
Originally Posted by
Pedro_The_Swift
yea John,, the word better is a bit hard to quantify,, the difference between D1 and D2 brake pedal feel is huge, The D1 is like a brick wall and the D2 is a lot softer with longer travel but stops just as well if not a tad better.
go figure.
how about "more effective"?
the car pulls up faster, for longer, with the same pedal pressure.
"more effective" is no more definitive than better! How fast the car pulls up is, for any modern car, ultimately dependent on tyres, to a lesser extent on ABS system and front/rear proportioning. If you want it to pull up faster for the same pedal pressure, this is a function of linings, cylinder diameters, pedal geometry and the (often ignored) vacuum level - but only up to the level of adhesion. For longer, i.e. less fade, is dependent on linings, discs, wheel ventilation, fluid. But you have left out progressive application, pedal travel as factors.
I have actually never encountered brake fade since the seventies, but that may be that since I learnt to drive on cars prone to fade I drive to avoid it (saves fuel too). The best brakes I have encountered are those on my Citroen (which is a 1950s design) - light pedal, zero pedal travel, zero fade from inboard front brakes with cooling ducts, braking proportioned to actual instantaneous load distribution.
But I am still interested in trying to find out what people mean when they look for better brakes.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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