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Author: Subject: Brake efficiency vs wheels size
ChrisW

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:01 PM Reply With Quote
Brake efficiency vs wheels size

Having a bit of a brain fart this morning and can't work this out!

For a fixed size of brake caliper, disc, clamping force, etc. Would the braking effect increase or decrease with wheel size?

Thanks, Chris





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A1

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:07 PM Reply With Quote
wouldnt it be easier to stop a smaller wheel cause it carries less momentum? but then would that benefit stopping the car...
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nick205

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:14 PM Reply With Quote
I don't think the wheel diameter would have a significant effect other than bigger diameter wheels tend to have wider tyres therefore a bigger contact patch.

To change the efficiency you'd to increase the friction area or disc diameter (i.e. move the caliper further from the hub to increase mechanical advantage.

(happy to be contradicted with physics BTW)






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Fred W B

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:18 PM Reply With Quote
quote:

Would the braking effect increase or decrease with wheel size?



I would say decrease, because the bigger wheel has more leverage

Cheers

Fred W B





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liam.mccaffrey

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:25 PM Reply With Quote
the deceleration of the vehicle would be less with bigger wheels. If it helps think of it at extremes say with 20' wheels and the leverages involved there!





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ChrisW

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:26 PM Reply With Quote
That may be true, but the relative speed of the disc surface to the pad would be less for the same speed with bigger wheels. Will that make a difference?

Chris





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DavidM

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:36 PM Reply With Quote
The leverage would be greater with a larger wheel, but for a given vehicle speed the larger wheel would also be rotating more slowly than a small wheel. It would be the same regardless of the wheel size as it would be the ability of the brakes to overcome the forward momentum of the vehicle, not the rotation of the wheel.
If the large and small wheels were just spinning at the same speed then the larger wheel would need more braking to stop.

David





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coyoteboy

posted on 8/5/12 at 12:40 PM Reply With Quote
Disc/pad combo can only create X amount of torque (ignoring RPM). Wheel can produce more torque with increasing diameter. Brake will rotate more slowly but with any given PSI of line pressure will be able to produce less reaction torque to slow the car. Meaning either more pressure is required or different compounds. Frictional heating effects, for same pressure, will be lower but to stop in the same time the same power must be dissipated so no gain there, in fact some loss possibly due to lower centrifugal ventillation.

So all in all bigger overall wheel diameter = worse braking for any given system. That said, you can now fit a bigger rotor and larger calipers which means you may reduce the likelyhood of overheat.

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ChrisW

posted on 8/5/12 at 01:13 PM Reply With Quote
Thanks all. Seems the consensus is that a given braking system will be more efficient on a smaller wheel, which is what I need for my application!

Cheers, Chris





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phelpsa

posted on 8/5/12 at 01:15 PM Reply With Quote
Take it back to the basics of what brakes do... kinetic energy into heat at a certain rate (power). If the kinetic energy (mv^2) stays the same and your brake power stays the same them you will deccelerate at the same rate, completely independent of wheel size (other than its effect on mass ).

Edit: Ahhh but your braking power doesn't stay the same because you've specified a constant clamping force.

The capability of the brakes to absorb power remains the same, but you need to apply a greater torque because your speed has decreased (power is torque x speed). In other words, you'll need to press harder to achieve the same decceleration but you'll boil the fluid in the same amount of time.

[Edited on 8-5-12 by phelpsa]

[Edited on 8-5-12 by phelpsa]






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britishtrident

posted on 8/5/12 at 03:13 PM Reply With Quote
Tyre rolling radius rather than wheel diameter , with all other variables on hold the tyre rolling radius is smaller it will be easier to lock the wheel but stopping energy that brakes can dissipate won't change much.

But Tyres with a smaller rolling radius lock earlier than the same width tyre with a bigger rolling radius.


Larger diameter wheel allow better brake cooling.
Wide wheels give poorer brake cooling than narrow wheels.
Aluminium alloy and magnesium alloy wheels sink more heat energy than steel wheels.





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coozer

posted on 8/5/12 at 03:40 PM Reply With Quote
So, Ive gone from 15's with 195/50's to 13"s with 205/60 on the back, 185/60 on the front.. I see the advantage there is the 4kg weight saving on each corner. However rolling diameter is just about the same.
Can I expect to see an improvement in braking performance??





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matt_claydon

posted on 8/5/12 at 04:19 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by coozer
So, Ive gone from 15's with 195/50's to 13"s with 205/60 on the back, 185/60 on the front.. I see the advantage there is the 4kg weight saving on each corner. However rolling diameter is just about the same.
Can I expect to see an improvement in braking performance??


No, if rolling diameter is the same then braking will be the same.


Greater rolling diameter = less deceleration for a given pedal force
Smaller roller diameter = more deceleration for a given pedal force

Maximum possible decel will be the same (assuming same tyre width) as unless your brakes are really poor you will always lock up the wheels before you run out of leg strength.

Fade performance will be unchanged as the amount of energy you are asking the discs/pads to absorb has not changed.

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