My two cents:
- 300mm option would far and away be the best GB as I would think a lot of people here run 16in rims and for us 17in crowd would have no problem with a little less weight (I would even argue 285mm is the best choice but that doesn't look to be an option in future builds)
- "back" might be literally something lost in translation and he's just agreeing that the vanes are directional and choosing an inaccurate word to describe the vane direction
edit: as for what Hank is complaining about, i have no doubt that whomever TEI had build these kits just let other Chinese knock-offs copy the plans and run with it. i mean Chinese companies stealing IP isn't anything knew. whether TEI was the original company or not is something we probably won't ever know but if TEI is willing to get ISO certified that does say something for how seriously they want to be taken.
I mean we can't even say for sure if TEI is providing Whoosh's BBKs. They could all just be coming from the same production facility and TEI could have a deal with the facility that they can reproduce TEI's idea with only slight changes and sell it to other company's and Whoosh is getting them after the fact. And with how China enforces their post-COVID visits there's probably no way to have surprise inspections to see what's going on in production to confirm. FWIW, Hank's frustration makes sense and he's not dodging questions the way I was worried he would.
edit edit: I agree that a racing team running TEI BBKs on a hatchback would be the best way to know how these things work IRL but seems like they don't sponsor anyone. That's a real shame as that would be great advertising as we would then know how it holds up. It'd be great if someone who runs this as a track only car would even test out a TEI kit. I found out about 2Forge wheels b/c a racing team out of England slapped them on their VW diesel race build and a full race season's worth of YT videos made me a believer in those wheels. Hopefully TEI can find a team in Europe to try out their brakes.
A Few logical conclusions about all of this.
A: It’s obvious TEI is making the Whoosh Calipers because Ludeem got Whoosh branded Calipers loaded with TEI pads and TEI advertises on their own site top to bottom complete sets, Not separates, i.e. , Caliper, rotor, pads, lines!
Now I honestly also can tell you my calipers look to be of better quality than Ludeems. . If I had seem seen stuff like what is obvious on Ludeems they would not even have gone on my car.
B. They are not ISO certified which Lilpartybox seeems to be putting the most importance on.
I can honestly say I may not agree with his consensus that ISO certified automatically spells quantity in part!
One only has to look at Rota who has been ISO 9001 for over 30 years now yet their rims can and do break when struck rather than always bending . What is more crash worthy a bent wheel or a wheel that cracks and breaks ? That is left up to you to consider.
Of course I will add Rota is now getting into the flow formed game which should bring a much better product as flow formed is much better than cast.
C. Hank while being nice even in his own discussions seems to be pushing larger rotors for the sake of looks i.e. form over function. THAT to me throws up warning flags about TEI in general as they really are not approaching it from a functioning engineering aspect.
Given all of this , I would buy the product from Ron before buying the product directly because all go backs and issues would be dealt with someone here in the U.S.
I am not sure any of you are aware what it’s like to buy products direct from China in bulk and dealing with Chinese companies in general. Things can change fast and overnight . I am not saying everything out of China is garbage it’s not . I am saying it has been the wild west of capitalism over there for the last 15-20 years and it’s an anything goes situation.
Companies are willing to manufacture say 2000 pieces of something for anyone as long as it’s paid for regardless of if the product is sold . I.E. you buy it you own it end of story . Warranties are great as long as they are exercised properly .
Back in the day I worked for an auto parts wholesaler who sold a crap company with a lifetime warranty on water pumps . Warranty amounted to shit because products broke and needed to be replaced. Guess what not was warrantied? Time and expenses to remove and replace said product .
One has to look at all of this before investing in a product or trusting a product and guess what again has nothing to do with ISO certification. A company can still make crap on a ISO certified facility . It’s not the be all end all statement to quality that some here seem to place.
I cannot stop reiterating that point because I feel it’s so lost on some here.
So all in all I would not buy from TEI.