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 Post subject: Re: autoX brake pad opinions?
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 1:24 pm 
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Maria Winslow wrote:
JamesShort wrote:

Too bad with all that information, I can't explain why I saw a sliver mini in the middle of the grass on Sunday.


No more talking and driving at the same time for me. That was actually a little scary for a second or two, and I think I saw people running (sorry!).
Do you talk to yourself while autocrossing too? Few people who have rode along with me say that I do the same thing :).

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 1:46 pm 
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Aaron Buckley wrote:
Karl Shultz wrote:

It's however much you happen to like. :)

Seriously, this is one where I think opinions vary. I like my pads to be "somewhere in the middle." Some people like really grabby pads. Still others like non-aggressive pads. It's all down to what you like.


Maybe I'm odd, but I've never, ever changed brake pads for autocross use. Stock pads always seem fine to me. - AB


Funny you mention that. I actually drove better in the ITR with the remainder of my stock pads because they were so predictable. When I switched to PBR's (not the delicious beverage) which are basically Axis Ultimates IIRC, I thought they were too on/offy. Plus, Jeff, the owner of Majestic Solutions, and I found that the only thing that got rid of the dust and pitting was wheel acid and lots of elbow grease.


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PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 1:47 pm 
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Threadjack? No problem!

I definitely talk to myself, usually key phrases to keep me from getting cone-confused (more than usual, that is). I view it as being similar in form to "swing thoughts" for the golfer or "focus on the seams of the ball" if you've a baseball background. It keeps the hypercritical Self 1 from impeding the actions of Self 2 (no, I'm not schizophrenic...read "The Inner Game of Tennis" and you'll see)

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 Post subject: EBC
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 1:58 pm 
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The one manufacturer I see is missing from this discussion is EBC (maybe I missed it), has anybody taken a chance on them? I had the Yellow Stuff pads on the front of my 08 Miata and had no complaints for both AX and street. After having no brakes in the BMW after Saturday afternoon I am looking for new pads.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 3:15 pm 
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I used the Carbotech autocross compound back when I was running the TransAm. I was really pleased with them, and they worked pretty well on the street too (if "well" includes coating all your wheels with black dust, something I cared much less about than braking deep into a turnaround).

There was no question about replacing rotors and pads at the same time -- they pretty much had the same wear rate, when the pads were shot so were the rotors. But heck, US domestic muscle car, rotors were cheap.

Now I'm still running the original OEM pads on the Mazda 3, so I'm a couple of years out of date on the Carbotechs, but I'd use them again in a heartbeat.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 3:18 pm 
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MartynWheeler wrote:
I used the Carbotech autocross compound back when I was running the TransAm.


Malia's dad now has this car, and these pads are aweful. The race tires are on Chrome wheels, and after a couple autocross runs they look like they've been painted primer black. No joke - they are terrible when it comes to dusting, worse than anything I could ever remotely imagine. They did work well, though. Like Martyn mentioned, however, that particular compound has probably been updated by now.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 3:28 pm 
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Yeah, I probably understated the dust on those Carbotechs. It is worse than you can EVER imagine. Think of it as just a sintering process away from powder-coating. Yes, that much dust.

But they stopped the car very well, and I never liked chrome wheels anyway. :D

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 Post subject: Re: EBC
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 5:38 pm 
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Michael Dacko wrote:
The one manufacturer I see is missing from this discussion is EBC (maybe I missed it), has anybody taken a chance on them? I had the Yellow Stuff pads on the front of my 08 Miata and had no complaints for both AX and street. After having no brakes in the BMW after Saturday afternoon I am looking for new pads.


I've heard nothing but bad things about EBC's

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 10:49 pm 
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Chris Landi wrote:
Karl Shultz wrote:
Did you guys replace your rotors when you tried the Bobcats? Carbotech often states that this is a necessary step, due to some kind of material transfer from the pads to the rotors.


My rotors were relatively new at the time. I had them shaved when I put the Bobcats on.

Someone (Matt N I believe) made the same suggestion to me, so I had them turned before I put the 2nd set on.

