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-   -   Hawk HT10 Pads (https://www.rx7club.com/suspension-wheels-tires-brakes-20/hawk-ht10-pads-656742/)

bursty 05-28-07 12:25 AM

Hawk HT10 Pads
 
Has anyone used these pads? Are they more or less aggressive then the blue/black? Way to aggressive for any street driving? What about damage to the rotors?

Bowtie7 05-28-07 06:49 PM

Not for street use unless you want to replace rotors frequently. Same goes for blue or black although I have done all 3. HT10 is more aggresive.

rynberg 05-30-07 01:29 PM

Way too aggressive for the street....they will brake far worse than street pads and will eat your rotors in a week.

If you want to stop better on the street, buy better and bigger tires.

bursty 05-30-07 02:03 PM

What sort of track setup would these work well with then? rotors, tirs, suspension, etc

I'm not saying I want to run them, just trying to get some info on them as I couldnt find much. I know a couple BMW guys who recommend them for both street and track.

Mahjik 05-30-07 02:22 PM


Originally Posted by bursty (Post 6992233)
What sort of track setup would these work well with then? rotors, tirs, suspension, etc

I'm not saying I want to run them, just trying to get some info on them as I couldnt find much. I know a couple BMW guys who recommend them for both street and track.

What BMW's are these guys driving? I can point you to some BMW threads of cracked rotors from those pads. Many BMW owners do use them, but only for track pads, not street pads.

The setup doesn't really matter for the pads, its the amount of heat they need to absorb which is in question. On public streets, you'll never get the pads up to"track temperatures" which is why they aren't recommended on the street.

If you want a dual purpose pad which is rotor friendly, the Carbotech XP8 can be used on the street. I have those on the front of my M3 right now because I was too lazy to put my stock pads on after the last track event. They do work cold, but they squeal as well when cold. I will be putting the stock pads on for the street after my next event since the event after that will be more than a month out.

The only thing I don't like about the XP8's is the initial bite. I'm used to the N-Tech pads on the FD which give a great initial bit on the track. The XP8's are a lot more "friendly" for that which I don't really like.

bursty 05-30-07 02:51 PM

Well my buddy has a BMWCCA trackday coming up and wanted new track pads for his 06 ZCP M3. All the guys on the BMW board (M3Forum.net) were recommending the HT10s. We put them on a couple days ago and set the pads on the street doing some medium-high speed stops and loved them. He's been driving it around on the streets for the past few days and said he hasnt really noticed any problems with cold braking. Turns out a handful of M3 guys said they just run HT10s full time, not just for the track.

Mahjik 05-30-07 04:40 PM

I don't know about "all those guys". I'm on there and I don't see people recommending those for street applications. A lot of racers do use them for track pads. Here's a quote from that forum (I'm a member on most of the M3 forums):


HT-10s are harder on rotors than many other pure race pads (pads that have 200 degree greater MOT and 0.2 greater friction coef., like the PFC01, DTC70s, SPec VR, etc), this is a fact. It is an older compound.
If you like killing rotors, by all means use those on the streets. However, there are much better (newer) pads available.

Mahjik 05-30-07 04:43 PM

Another from M3forum:


Originally Posted by LandShark (Post 343478)
for you, try Pagid Orange (HT-10 just too abuse on rotor and won't heat up enough for you autox!) front and Ultimate/HP+/PagidYellow at the rear. it should be good enough up till (at least) advance and/or NCC's A group at the track.

So if you don't take our word for it, hopefully you'll take theirs.

patfat 05-30-07 05:35 PM

I used HT-10 pads on my E30 M3 and they were fantastic on track, but there is no way I would ever use them on the street. Plus, they're noisy little buggers :)

Do yourself a favor and buy dedicated track pads.

teamstealth 05-30-07 05:48 PM


Originally Posted by Mahjik (Post 6992304)
What BMW's are these guys driving? I can point you to some BMW threads of cracked rotors from those pads. Many BMW owners do use them, but only for track pads, not street pads.

The setup doesn't really matter for the pads, its the amount of heat they need to absorb which is in question. On public streets, you'll never get the pads up to"track temperatures" which is why they aren't recommended on the street.

God it's been forever since I've been on this forum. I'm the Bimmer guy running Hawk HT-10's on the street on my '06 E46 M3. It has the competition package on it, which entails cross-drilled 13.6" rotors up front, and cross-drilled 12.9" rotors in the rear. The sucky thing is that it still makes use of the subpar 1-piston calipers from the standard M3.

