[Supras] stock brake rotors
Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist)
Brian.Walker2 at VDOT.Virginia.gov
Fri Apr 11 14:19:50 CDT 2008
I'm not arguing that point and never looked at it that way. It would
certainly disrupt what the vents are creating (like not running the
undercover, it redirects the air that was supposed to be routed through
the radiator)
I'm thinking of brake power as the force applied. You're right it would
allow more work as in max. brake force application for a longer time
before fade/friction drop off.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff Mohler [mailto:speedtoys.racing at gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 3:08 PM
To: Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist)
Cc: Khalid Almufti; Supras at supras.com
Subject: Re: [Supras] stock brake rotors
Oh yes, but surface area for cooling WRT drilling, hardly any at all,
because the holes are not receiving that high volume air at a high
pressure the same way that the surface area IN the rotor core does.
Ppl think surface area as a radiator, and that doesnt help anything.
Drilling also reduces important mass that you need to control temps
with.
Thickness does aid braking power, because all things being equal, a
thicker rotor runs cooler and allows a LONGER usable pad application.
On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 12:04 PM, Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist)
<Brian.Walker2 at vdot.virginia.gov> wrote:
> But I was a thermo major :)
> Heat transfer is derived from surface area and temp. differential.
> Since you've got huge differences in temp during braking (rotor vs.
> pad face), there's a lot of heat transferred to the rotor through the
> outside surface. Since's there's a much smaller temp difference for
> cooling (rotor temp vs. air) you need more surface area to cool
> (accomplished by lots of air across the vented center) You're still
> talking surface area, just not the area that's seen on the outside of
> the rotor. A reason BBK's have thick rotors, more surface area for
> cooling, thickness of the rotor does nothing for braking power.
>
> Just wanted to point out that surface area does matter, a lot.
> Brian
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jeff Mohler [mailto:speedtoys.racing at gmail.com]
>
>
> Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 1:31 PM
> To: Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist)
> Cc: Khalid Almufti; Supras at supras.com
> Subject: Re: [Supras] stock brake rotors
>
> Everyone is told that..but..it just isnt true.
>
> Theyre machined..it makes no difference how the hole got there, the
> outside edge of the hole is where it will split under enough expansion
> stress.
>
>
> Now..why are they there??
>
> 1: Looks sporty.
> 2: IF theyre there on a true race car, theyre dropping mass that
> way, but the braking system is already designed to run cool enough to
> NOT FAIL the rotor by cracking.
>
> I you look at how airflow moves through a rotor, it becomes instantly
> clear why holes dont help.
>
> If you consider that it takes 3 seconds to get a rotor to 1500d in
> braking, and maybe a mile to get it down to where it was
> before..."surface area" doesnt aid in cooling on a track whatsoever.
> Its that large volume of airflow moving thru the rotor core. Holes
> reduce the pressure differential at the hub where air enters the rotor
> core, and drops the CFM that it flows.
>
> GO find a thermodynamics major and talk about drilling holes in a
> rotor...not supraforums.com or some vendor that wants to -sell- you
> this process. I will be the first to talk you out of it on a track
> car if you bought rotors from me.
>
> GO to a club racing event like SCCA or NASA, find 3 cars out of 500
> with drilled rotors that were not given to them for free as a
> sponsorship deal. Bet ya cant.
>
>
> And..if its so good, why such small holes, and why so few? (Cuz it
> doesnt work)
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 7:48 AM, Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist)
> <Brian.Walker2 at vdot.virginia.gov> wrote:
> > I had been told Porsche casts these features into their rotors. One
> > would expect that a 6 figure car would have all the best in >
> technology, is the drilled/slotted feature one of those aesthetic >
> things they throw in?
> >
> > I'd imagine cost from pad wear isn't of concern on those, maybe
> it's > to aid non-street pads on cars typically used on the street?
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Jeff Mohler [mailto:speedtoys.racing at gmail.com]
> > Sent: Friday, April 11, 2008 10:40 AM > To: Walker, Brian (Rich.
> Dist) > > > Cc: Khalid Almufti; Supras at supras.com > Subject: Re:
> [Supras] stock brake rotors > > On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 7:04 AM,
> Walker, Brian (Rich. Dist) > <Brian.Walker2 at vdot.virginia.gov> wrote:
> > > I'm no expert but honestly, I don't think there is a performance
> > gain > > > from those type of rotors. Of course, with slots and
> drilling you > are > > > increasing surface area slightly, which
> would mean they can shed a
>
> > > little more heat.
> > ---
> > Yes, you lose BRAKING surface area.
> >
> > Nobody has proved that they make rotors cooler. The goal is pad
> face
>
> > temps, which go UP when you lose rotor surface area.
> >
> > You're also decreasing contact area for the pad > slightly,
> which > would mean a little less braking power (we're talking > >
> > very small amounts) >From the research I've done, pads nowadays >
> don't > > > release a gas layer like they used to which was the
> main reason > for > slotting/drilling, to remove or scrap that
> layer away. When > you have > a drilled/slotted piece (provided
> it's added after manufacturing vs.
> > > cast into the piece) you're also adding areas prone to
cracking.
> > ---
> > Drilled rotors crack no matter HOW the holes got there if you get
> > enough energy into them. Its how a round piece of metal expands.
> > Has anyone ever seen any evidence of a rotor casting WITH holes?
> >
> > No..it doesnt exist.
> >
> > If you put holes in pizza dough, does it stop splitting as you
> expand
>
> > it on the outside edge? No..thats how a round rotor expands, and
> > fails with enough energy thrown at it.
> >
> >
> > > for street use, most people use slotted/drilled for street
> because
>
> > > they look cool. There are some processes out there like cryo >
> treating > > > that are supposed to reduce the possibility of
> cracking, I've > never > tried them though.
> > ---
> > Nope. Cryo hardenes the rotor, which adds some lifetime to it,
but
> > unless the rotor costs like $130, its not worth the $50 to do it.
> > It'll still fail the same way..its still steel.
> >
>
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