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 Post subject: Re: autoX brake pad opinions?
PostPosted: Tue May 18, 2010 11:27 pm 
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JamesShort wrote:
Well smartass, I guess a braking conversation to have is how surface area means nothing. Way too frequently am I hearing people talk about surface area when it comes to brake pads or rotors and it is immensely irrelevant.

{long involved brake discussion snipped for brevity}


Steve, you satisfied :) ?


Kidding aside, that was a great post. Reference-quality work, that. Thanks for the effort, James.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed May 19, 2010 1:46 am 
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James, excellent explanation. I honestly could not find one single hole in your explanation. That's a compliment.

We should get a beer sometime.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed May 19, 2010 7:15 am 
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MikeWhitney wrote:
James, excellent explanation. I honestly could not find one single hole in your explanation. That's a compliment.

We should get a beer sometime.


I agree -- great write-up.

The only thing I would add is that there is a radiation heat transfer component that also comes into play in an increasing manner as rotor temperatures rise. Anything the rotor can "see", from a radiation view factor standpoint, that is at a substantially lower temperature will exchange heat with the rotor surface.

One other thing to add that is not directly related to this discussion about pads but brakes in general, is that using an interstitial material between the pad backing plate and the piston(s) can substantially reduce conduction heat transfer into the pistons/calipers. Commonly thin Ti plates are used due to the low conductivity of Ti. The thickness of the plate is very small, so the Ti part isn't that significant, but by introducing the plate, two thermal contact resistances are added to the heat conduction path to the piston(s). The additional benefit is that the potentially very hot backing plate back surface is shielded, from a radiation standpoint, by the Ti plate (which will be at a lower temp) which helps reduce heat degradation of the dust covers. The benefit of Ti plates increases substantially as pad thickness is reduced (and therefore the backing plate is operating at higher and higher temperatures as a function of pad thickness reduction).

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed May 19, 2010 9:23 am 
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Chuck Branscomb wrote:
MikeWhitney wrote:
James, excellent explanation. I honestly could not find one single hole in your explanation. That's a compliment.

We should get a beer sometime.


I agree -- great write-up.

The only thing I would add is that there is a radiation heat transfer component that also comes into play in an increasing manner as rotor temperatures rise. Anything the rotor can "see", from a radiation view factor standpoint, that is at a substantially lower temperature will exchange heat with the rotor surface.

One other thing to add that is not directly related to this discussion about pads but brakes in general, is that using an interstitial material between the pad backing plate and the piston(s) can substantially reduce conduction heat transfer into the pistons/calipers. Commonly thin Ti plates are used due to the low conductivity of Ti. The thickness of the plate is very small, so the Ti part isn't that significant, but by introducing the plate, two thermal contact resistances are added to the heat conduction path to the piston(s). The additional benefit is that the potentially very hot backing plate back surface is shielded, from a radiation standpoint, by the Ti plate (which will be at a lower temp) which helps reduce heat degradation of the dust covers. The benefit of Ti plates increases substantially as pad thickness is reduced (and therefore the backing plate is operating at higher and higher temperatures as a function of pad thickness reduction).
Excellent point on radiation. Definitely should have entered the conversation but I guess I didn't mention it because my rotors haven't glown red while autocrossing yet :). Sure there is radiative heat xfer between any two objects of varying temperature but the constant (epsilon?) in front of (T_1^4 - T_2^4) is pretty small and despite being a difference of 4 powers, radiation is probably small in relation to convection/conduction......well in autocrossing. Maybe radiation becomes an issue when you fly through the Monaco chicane with your wheels almost locked up :).

One question about this titanium backing plate....why would you want to limit the heat transfer into the caliper etc? The caliper is mass for getting rid of heat at the pad/rotor interface? Well it would keep fluid colder which is important in prolonged racing... I guess in pure racing, they have such cooling capacity with ducting and 2 piece rotors that they are more concerned with point 3 (ie cooling) than they are about heat capacity of the overall system.

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2013/2014.5 President
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2015 Fit

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 Post subject: Re: autoX brake pad opinions?
PostPosted: Wed May 19, 2010 9:31 am 
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Steven Carter wrote:
JamesShort wrote:
Well smartass, I guess a braking conversation to have is how surface area means nothing. Way too frequently am I hearing people talk about surface area when it comes to brake pads or rotors and it is immensely irrelevant.

