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Old 07-01-2017, 10:23 AM   #1
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2004 S for trackdays and anydays

Bought up this 04 Boxster S from right here on the forum. This was an genuinely positive experience and I bought it (mostly sight unseen).

The car was in the Palm Springs area and I am in Michigan. I had a friend in SoCal pop over and give it a look and based on his endorsement we made the deal and put it on a truck bound for Michigan.

For me this is a perfect step as a fantastically balanced car that I can use when its not frozen-over here, and on both of the racetracks that are less than a half hour away for track days.

Going to show some of the things I will be addressing and working on to make it a great(er) car for road and track.

Cheers -



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Old 07-01-2017, 12:43 PM   #2
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Congrats! Great looking car! I don't track my car but from what I've read, it'd be worth looking into a deeper sump and different oil pan baffles. Might want to ask around in the track car sub-forums. I'd hate to see anything bad happen to such a nice car!
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Old 07-01-2017, 12:52 PM   #3
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Thanks.

I have the EBS baffle on the way going in with upcoming oil change. Previous owner was wise enough to put in an LN IMS as well so I have confidence in that.

First I am going over the outside of the car with a bit of TLC, then ill get into the guts.
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Old 07-02-2017, 06:57 PM   #4
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First couple steps -

The car came from the Palm Desert area, and living out there had faded some of the exterior plastics and the trim molding around the windscreen. See image:



So I masked the trim off with painters tape and lightly sanded any high and rough spots off:



I removed the painters tape, and applied 3M 471 trim tape as it is flexible and is made to be used to mask curves:



I then went back and applied painters mask tape outside the 3M tapeline and masked off the front of car. I cleaned the trim with alcohol (not acetone)



Then I simply painted the trim with a semi gloss black enamel from a spraycan in 3 coats. Done and on to the next project. Result in image



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Old 07-03-2017, 07:26 AM   #5
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Congrats! Looks Great!
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Old 07-03-2017, 07:50 PM   #6
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The car came form the Palm desert area, so the paint had some sand contaminates in it.

Easy to work out with clay and a polish.
Using clay is very easy, no circular strokes and keep the area really soaped up and wet.

Look at what came out of the trunk area alone:

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Old 07-03-2017, 07:52 PM   #7
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Last for this round of aesthetic work was a machine polish. Not much time invested (boxster is a small car) and paint on this one is like glass. Almost looks new.
On to the mech stuff...




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Old 07-08-2017, 07:26 AM   #8
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Great job and nice car, it looks brand new!
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Old 07-16-2017, 06:19 AM   #9
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Exterior twin to my car. I just got a new OEM windshield and replaced that trim in the process.
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Old 07-25-2017, 06:08 PM   #10
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Car is getting better.
I had to travel a bit but back to business... some parts arriving now. getting ready to get to work on it....







More soon.
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Old 08-02-2017, 02:07 PM   #11
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Going on this weekend (I think) - Ill write a bit about it when I get into the swap


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Old 08-12-2017, 06:12 PM   #12
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Finally got around to getting it up in the air.

Got the pan off and swapped in the EBS motorsport baffle. Worth the reasonable price for a bit more protection in steady state cornering.

It is a tight fit, and i dint like the pressure exerted by the foam pad on the side dams to the front side of the pan as its a thin aluminum casting, so i removed the foam from the top of these dams and cleaned off the adhesive.

Managed this with a minimum of swearing and no blood. I am amazed.

Tomorrow brakes.



OEM



EBS with dams to keep oil flowing to pickup

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Old 08-12-2017, 07:28 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ericd View Post
Going on this weekend (I think) - Ill write a bit about it when I get into the swap


Very nice.
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Old 08-12-2017, 10:40 PM   #14
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Nice Boxster and write up.

Make sure you don't get any sealant in the sump.

Look forward to seeing the other work you do on the car.
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Old 08-14-2017, 05:53 PM   #15
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Brake time

Ok Brake time -

The Girodiscs are a great solution to gain proper competition spec 2 piece construction for weight savings and increased cooling potential.

The set is larger in diameter by 22mm front and 27mm rear, (340mm/325mm vs 318/298mm) and includes color coded billet spacers and longer bolts to set the calipers in the proper radial location.

And even though the set is larger in diameter, Front is 19.8lbs and giro is 17.2 lbs 2.6lb diff each. In total the system loses about 11.5lbs in total off all the OE rotors. That’s a worthwhile loss in rotational inertia.

The mechanical brake torque is up by 8% based on the caliper piston center being a moved out radially by 11mm (front) from where the OE was. Torque actually increases additionally from the higher friction value of the pads, but I don’t have metrics for the difference. Another bonus is that fade resistance is increased via the rotor having 9% more surface area, while still cooling better based on 2 piece construction and an improved vane design.

The Girodisc rotors have a proper curved vane design to cool better with more air reaching the vents and pumping out. It’s a great win-win to loose rotational inertia and gain thermal and brake torque performance.

I am also trying out the Girodisc SS pads – these are an intermediate solution between a full race pad and OE. They come recommended as a good pad for something that is primarily a roadcar and needs to perform at trackdays.

I will let you guys know if they make significant dust or noise over the OEMs.

Last item is Pentosin (ATE) Super fluid. Picked this one as it has a 500F dry boil point and a 330F wet point. Because I don’t want to be concerned to drain fluid once or twice a year, this fluid makes sense as it has a very low hygroscopic (water attracting) index. Racing fluids like Motul are really good, but are more hygroscopic and not meant to be left in a system very long. Also the Boxster isn’t known to boil fluid as a common issue. So this fluid is more than enough for my use.

Spacers and bolts from kit


Front rotor comparison


Rear rotor comparison
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Old 08-14-2017, 06:00 PM   #16
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Spacers are color coded F/R. Nicely made billet pieces with laser etch






mounted between caliper and knuckle. Can also see how open the curved vane vents are



Backside of front rotors compared, notice hoe open the entry for ventilating air is in the center of rotor:



Same at the rear, look at the opening difference


BTW the orange tool in the image is a super handy racing caliper pad/piston spreader from girodisc as well - quick lever action opens pads and retracts pistons in one stroke - good for pits at enduros

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Old 08-14-2017, 06:04 PM   #17
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Like art! Almost hate to make them work hard (almost)



Compared to OEM




Fills the wheel nicely too



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Old 08-15-2017, 04:31 AM   #18
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I wonder if you could fit 17z calipers on those front rotors?
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Old 08-15-2017, 08:06 AM   #19
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That not only is a nice upgrade in performance but also visually since they fill more of the wheel. Look forward to hearing about how they actually perform. Nice job!
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Old 08-15-2017, 10:31 AM   #20
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I like where you're going with this work! Having done 4 HPDE track events now I'll be following this-my car is a Seal Gray 2003 S with Black top and interior. If you have a good report on the brakes I may do that next time I need brakes. Do the longer caliper bolts need to be replaced each time they are undone like the OEM caliper bolts? You should get some stainless steel flexible brake lines to replace the rubber ones that may now be 14 years old. An under-drive pulley will also help preserve your power steering pump while on the track, and save you a few extra HP from parasitic loss to boot. You might want to consider adding a deep sump like the smaller Mantis which would also provide some extra protection from oil starvation in high G cornering.

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