The Green Goblin wrote: Lastly, does a fluid flush help in this space?
cheers,
Jas.
No, and for similar reasons to those mentioned above. A fluid flush helps restore the intended incompressibility of brake fluid. (Nothing wrong with fresh fluid, and a good idea to do regularly if you track, but probably not a cause of your difficulty).
Bigger master cylinder pushes more fluid, requiring less pedal travel and a more on/off operation if nothing else is changed. Braided brake lines remove the natural ‘give’ found in rubber lines (more direct again). Master cylinder stopper removes another place where the system has give. More aggressive pads, same again. If you also have track oriented front springs, which require more effort to create weight transfer when braking, that also removes some ‘give’ in the braking system. The only things left are your leg, the tyres and the road surface.
Probably not much you can do about the road surface other than look for the groove and the stickier places to do your braking. Your leg can practice modulating the brakes as they are - to essentially be more delicate. Adding sticky tyres is probably easiest - and will give your other hardware a chance to work, and will widen the range of pedal effort that you can work with before locking tyres.
The only other thing I can think of, is down grade your pads to something less agressive.