{long involved brake discussion snipped for brevity}


Steve, you satisfied :) ?


Kidding aside, that was a great post. Reference-quality work, that. Thanks for the effort, James.
You know Steve, the ironic thing is that in the last few months I've had to get into deep conversation about brakes, anti roll bars (ie D is NOT the only parameter in a sway bar....don't compared D from one car to an other or from one chassis of the same car to another), and how lowering a strut suspension increases roll couple (so lowering springs with the same rates INCREASE a cars body roll) on NASIOC......now that I have this forum, I shouldn't waste my breath (keyboard) typing to the boy racers (see my sentiment in the second post of this thread ;) ) because you folks probably appreciate it more.

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2013/2014.5 President
2013 Top Gun

2015 Fit

22R-EC => 4G63 => D16Y7 + D16Y8 => EJ255 + K24Z2 => K20Z3 + K24Z2 => K24Z2 + M54 => L15B


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Wed May 19, 2010 9:40 am 
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JamesShort wrote:
Chuck Branscomb wrote:
MikeWhitney wrote:
James, excellent explanation. I honestly could not find one single hole in your explanation. That's a compliment.

We should get a beer sometime.


I agree -- great write-up.

The only thing I would add is that there is a radiation heat transfer component that also comes into play in an increasing manner as rotor temperatures rise. Anything the rotor can "see", from a radiation view factor standpoint, that is at a substantially lower temperature will exchange heat with the rotor surface.

One other thing to add that is not directly related to this discussion about pads but brakes in general, is that using an interstitial material between the pad backing plate and the piston(s) can substantially reduce conduction heat transfer into the pistons/calipers. Commonly thin Ti plates are used due to the low conductivity of Ti. The thickness of the plate is very small, so the Ti part isn't that significant, but by introducing the plate, two thermal contact resistances are added to the heat conduction path to the piston(s). The additional benefit is that the potentially very hot backing plate back surface is shielded, from a radiation standpoint, by the Ti plate (which will be at a lower temp) which helps reduce heat degradation of the dust covers. The benefit of Ti plates increases substantially as pad thickness is reduced (and therefore the backing plate is operating at higher and higher temperatures as a function of pad thickness reduction).
Excellent point on radiation. Definitely should have entered the conversation but I guess I didn't mention it because my rotors haven't glown red while autocrossing yet :). Sure there is radiative heat xfer between any two objects of varying temperature but the constant (epsilon?) in front of (T_1^4 - T_2^4) is pretty small and despite being a difference of 4 powers, radiation is probably small in relation to convection/conduction......well in autocrossing. Maybe radiation becomes an issue when you fly through the Monaco chicane with your wheels almost locked up :).

One question about this titanium backing plate....why would you want to limit the heat transfer into the caliper etc? The caliper is mass for getting rid of heat at the pad/rotor interface? Well it would keep fluid colder which is important in prolonged racing... I guess in pure racing, they have such cooling capacity with ducting and 2 piece rotors that they are more concerned with point 3 (ie cooling) than they are about heat capacity of the overall system.


Yeah, it's commonly used on street and track cars at track events as it significantly lowers brake fluid temps and especially protects dust covers from thermal degradation. As pad thickness declines, the heat transfer to the caliper/fluid increases substantially (since the pad material is a fantastic insulator), so Ti shims allow increased protection as pads wear. For the most part, at track events, you want to minimize fluid temperature as much as possible -- especially at high brake duty cycle tracks. You really don't want to impose a high heat transfer into the caliper mass -- it's better to depend on the rotor (mass for transient) and convection+radiation cooling capability than to design the caliper to play a significant role.

The importance of brake cooling on track is massively more than at an autox as you know, so that was where my comment on radiation was headed. A maximum braking effort at the end of VIR's 4000' back straight from 140mph to 40 mph in a 4000lb sedan on R-comps will quickly highlight that part. :) Same for the end of front straight, perhaps 130mph to 45 or so. Rotor temperatures can reach well into the range where radiation becomes a factor that can't be ignored.

BTW, using the Ti plates there with the M5 makes a huge difference in survivability of piston dust covers...even with the Stoptech big brake kit and PFC01 pads.

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