Nissan 370Z Forum  

Akebono with Stock Brake Lines

Did you use oem hardlines from the sport brakes?

Go Back   Nissan 370Z Forum > Nissan 370Z Tech Area > Brakes & Suspension


Like Tree15Likes

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-25-2015, 02:09 PM   #31 (permalink)
A True Z Fanatic
 
Dragon_Ball_Z's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 1,117
Drives: Nismo& Sport/Touring
Rep Power: 17
Dragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond reputeDragon_Ball_Z has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Did you use oem hardlines from the sport brakes?
__________________
Build in Progress
Dragon_Ball_Z is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-25-2015, 04:11 PM   #32 (permalink)
Base Member
 
moore.speed's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: Northwest Arkansas
Posts: 181
Drives: 09 370Z Touring 6MT
Rep Power: 10
moore.speed is on a distinguished road
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nut_N_Much View Post
Hey brother,
Just some pointers if you do this your self.

1. Any after market steel braided or Kevlar brake line kit for the Z will work well. You can't mount the rear lines due to the bango fitting on the stock lines, you will need SS lines for the rear no matter what. The front can be modded and will work with some modification of the hard line but better to go with full set of lines.

2. Mounting Bolts, you don't need new bolts to mount them, just reuse the stock bolts the hold your base model calipers on for the front and rear.

3. Rotors, easy day use the set screw on the stock rotors and they will pop right off with a 12mm socket. The rear rotors use a 2x4 and a hammer to pop the rotor over the safety brake lip inside the rotor and it should pop right off after that.

4. Installing the rotors: The front is easy day, The dust shield on the rear will need to be trimmed. Its made to fit the Base rotors, I trim the lip off and from the mounting bolts I trim a large section off to clear the new caliper.

5. Brake lines: The aftermarket brake lines need to be attached to the back of your new calipers first. They are compression fittings so don't use Teflon. You have to mount the lines to the caliper first the run the connection strait to the hard line coming off the fender well. Ignore the brass blocks that come with the kit. It's a strait connection from hard line to caliper, make sure the line is ran around the strut and doesn't bind on anything.

6. Bleeding order from the Nissan Brake System PDF Manual R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.

So all in all the only issue with the swap is trimming the rear brake dust shields and getting new SS lines. Hope this helps you out. Easy swap..

This car is a Base Model we installed Infinity Calipers that have been powder coated, same calipers as the 370Z.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Nut_N_Much View Post
If your referring to the Z1 kit yes the lines are in the kit, You will save money buying Infinity Calipers and having them powder coated then buy the rotors and lines from Z1. Every one jacks up the price on 370Z calipers. Take you time you can pick a set up for $5 to $700.00.

You will notice the brake isn't as stiff as your base model brakes. The reason is the Booster on the sport model is a different size and the hard lines that are on the sport are slightly larger in diameter than the base hard lines.

Connecting the new SS lines to the hard line and attaching it directly to the caliper helps stiffen the braking feeling a little bit but a good set of Pads you wont know the difference.

Also you need to fill the Brake Reservoir all the way to the top. The Sport brakes used a little more fluid, if you don't top the reservoir off all the way you will get VDC, Traction and E-Brake light will come on and freak you out.

Next time I do a set I'll take pictures and do a DIY for it.


Anyone with questions, read this post first. This is an awesome description. My questions have been answered by the poster and +1 rep to you sir!
370zBLAST likes this.
__________________
"Let me tell you something. Anyone who owns a car like this (370Z) has something wrong with them in the head." My Grandpa who has owned 4 Z's in his day.
moore.speed is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-25-2015, 05:05 PM   #33 (permalink)
Base Member
 
khern11's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Miami, FL
Posts: 137
Drives: 2009 370z 6mt
Rep Power: 447
khern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond reputekhern11 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

According to the service manual the brake boosters are the same on both sport and base models.

primary diaphragm diameter are both 9.06"
secondary diaphragm diameter are both 8.07"

its on page BR-64
http://www.nicoclub.com/FSM/370Z/Coupe/2013/BR.pdf
Dragon_Ball_Z likes this.
khern11 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-29-2019, 01:30 PM   #34 (permalink)
CB1
Base Member
 
CB1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Washington
Posts: 188
Drives: 2011 Touring/Sport
Rep Power: 30
CB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nut_N_Much View Post
Hey brother,
Just some pointers if you do this your self.

1. Any after market steel braided or Kevlar brake line kit for the Z will work well. You can't mount the rear lines due to the bango fitting on the stock lines, you will need SS lines for the rear no matter what. The front can be modded and will work with some modification of the hard line but better to go with full set of lines.

