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Published byEleanor Martin Modified over 8 years ago
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Intro to Disc Brakes
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Most Common - Floating
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Floating Disc Brake
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Newton’s Law
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Sliding – No Bolts
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Sliding
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Fixed – Caliper Does Not Move
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Carbon Ceramic
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Fixed Operation
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Drum-In-Hat Parking Brake
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Inside the Caliper
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Caliper Piston Seal Flexes as piston moves out Pulls the piston back when brakes released Seals fluid self-adjusting
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Brake Pads Backing plate Lining (pad) Wear indicators Clips, springs, hardware
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Removing the Pads Remove brake fluid from m/c Retract piston first Remove caliper bolts Move caliper out of the way
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Support Caliper Once removed, support caliper on wire or bungee cord Never let the caliper hang by hose
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Pad Inspection
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Brake Rotors Also called discs Rotating friction surface Vented for cooling
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Heat Dam
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Rotor Inspection
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Just Started Making Noise
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Parallelism / Thickness Variation
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Runout
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Runout Measurement
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Economy Rotors
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Burnish/Break-In Procedures Necessary to properly seat pads and rotors – Transfers a layer from the pads to the rotors Improves brake performance – Smoothes the mating surfaces – Heat cycles the pads and rotors Reduces noise
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Procedures Vary - RTM For “normal” street service: 8 to 10 moderate applications from 40-10 mph is sufficient. Allow the brakes to cool for at least 15 minutes either by parking the vehicle or continuing to drive at moderate speeds with minimal brake applications.
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Procedures cont. Make approximately 20 complete stops from 30-mph or 20 “slow downs” from 50-mph to 20-mph with light to moderate pedal pressure NO PANIC STOPS · Allow at least 30 seconds between brake applications for the brake pads or shoes to cool down No high speed stops and/or braking under heavy loads that could result in glazed or otherwise damaged linings
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30/30/30 Procedure Perform 30 stops from 30 miles per hour with a 30-second cooling interval between stops. Performed at a decelerating rate of 12 feet per second or less. This means that it should be a gentle easy stop. The 30/30/30 Burnish Procedure beds the pads and shoes into the rotor and drums. It also deposits the necessary friction transfer to the rotors and drums for optimum brake performance.
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