Originally Posted by
DoubleChevron
They were probably well past there due date. Its nothing to do with the slots in the rotors, its the thickness (ie: ability to distribute heat no doubt) that matters. All cars have a minimum thickness that is required for the brake rotors. This doesn't stop places trying to change brake parts that don't need replacing though. Who is going to say no, if a mechanic tells you your car needs new brakes :o
This will be interesting. I wonder how terrible they will drive if they have a motor as unsprung weight (maybe wheel motors will mean a small driveshaft to the motor, so the weight isn't sprung).
Some EV's are so light on brake wear, in areas they salt the roads, they are finding the brake seize up and become inoperable and need replacement..... because they no longer work.....
The more I look at modern cars ... the more I'm thinking our next daily driver will be a chrysler 300 with a nice big 6.4 litre V8, 16 spark plugs, giant brakes that will wear out quickly (2 tons .... lots of power and only available with a slugomatic gearbox).... simple to work on, simple to own, lovely sound track out the back. The polar opposite to an electric throw-away :firedevil::banana::banana::arms:
I'm hoping big, comfy, grunty .... highway cruiser that float along like a barge.