd like some bloody good brakes please, lol.AlpineAde wrote:Ah, I'm with you now...
There is nothing wrong with what you're suggesting. The last track day I was at had a fellow in a 325iS who had made his own ducting. It was done very well indeed and he was very happy with the performance of it.
They do take a little while to bed in, but I've found them to be pretty good as a road pad.zaust wrote:I have given them some hard treatment, And they seem ok when they are very hot but not so good when only warm, But they are getting better.
I run front brake cooling ducks on my E30. No problems except when driving on the street in cold weather. The front brakes stay very cool, but the rears run at much high temperatures (not cooled) introducing A LOT of rear brake bias. I suggest blocking the ducts on the street, and unblocking for the track. I will find a picture of my ducting setup as an example.

Cheers,
Michael.
I think if I angle the pipework upwards from the intake duct then it should prevent any stones etc from being fired at the face of the disc.MillRat wrote:I run front brake cooling ducks on my E30. No problems except when driving on the street in cold weather. The front brakes stay very cool, but the rears run at much high temperatures (not cooled) introducing A LOT of rear brake bias. I suggest blocking the ducts on the street, and unblocking for the track. I will find a picture of my ducting setup as an example.
Why not put some mesh over the intakes and paint the mesh black. You will never know it was there.N00b wrote:I think if I angle the pipework upwards from the intake duct then it should prevent any stones etc from being fired at the face of the disc.MillRat wrote:I run front brake cooling ducks on my E30. No problems except when driving on the street in cold weather. The front brakes stay very cool, but the rears run at much high temperatures (not cooled) introducing A LOT of rear brake bias. I suggest blocking the ducts on the street, and unblocking for the track. I will find a picture of my ducting setup as an example.
I have mesh over mine incase I end up in one of the many gravel traps around my local race track.

Cheers,
Michael.
It'd need to be pretty fine mesh, but even so I don't think it would hamper the air feed. Good call!MillRat wrote:Why not put some mesh over the intakes and paint the mesh black. You will never know it was there.
I have mesh over mine incase I end up in one of the many gravel traps around my local race track.
