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Michael Pardee wrote: I don't want to trigger another never-ending thread, but in research for another forum I stumbled across this essay on brake pulsations at http://www.powerbrake.co.za/download..._01_judder.pdf It seems to pull together the cementite issue with the issue of disc thickness variation and supports it with pictures. I've seen the individual pieces in various places but thought this did a good job of making sense of it all. There is also a good treatment of brake pad selection that mainly reinforces my preference for staying with OEM. Mike dude, the moment they start talking about cementite, and getting it wrong, they lose all credibility. bottom line, honda disk hubs are ultra-lightweight. they elastically distort when the lugs are tightened. if the torque is incorrect, the disk starts to sit out of plane, and the brake judders. it's real simple! metallurgical problems can exist, and they show disk cracking as one of them, [but get that explanation wrong too], but cementite transformation at normal braking temperatures is pure b.s. i've permanently fixed this issue several times now on different civics and most recently on my crx. simply apply a thin layer of antiseize to the hub surfaces, torque in a 2 or more stage process and bob's your mother's brother. i've been thinking about this for a while, but i guess this article ratchets things up my agenda - i must go to a junk yard and take some pics of things to look out for in the disk brake department. there's one thing particularly i want to show for cheap chinese disk castings. |
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| the #1 issue with "cementite theory", even if the metallurgy weren't bogus, is that brake pulsing disappears if you take the wheel off, clean, antiseize and correctly torque. even if you're unsure on the metallurgical argument, that alone identifies it as a mechanical issue, nothing else. I've never had that experience (possibly because I lived in Phoenix so |
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regarding casting quality, there are indeed a multitude of issues that can be present including non-homogeneity of the casting, voids, inclusions, etc. there can also be heat treatment issues too, lots and lots of things. but to suppose there's any significant metallurgical transformation going on at the temperatures cited, for the few seconds it can be sustained, is massively underinformed. Dunno - that's outside my areas of expertise. But the models and |
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if we're looking at patchiness on the disk, my money's 80% on surface contamination. a thumb print for instance leaves oils which carbonize on heating. then you have a glazed patch with different friction and wear properties to the rest of the disk. add to that a brake pad with insufficient silica [abrasive] content, and this patch will remain while the the remainder of the surface wears. etc. Brake cleanliness is something I've always been a fanatic about. I clean the |
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my other 20% is on insufficient post-casting heat treatment. disk irons are usually "gray" - that means carbon flakes are precipitated throughout the material. if there's a region where it's been insufficiently heated for not long enough, there my be insufficient precipitation and too much retained cementite, but that's /retained/, not formed as the result of service. so, inasmuch as the article tries to address the problem, it's making a good effort regarding cleanliness, torque, q.c., etc. but it's well wide of the mark on the metallurgy and only part way there on contamination. oh, and why do disks "warp" over time? believe it or not, the wheel moves about on the hub, even when bolted tight. not a lot, but a little. if something "settles" as the result of this movement, it'll "warp" the disk. likewise corrosion - that can creep in under bolted surfaces and have the same effect. keep things clean and antiseized, there will be no problems. |
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and as a final reality check, always bear in mind that brakes are supposed to be able to cope with severe service. [despite the "standards" considered acceptable in detroit not so many years ago] if a brake can't stop a fully loaded car from it's maximum speed, fully loaded, on a steep grade, it's a potential killer. cast irons can retain sufficient strength and hardness for this function well into the red heat zone. that's a good deal hotter than our "avoid 610 C" friends seem to be able to envisage. |
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