2. Mounting Bolts, you don't need new bolts to mount them, just reuse the stock bolts the hold your base model calipers on for the front and rear.

3. Rotors, easy day use the set screw on the stock rotors and they will pop right off with a 12mm socket. The rear rotors use a 2x4 and a hammer to pop the rotor over the safety brake lip inside the rotor and it should pop right off after that.

4. Installing the rotors: The front is easy day, The dust shield on the rear will need to be trimmed. Its made to fit the Base rotors, I trim the lip off and from the mounting bolts I trim a large section off to clear the new caliper.

5. Brake lines: The aftermarket brake lines need to be attached to the back of your new calipers first. They are compression fittings so don't use Teflon. You have to mount the lines to the caliper first the run the connection strait to the hard line coming off the fender well. Ignore the brass blocks that come with the kit. It's a strait connection from hard line to caliper, make sure the line is ran around the strut and doesn't bind on anything.

6. Bleeding order from the Nissan Brake System PDF Manual R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.

So all in all the only issue with the swap is trimming the rear brake dust shields and getting new SS lines. Hope this helps you out. Easy swap..

This car is a Base Model we installed Infinity Calipers that have been powder coated, same calipers as the 370Z.

Getting ready to install some brake components myself. Got a couple questions..
I purchased (2) bottles of Motul RBF600 DOT 4 fluid in June 2017. They are still factory sealed and unopened. Are these still ok to use?
Can I use DOT 4 fluid in my 2011 370Z?
Also I noticed the Bleeding order from the Nissan Brake System PDF Manual as well. R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.
I always thought you were suppose to start at the furthest away and work towards the master cylinder. Just curious why they say R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.?

Thanks for any guidance!
__________________
2011 Metallic Black, Touring/Sport, Nav, AT
| F.I. Twin Turbo #060 | E85 | F.I. Built 7AT | F.I. Flex Plate | F.I. 34 Row Oil Cooler | F.I. 19 Row 7AT Cooler | ECUTEK Tuned By Sebastian | 647 WHP 605 TQ |
CB1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-29-2019, 02:35 PM   #35 (permalink)
A True Z Fanatic
 
JARblue's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Austin, TX
Age: 43
Posts: 36,450
Drives: 11 Z34, 98 E36 M3
Rep Power: 2684440
JARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond reputeJARblue has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by CB1 View Post
Getting ready to install some brake components myself. Got a couple questions..
I purchased (2) bottles of Motul RBF600 DOT 4 fluid in June 2017. They are still factory sealed and unopened. Are these still ok to use? Should be fine
Can I use DOT 4 fluid in my 2011 370Z? Yes
Also I noticed the Bleeding order from the Nissan Brake System PDF Manual as well. R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.
I always thought you were suppose to start at the furthest away and work towards the master cylinder. Just curious why they say R/Rear then L/Front then L/Rear then last R/Front.? It is weird, yes. I just follow the Nissan recommended order. Never had any issues.

Thanks for any guidance!
Brendan likes this.
__________________

2011 370Z 6MT Sport Gun Metallic | ARC | CJM | Ecutek | FI | Fujimura | R2C | SPL | Stillen | TWM | Z1 | ZSpeed |
JARblue is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-29-2019, 03:28 PM   #36 (permalink)
CB1
Base Member
 
CB1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Washington
Posts: 188
Drives: 2011 Touring/Sport
Rep Power: 30
CB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond reputeCB1 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JARblue View Post
Thank you!
__________________
2011 Metallic Black, Touring/Sport, Nav, AT
| F.I. Twin Turbo #060 | E85 | F.I. Built 7AT | F.I. Flex Plate | F.I. 34 Row Oil Cooler | F.I. 19 Row 7AT Cooler | ECUTEK Tuned By Sebastian | 647 WHP 605 TQ |
CB1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Goodridge Brake Lines Nissan Nissan 370Z 09-13 IN STOCK, Free Shipping! ImportDynamics Import Dynamics 0 05-10-2013 11:04 AM
[FOR SALE] Akebono sport brake rotors pads and lines Vandawg44 Parts for sale (Private Classifieds) 5 04-11-2013 07:22 PM
[FOR SALE] Complete Akebono Big Brake Kit from stock Sport 370z chuckd05 Parts for sale (Private Classifieds) 19 09-08-2011 12:08 AM
Place in dallas to install brake lines and clutch lines? rambunctious Texas 0 02-05-2011 03:13 PM
REQUEST:Changing front and rear brake pads on stock akebono tru_Asiatik DIY Section (Do-It-Yourself) 49 12-08-2010 10:23 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:26 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2