Anyway, I have been running these pads on the street for a week now. The very first application of the brakes in the morning when they're cold sucks. It takes a while for them to heat up and bite. They grind below 10mph and screech like a banshee under 5mph. I'm running them on the street for the sole reason of braking them in a little before the track day. I agree they are way overkill on the street and i plan on taking them off after the track day.

-Zach

Mahjik 05-30-07 06:01 PM


Originally Posted by teamstealth (Post 6993017)
Anyway, I have been running these pads on the street for a week now. The very first application of the brakes in the morning when they're cold sucks. It takes a while for them to heat up and bite. They grind below 10mph and screech like a banshee under 5mph. I'm running them on the street for the sole reason of braking them in a little before the track day. I agree they are way overkill on the street and i plan on taking them off after the track day.

-Zach

Keep in mind that enough heat to make them stop and enough heat to make them not damage the rotor are not necessarily the same. I would recommend the Carbotech pads the next time around if you intend to drive them around on the steets for a few days before and after the track events.

teamstealth 05-30-07 06:06 PM

Yeah, I got the pads for a steal which is why i picked them up. Otherwise i probably would have run PFC-01's on the front and PFC-97's in the rear. My car is running double duty at this HPDE, with me and my father running in two separate classes so i needed something with a high MOT. I also flushed the fluid and am now running Motul RBF600.

bursty 05-30-07 06:44 PM


Originally Posted by Mahjik (Post 6993061)
Keep in mind that enough heat to make them stop and enough heat to make them not damage the rotor are not necessarily the same. I would recommend the Carbotech pads the next time around if you intend to drive them around on the steets for a few days before and after the track events.

Hey Mahjik, what track is that in your avatar? Any good tracks around KC?

Mahjik 05-30-07 07:51 PM


Originally Posted by bursty (Post 6993242)
Hey Mahjik, what track is that in your avatar? Any good tracks around KC?

That one is Heartland Park in Topeka, Kansas: http://hpt.com/store/catalog/

Basically, in the area there is Hearthland, MAM up in Nebraska, Hallet down in Oklahoma and a few others. Those aren't that far to drive to from KC, but a quite a drive from STL.

There is a track going in up by the KCI airport. I don't know of the timeline for completion though. It will be a club type like the Autobahn Club in Illinois.

bursty 05-30-07 07:55 PM

Autobahn looks so nice but damn is it expensive. :(

Mahjik 05-30-07 08:20 PM


Originally Posted by bursty (Post 6993537)
Autobahn looks so nice but damn is it expensive. :(

Just wait for a group to rent the track. I've seen several groups rent the track out quite a bit and their HPDE days are affordable. Memberships are what the expensive thing is which unless I win the lottery, I'll never belong to some place like that. ;)

Here's the one opening up by the KCI airport: http://kcimotorsportspark.com/

rynberg 05-30-07 08:42 PM


Originally Posted by teamstealth (Post 6993017)
I'm running them on the street for the sole reason of braking them in a little before the track day.
-Zach

Bad idea and useless, really. Go out on the way to the track and bed those suckers in properly (ie, several 80-10 mph applications near ABS threshold and then let cool without hitting them). Driving around in street driving isn't going to do crap to fully bed them in.

DigDug 05-30-07 11:18 PM


Originally Posted by Mahjik (Post 6992304)
The only thing I don't like about the XP8's is the initial bite. I'm used to the N-Tech pads on the FD which give a great initial bit on the track. The XP8's are a lot more "friendly" for that which I don't really like.


Have you tried the XP10s? I've never run the 8s, but the 10s have incredible bite. By far the most impressive race pads I've used, comparable to Hawk blues except with much better initial bite.

Mahjik 05-31-07 08:22 AM


Originally Posted by DigDug (Post 6994376)
Have you tried the XP10s? I've never run the 8s, but the 10s have incredible bite. By far the most impressive race pads I've used, comparable to Hawk blues except with much better initial bite.

Not yet. Honestly, I don't have the tires to really overwork the stock pads on the M3 with the tracks I'm running right now. I just put the XP8's on there for a little added protection. When I upgrade to a more stickier street tire for the M3, I'll probably try the XP10's.


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