Ok, finally got Photobucket sorted and working (albeit from work: naughty

)
Anyway,
Here are some shots of the skyline rear disc and caliper that I intend to use of the Honda-powered, AWD ute conversion that I am doing.
As you can see, the caliper is nothing special, a typical sliding caliper type with single piston. The difference with this and say, a Commodore rear disc caliper is that with the Holden, the park brake is situated inside the hat section of the disc rotor, and operates that same as what a drum would. With this caliper (and the other Jap ones like Simon's CRX one) the handbrake cable actuates a cam, which leverages against the disc pad to grip the rotor. It works very effectively, and is very light and compact with fewer moving parts. Bear in mind that this caliper is
not off a GTR, it is a GTS caliper. The GTR caliper is a twin opposed setup made by Brembo, and an awesome bit o' kit!!
And this is the rotor. It is a cast steel unit, with integral hat section as per the norm for mass-produced cars. PCD is 4 x 100, and the stud diameter is 12mm. The rotor diameter is 240mm (or 9 3/8 inches in the old mesurement for those old farts among us that are living in the dark ages

) which is quite large for a rear disc (but then again, the Skyline is a large car). Disc thickness is 9.8mm.
This is the rotor and caliper sitting inside my 13 x 7 Superheavies. As you can see, there is a little bit of room here, but not much. I would say that with this caliper, 250mm (or 10") rotors would be the absolute maximum you could use. If you used slimline calipers, I doubt you would gain any extra. Anyway, this type of setup, and that of Simon's using the CRX setup, would be more than enough braking for the rear end of a Mini, even with a mid-mount RWD setup with more weight over the back axle (actually, it would work better!!)
And this is the gap, about 10mm to the inside of the rim. I am using 14" rims on 4 Paw, so this would be a bit larger (by about 12mm). Large enough to stop small bits of gravel lodging between the brake caliper and the rim and scoring the rim, which is a real issue on tubeless tyres.
Any questions, please ask (Simon)!
Cheers,
Tricky