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disk brake upgrade

14 inch

disk brake upgrade

Postby demon2a [OP] » Dec 24 2010, 8:46pm

ive been looking at alot of brake upgrade kits, do u need slotted or will cross drilled rotors work on stopping better. has any one installed any on there truck and if so hows it feel when braking is thre really a big difference :?:
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Re: disk brake upgrade

Postby In2Trux » Dec 24 2010, 10:12pm

To answer your question: Will Drilled or Slotted Rotors stop you better.

From Wilwood's website:
QUOTE
Q: Why are some rotors drilled or slotted?
A: Rotors are drilled to reduce rotating weight, an issue near and dear to racers searching for ways to minimize unsprung weight. Drilling diminishes a rotor's durability and cooling capacity.

Slots or grooves in rotor faces are partly a carryover from the days of asbestos pads. Asbestos and other organic pads were prone to "glazing" and the slots tended to help "scrape or de-glaze" them. Drilling and slotting rotors has become popular in street applications for their pure aesthetic value. Wilwood has a large selection of drilled and slotted rotors for a wide range of applications.
QUOTE
Crossdrilling your rotors might look neat, but what is it really doing for you? Well, unless your car is using brake pads from the 40’s and 50’s, not a whole lot. Rotors were first ‘drilled’ because early brake pad materials gave off gasses when heated to racing temperatures – a process known as ‘gassing out’. These gasses then formed a thin layer between the brake pad face and the rotor, acting as a lubricant and effectively lowering the coefficient of friction. The holes were implemented to give the gasses ‘somewhere to go’. It was an effective solution, but today’s friction materials do not exhibit the same gassing out phenomenon as the early pads.

For this reason, the holes have carried over more as a design feature than a performance feature. Contrary to popular belief they don’t lower temperatures (in fact, by removing weight from the rotor, the temperatures can actually increase a little), they create stress risers allowing the rotor to crack sooner, and make a mess of brake pads – sort of like a cheese grater rubbing against them at every stop. (Want more evidence? Look at NASCAR or F1. You would think that if drilling holes in the rotor was the hot ticket, these teams would be doing it.)

The one glaring exception here is in the rare situation where the rotors are so oversized (look at any performance motorcycle or lighter formula car) that the rotors are drilled like Swiss cheese. While the issues of stress risers and brake pad wear are still present, drilling is used to reduce the mass of the parts in spite of these concerns. Remember – nothing comes for free. If these teams switched to non-drilled rotors, they would see lower operating temperatures and longer brake pad life – at the expense of higher weight. It’s all about trade-offs.
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Re: disk brake upgrade

Postby thenutter » Dec 24 2010, 10:22pm

Thats a great bit of information you provided there. Thanks for sharing it.
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Re: disk brake upgrade

Postby demon2a [OP] » Dec 26 2010, 12:15am

thank you for the info that helps alot.imma go with the 14 inch wilwood cross drilled and slotted.
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Re: disk brake upgrade

Postby aspena » Jan 06 2011, 5:46am

Those brakes are pretty nice and they can stop on a dime. It costs one pretty penny but they are worth every bit of it.
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Re: disk brake upgrade

Postby Mudduck » Jan 12 2011, 5:34pm

I always get the best I can afford. Wilwoods are great. Drive hard stop fast. Brakes are nothing to skimp on.
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