Similar cars. Different missions. Very different equipment.
The street car’s brakes must perform at a high level while also remaining civil—no noise, no discomfort. The ones on the race car have a narrower purpose: to help win races. Both operate on the simple premise of converting kinetic energy into heat, but parsing how each one meets its specific engineering challenges is a deeper dive than you might imagine.
Street Brakes
Even a machine as exotic as the latest Ford GT—the brand’s half-million-dollar, 660-horsepower supercar—is still primarily designed for street use. It’s fast, yes, “but 99% of the time, it is a road car,” notes Benjamin Pohl, Brembo North America’s senior program manager for original equipment. “Noise, wear, dust: Consumers care a lot about those things.”
How the brakes feel is also very important to the end user, he continues: “They don’t want to feel brake judder on their drive to work.”
At the same time, these brakes must be able to handle track use that Pohl characterizes as short-duration, limited and nonprofessional—basically a track day, with drivers tapping maybe 80% of the car’s capability.
Brake photograph courtesy Brembo, GT photograph courtesy Ford
1. Pad Life
The 10mm-thick pads found at the front of the street Ford GT should last 30,000–40,000 miles, according to our source at Brembo.
2. Piston Size
Both the race and street brake calipers feature six pistons up front and four pistons out back. Piston size differs, though. Federal regulations state that, should the power assist fail, the street car still must slow at a certain rate at a certain pedal pressure. That typically dictates larger pistons.
3. Anti-Rattle Clips
The street calipers get anti-rattle clips to keep things quieter and control the retraction of the pad.
4. Caliper Life
A street caliper is designed to deliver hundreds of thousands of cycles over years of service, in some cases the entire life of the vehicle. “That might drive a caliper to be heavier,” Pohl says. In this case, a cast-aluminum caliper met the cost and operational goals.
5. Caliper Seals
As the pads wear, rubber accordion dust boots keep foreign debris off the caliper pistons.
6. ABS
The street Ford GT, like every other road-going vehicle sold today, features ABS.
7. Rotors
The production version of the Ford GT fills its 20-inch wheels with two-piece carbon ceramic brake rotors: 394×36mm fronts, 360×28mm rears. According to Brembo, these rotors weigh 50% less than traditional cast-iron pieces.
8. Friction Material
The pads must operate under a wide range of temperatures while remaining quiet, civil and relatively dust-free. Federal standards are currently phasing out copper and other heavy metals from brake pads.
9. Weight
A fully loaded, cast-aluminum front caliper for the street Ford GT weighs about 16 pounds. “Racing guys have the opportunity to remove weight where we can’t,” says Pohl.
10. Cooling
The road car is one of the few street models delivered from the factory with caliper ducts.
11. Cost
Ford initially promised to build 1000 copies of the Ford GT over four model years. “Even 250 units per year, that’s a lot of units,” explains Pohl. “We have to design a caliper for high-volume manufacturing.”
Brake Issues?
“Nine times out of 10, it comes back to cooling,” explains Mike Messina, manager of racing at Brembo North America. “Take whatever you think you need and double it.”
Racing Brakes
The factory-backed Ford GT race effort landed with a splash, winning big at its Le Mans debut in 2016 as part of a 1-3-4 finish. Then the success came stateside, with class wins at Daytona for 2017 and 2018.
“We have more freedom to make exactly what is needed for the intended use,” explains Mike Messina, manager of racing at Brembo North America. “In some ways it’s easier. I don’t have to worry about how loud it is.”
Brembo’s only mission when creating the brakes for the race car? Winning races. Any other concern, including cost, was secondary. Messina used a tire analogy to explain these brakes: “We’re making racing slicks.”
Brake photograph courtesy Brembo, GT race rar photograph courtesy Ford
1. Pad Life
The front calipers are built around 30mm-thick pads, enough material for 18 to 20 hours at Daytona. Some teams have run all 24 hours at Le Mans on a single set of pads. “I don’t recommend it,” says Messina, “but it’s been done.” Each 1mm in pad width requires 2mm in caliper width. “All of this adds up,” Messina continues, noting that a race caliper can wind up being considerably wider than its road-going counterpart.
2. Piston Size
Racing calipers tend to feature smaller-diameter pistons, as these yield more driver control. “Drivers like to feel something that’s very mechanical,” explains Messina.
3. Anti-Rattle Clips
The race car doesn’t get these.
4. Caliper Life
Race calipers are rebuilt between races.
5. Caliper Seals
The street car’s accordion seals would melt under competition conditions, so the race calipers just get a primary seal.
6. ABS
No ABS for the race car.
7. Rotors
The IMSA and WEC homologation specs for the race car call the shots here, requiring 18-inch wheels and cast-iron rotors: 380×35mm fronts, 355×32mm rears. As on the street car, the two-piece rotors feature an aluminum center hat.
8. Friction Material
On track, the brakes operate within a narrow temperature window and don’t need to bother with street manners. “The race car can be so much more focused on a narrow range of operations,” says Messina. “Most race pads don’t wake up until 300 degrees Celsius.”
9. Weight
Thanks to the five-axis machining work, which adds to the manufacturing cost, the front calipers for the race version of the Ford GT weigh 7.25 pounds.
10. Cooling
“So much attention paid to cooling on the road car helped the race car,” explains Messina. “In the case of the Ford, it was a pretty straight shot. All we had to do was adapt what was there on the road car.”
11. Cost
Brembo says that the race caliper would retail for three to five times as much as the street caliper.
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