RooDuct Use and Installation



RooDucts were developed to get air to the brakes past the choke point of the frame rail and the arc of the wheel and tire. Because of the flat engine configuration on Subarus, the frame rails are pushed out to their limits which leaves no room for a typical brake cooling hose.

RooDucts take the small voids around the frame rail and front sub frame and direct the air past sway bar mounts, brackets and the tie rod from the front of the car into the wheel rim, brakes and wheel bearing where it can dramatically lower the temperature of these components without restricting turning radius.

The following video demonstrates where the RooDuct fits and how easily it attaches to the car.

Installing a RooDuct on a Subaru GC

While directing air via a hose directly to a backing plate mounted duct used to be considered the absolute best way to get air into the brakes, the flooding of fresh air into the confines of the modern wide wheel rim satisfies most RooDuct customers better than those who use a secondary hose!

Cutting a group of holes or fashioning a single opening in the backing plate would let the brake rotors take in the cooler air and pump it through the vanes as they were designed to do but most users have reported that removing the backing plates completely gives the best results.

There are a few things to know and to do to make the ducts work.
To get air to them, you can use the fogs or any opening up front.
I recommend a cheap 3″ dryer hose from Lowes.
It is flexible, smooth inside and stays where you want it.
It goes inside the duct to keep the flow smooth.
Some of the openings in front are oval to fit between the washer bottle and the plastic shield.

I recommend you not use a secondary hose until you’ve tried it without one.
That second hose is tough to get right and sometimes they collapse and stop the air flow.

There’ll be some holes to be made in the inner fender plastic.
Where they need to be will be easy to figure out when the ducts get mounted.
Good scissors or tin snips cut the plastic like butter.

The ducts need to be where the tie rod will fit best under the body just in front of the outlet.
Get them up as high and tight to the body as you can to get maximum space for the tie rods.
Some GD’s have a round vibration damper on the tie rod that needs to be removed.
Just unscrewing two 10mm headed bolts will take it off.
The bottom duct mount will line up with the swaybar mount.

Getting fresh air to the brakes will make your pedal stay firmer longer,
reduce rotor cracking and will keep your pads from vaporizing so they’ll last longer.
The ducts won’t cure anything and everything but going with them first will help you
upgrade your brakes in a more structured, cost-effective way.
Depending on how hard the tracks you go to are on brakes, the RooDucts may be enough.
Try them as I recommend first and see how it goes.
To easily see what it would be like without them, just put rags in the inlets and try a couple laps.
It won’t take long.

If the distance between hard braking zones is short at a track, the next step, if your rules allow them, are electric fans that will supply 60MPH air at all times.
The fans have been working great on all the test cars and if legal for where you run, are the absolute best, but more costly, solution.

Even with the fans’ cost, you are still way ahead of buying rotors and pads every weekend or upgrading.
Just the savings from flushing all that burnt fluid adds up fast.

If you put the car on a dyno, you may want to remove the ducts.
Without air flow, the headers may melt the ducts.
On GR’s, an air separator plate between the 02 sensor and the RH duct is a good idea.
The ducts now come with a premium heat reflective insulation that has protected dusts on the highest horsepower cars.

I got an email from a potential customer that read, ” …I’ve read several posts from owners on nasioc that the abs models can break fairly easily…”
Its hard (some would say, impossible) to argue with people on the internet but all the customers who have broken RooDucts and have contacted me have been satisfied that with proper mounting the damage would not have occurred. The RooDucts are easy to mount but because the duct is made to use all the space available, mounting it in the correct position is critical and can take some time, thought and testing. If the duct is mounted in the wrong place, suspension parts can hit them and cause a crack. I think cracking plastic is preferable to bending a tie rod.
Some glue or tape can effect a repair in the field and I’ve replaced the damaged ducts that I’ve been made aware of with, along with tips on how to keep the same thing from happening again.
Here’s a picture of a broken duct with the cause easily seen. Note how the paint is missing from the hit by the tie rod when in bump.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The new Lower Control Arm (LCA) Ducts are the easiest to mount on Aluminum arm cars but I make others for steel arm cars, those are harder to mount. If you need these ducts, ask for the latest tips on mounting them.

The LCA ducts for aluminum are really easy to mount and remove. Remove the sway bar link nut, slide the round spacer over the bolt threads, slide the duct on, hand tighten the nut and drop the plastic bolt down the existing hole in the A-Arm and line up the duct to get the threads started. Tighten the sway bar nut and the new bolt and that’s it.

Back to the secondary hose question. My friend John has been running his FRS with the caliper fans for years now. He tried the Lower Control Arm ducts and they worked better than nothing but not as well as the fans. He asked for LCA ducts with a fan mount so we tried that. FYI, the LCA duct shoots air into the center of the rotor like everyone wants. John did a back to back of the two fan configurations and the caliper cooler fan worked better than the rotor bell fan by a good amount. John’s testing, in this case, showed that cooling the caliper did more than getting air inside the rotor. I have yet to get feedback that ducting air from the duct to a funnel backing plate has better results than just letting the air flow freely into the rim. If you do, please let me know.

 

7 thoughts on “RooDuct Use and Installation

  1. I have RooDucts installed on my 2011 WRX Wagon with only the first hose and holes drilled into the backing plate (as you describe here). I still managed to destroy brand new set of rotors at a track day in Laguna so am now looking to connect to a second hose directly to the backing plate. I haven’t been at the track since! Any suggestions where to find a bolt on plate these days? Any I’ve found online seem for newer models. Or even where to get one fabricated? Thanks.

  2. Hello. I have a 2011 WRX and am interested in a set of ducts. I have a Perrin FMIC, CAI, and Stoptech BBK on the car already. I track my car very often. Most likely, I would go with the 3″ ducts. Thanks.

  3. I’ve given up making the carbon ones because the ABS are cheaper and better. The carbon ones took me a week to make a pair!

  4. hello my name is Gerry and I have a 2011 WRX. Im interested in the carbon Rooducts. Do you make them for my year car? Can you send me some pictures of them? Also what is the cost for the carbon ones versus the white plastic?

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