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10-04-2023, 07:26 PM | #1 |
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Signature Werks BBK...
So my question is... If they are allegedly not true Brembos, how come Brembo hasn't gone after them?
Not looking to start a flame war, although it seems that may be inevitable 🤷🏻‍♂️ But yeah, considering that they pop up tons of times a day in my social media feeds I wonder the above |
10-05-2023, 08:16 AM | #2 |
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From a recent related post...
https://www.m3post.com/forums/showpo...&postcount=433
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e92 M3 - Interlagos Blue | Recaros w/Fox Red Extended |Carbon Leather
Performance Mods: Alpine Stage II; SuperSprint F1s; Cat-less Bomiz X-Pipe; aFe CAI; Bilstein B16s w/EDC; Brembo BBK; AutoSolutions SSK |
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10-05-2023, 06:48 PM | #3 | |
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Quote:
That said, the fakes from China now have come a long way. It is near impossible to spot fakes just looking at the outside. And then we have many unscrupulous shops claiming to sell 'real Brembo calipers with OEM discs'. The only real way to tell a fake caliper these days is by looking at the piston dust boots. If it doesn't have a Brembo logo or part number on it, the caliper is likely fake. Even if the caliper is authentic Brembo, many of these retrofit kits using Alfa/AMG/Porsche calipers require custom rotors with custom center hats. They may be cheap to buy but you may not be able to get replacement rotors when they wear out. A 380mm disc does not automatically mean it uses the same replacement friction rings as the original Brembo GT kit. If you plan to keep the car for a while I absolutely would avoid retrofit kits, regardless of whether the calipers are authentic or not. You're better off getting a used branded bbk. |
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