Hydralic ebrake? Is there such a thing?

airhead04

New Member
Aug 21, 2009
1,489
1
0
Lima, Ohio, United States
So as the title says, is there such a thing as a hydralic ebrake? I was told that the ebrake connects to a booster underneath the car, which is connect to a line that splits into the rear 2 brake lines. Thus giving the car an instant lock with the e brake, when pulled. I know it seems to be used in drifting alot now. Just wondering how the set up is.

Is this possible on an mkIII? Has anyone thought of doing it to one? Any down falls to it?

Help is apreciated. Please dont flame in this thread, and yes i searched on here and came up with nothing on the subject.

-David
 

GrimJack

Administrator
Dec 31, 1969
12,377
3
38
56
Richmond, BC, Canada
idriders.com
Of course it's *possible*.

However, the law around building cars specifies that the emergency brake must be on a separate system for a reason. Specifically, so that if the regular brakes fail, you can still use the other system in case of, well, emergency.
 

Devin LeBlanc

Banned
Apr 7, 2010
1,830
0
0
32
Las Vegas NV.
In drifting we set it up like that.. usually with a T into the rear brakes and a hydraulic E brake (Basically a slave cylinder with a long handle on it) Some of the time we do a dual rear caliper that has a separate system just for the Ebrake
 

airhead04

New Member
Aug 21, 2009
1,489
1
0
Lima, Ohio, United States
OK, so that would mean the ebrake pads inside the rotors are no longer used correct? Because you are now using the regular braking system.

Grim, would it still be legal if I moved the ebrake to the other side of the console? What I mean by that is, have 2 ebrakes. One on the driver side (hydraulic) and one on the passenger side (non hydraulic?)
The hydraulic one would be for drift/race purpose only, and the other for everyday use.
 

Devin LeBlanc

Banned
Apr 7, 2010
1,830
0
0
32
Las Vegas NV.
Correct, That would be fine.. Here is how we have it setup on the drift car

p1643591_1.jpg