ORIGINAL: Neil Haughey
Just a couple or three points.
Best place to remove weight is from the front end, makes a huge difference to the cars dynamics which is why you will see that every ground up built 944 race car has fibreglass everything up front (wings / bonnet / bumper cover / badge panel) with no head lights.
I was convinced for a long time that I needed better brakes but two things changed my mind:
1) Using proper Pagid race pads. In my case yellow up front and orange in the back. The balance is perfect and whilst the system always boils the fluid I have never had the brakes go off. I have also used the EMC cooling duct kit but recently haven't had the hoses on and it hasn't made a huge difference.
2) Following Alex Eacock and having tuition from Ben Demetriou. Between them Alex won the championship last year and has something like 30+ race wins, Ben won his class in the championship 3 times and held/holds several class lap records some of which are barely believable they are that fast. Neither of those guys brake that late, instead easing up before turning in so that the car is nicely set up to get on the throttle really really early way before the apex a lot of the time. Those guys have demonstrated that this is the fastest way to drive these cars. Ben drove my car at Combe the other week and honestly I can't see how bigger calipers would reduced the lap time. I brake harder than he does and in my own case I haven't found the brakes lacking in ultimate power on list 1B tyres.
I don't doubt that medium black calipers (M030) will be sharper and help stop the car fractionally quicker, I don't believe for a second though that they will make anyone that I know off actually lap faster in reality.
Now that I have finally seen the light and realised that trying to race in the clubs championship was really daft for my meagre means the two things I am looking at doing on my car are:
1) Run with 245x45-16 tyres all round, its pretty clear you need as much grip as you can get on the front axle of these cars.
2) Fit adjustable rear ARB drop links. This last one is for a very specific reason. When one corner weights a car you're supposed to disconnect the ARBs but the problem with this is that on a 944 the stock drop links are not adjustable and the car always seems to put a lot of pre-load into the ARBs and hence across the car mucking up the point of doing the corner weighting in the first place. I am hoping that with adjustable rear drop links I/we can corner weight the car more properly and hence set the rear ARB with 0 pre-load.