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Technical Articles
 
Home >> Technical Articles >>Basics of Automotive Disc Brakes
Basics of Automotive Disc Brakes
Time: 2009-02-17
By Karim Nice
Most modern cars have disc brakes on the front wheels, and some have disc brakes on all four wheels. This is the part of the brake system that does the actual work of stopping the car.The most common type of disc brake on modern cars is the single-piston floating caliper.
 
Here is the location of the disc brakes in a car:
Disc brake location
 
The main components of a disc brake are:
 
·The brake pads
·The caliper, which contains a piston
·The rotor, which is mounted to the hub
Parts of a disc brake
 
The disc brake is a lot like the brakes on a bicycle. Bicycle brakes have a caliper, which squeezes the brake pads against the wheel. In a disc brake, the brake pads squeeze the rotor instead of the wheel, and the force is transmitted hydraulically instead of through a cable. Friction between the pads and the disc slows the disc down.
 
A moving car has a certain amount of kinetic energy, and the brakes have to remove this energy from the car in order to stop it. How do the brakes do this? Each time you stop your car, your brakes convert the kinetic energy to heat generated by the friction between the pads and the disc. Most car disc brakes are vented.
Disc brake vents
 
Vented disc brakes have a set of vanes, between the two sides of the disc, that pumps air through the disc to provide cooling.
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