Long time, no reply! It's about time for an update. I've started on the power adders. I ditched the stock intake box in favor of a cone filter. The butt dyno shows no improvement whatsoever, but it certainly sounds better! I'm sure it added a couple of ponies considering two turbos need a lot of air to breathe, but I can't feel a difference. I had a wastegate helper spring on it for a short while to see if I have a leaky wastegate. That definitely made a difference, but until I have a boost gauge to know what's happening under the hood, it's best that I don't tinker with it too much. Granted, it'll hit fuel cut at 18 psi and the helper spring is only good for about 2 psi, but I'd like to know what I'm working with before messing around too much.
Anyway, onwards and upwards. I knew when I bought the car that I would needs new tires and it definitely needed new brakes. The tires on it were summer tires, dated 3202. Manufactured the 32nd week of 2002. Needless to say, I was less than comfortable riding around on those, even though they had 75% tread life left. They made some scary noises on the highway. So I bought a set of BFGoodrich g-forces and decided to find a closed road and have some fun with the old tires.



After five solid clouds, there wasn't much left of the tires, so no videos available. Of course, keep in mind that I need new brakes anyway. I have paperwork and receipts showing that the rear brakes were replaced by Toyota not long before I bought the car. However, the rust on all four rotors, coupled with the grooves in the pads and rotors, tells me that these brakes have had a hard life in the few thousand miles they've been on the car. I thought I heard a caliper dragging last weekend so I took everything apart today to try and find the issue. Fortunately for me, my very expensive calipers are all in top notch shape. They need fresh paint, but all the slider pins move freely and none of the calipers are seized. However, I did find that the driver side parking brake is seized. I wasn't able to remove the rotor. Given that all four rotors have grooves, I decided to bite the billet this evening and spend nearly $500 on OEM pads and rotors for all four corners, as well as parking brake shoes. Pretty expensive, but the tests on a '93 TT showed a stopping distance of 102' from 70 mph. Impressive by every measure, especially considering the 3,400 lb weight. It's a very capable braking system and I see no need to upgrade, so all OEM components are going back on. Hopefully the new parts get here this week so I can install them next weekend.
Side note, the rear rotors on this car are huge in comparison to what I'm used to seeing.