GR86 GR86 - Brake Upgrade Guide

Hey @Will300, what discs are needed for these calipers? Do oem rears work with them?

No standard OEM rear disc won't work as they are 290mm. You need discs from the Performance Pack equipped cars, with 316mm.

Ive just gone for MTEC4121 with these calipers. DBA42656-10 were out of stock everywhere (Amber Performance quoted 12 weeks)

There's lots of options for DBA discs that are instock, just the 4000 plain which are currently out of stock.

Plain: https://www.dbabrakes.co.uk/discbrakes?number=32001&name=DBA2656-10
Street T2: https://www.dbabrakes.co.uk/discbrakes?number=32235&name=DBA2656S-10
4000 - T3: https://www.dbabrakes.co.uk/discbrakes?number=22837&name=DBA42656S-10
Kit: https://www.dbabrakes.co.uk/discbrakes?number=89838&name=DBA42656-10-1521XP

Another option: https://www.centricparts.com/disc-brake-rotor-6853991

Thanks, What pads did you for @Alistair31 ? What shape are they?

Pad shape: WVA number
21580, 23323

They are a common brembo pad shape, used on Evo's, STi, Nissans, etc, so there is lots of pad choice.
 
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Godspeed kit arrived in good time. Shame I need to wait weeks on a fitting slot.

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Morning all.

Just had an email from Ian at Godspeed. The rear kits are now in stock. This includes a set of new STI calipers (powdercoated in a colour of your choice), 316mm discs, pads and all necessary fitting equipment.

They bought in 5 sets of calipers as a trial to see how they sell. They're available to order now at £695.

Thanks to @Will300 and his continued work on this, we can see that doing this yourself would cost approx £672, so you're paying £23 more to have a full kit from one place. Pretty impressive value.

To order, email: [email protected] and don't forget to say you got referred from here. The more support he gets from here the more I can improve our terms of supply :)
 
Are they OEM disks and pads out of interest? Does "fitting equipment" include new hoses? Seems like a good option, especially if I can colour match the fronts.
 
Does anyone know if an EBC 330mm BBK will fit a gr86 and if so will it clear OEM wheels?
 
Godspeed kit arrived in good time. Shame I need to wait weeks on a fitting slot.
@Alistair31 Following this with great interest mate. I'm pretty sure Duncan at Hypertech will do a sound job. Let me know how it all turns out (costs etc) as I might have to do something with mine and get it in before Duncan decides to retire in the next year or so ... 🫣
 
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Talking to Godspeed, learned that they have a kit prepared for the GC8 that is a bolt on and keeps BRZ brake bias (calculated and update the brake bias file, will upload later here). Would not need to change rear caliper/rotor, saving mass where is not needed to upgrade.

Probably this will be my go to as I did not have a response from Reyland for a 304 rotor with the 9200 ap calipers (which was my preferred solution earlier).

 
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The 330mm Reyland kit will be absolutely fine but they’ve not been good at answering their emails recently.
The 330mm Reyland shifts the bias forward, for a proper balance of geometric bias, requires rear PP Brembos. I do not see a reason to upgrade the rears as I do not see any fade or degradation on those.
 
@Will300 will be able to elaborate but I don’t think that’s anything to worry about, the difference is so small, or even nullified by careful pad choice. I’m currently running OEM rear pads and EBC RP1 (lower mu vs RPX) front and it drives perfectly (albeit with some noise that was expected)
 
@Will300 will be able to elaborate but I don’t think that’s anything to worry about, the difference is so small, or even nullified by careful pad choice. I’m currently running OEM rear pads and EBC RP1 (lower mu vs RPX) front and it drives perfectly (albeit with some noise that was expected)
Overall I prefer setting my cars with a good geometric balance, so I can choose rear pads with lower overall friction and better modulation, that normally allows the ebd to work better, get shorter stopping distance and reduce likelihood of issues.
But I am sure others may differ and run different setups.

Sometimes, more front bias may work well. Specifically when you’re reaching much higher deceleration levels than initial setup. This can hurt trail braking sometimes. Anyways, trial and error and finding what works for your setup (tires, suspension, weight, aero) is not a cookie cutter.