Re: 1-piece rotors vs 2-piece rotors vs 2-piece floating rotors
louis said:
guys,
thanks for the input so far!! you chaps are the best, but also the worst influence sia....keke, after one track day and the mod bug has bitten already...
my mum kenna bitten also. she's thinking of the full nismo kit..brakes, exhaust, bodykit, the works.... steam
back to brake discussion:
thus far, the learning points are:
1) get a proven brand if possible
2) weight is my enemy
3) 2-piece is lighter than 1-piece
BUT: is 2-piece floating significantly better than 2-piece non-floating? how does giving greater allowance for different rates of expansion provide an advantage on track?
cheers
Hi,
Brembo has been the frontiers in the development of the 2 piece floating rotors.
I quote with references from a brembo website:
There are several reasons that a two-piece floating disc assembly is of benefit.
First, by using an aluminum bell for the hub section of the disc saves a great deal of weight. Since this is both rotating and unsprung, it benefits the acceleration, braking, and handling of the vehicle.
Secondly, it is better able to handle the large temperature changes that a brake disc experiences. During severe use, temperature variances become present in a one-piece disc and generally cause warping of the disc. This not only results in vibration of the vehicle, and pulsing of the brake pedal, but also pushes the pistons farther away from the disc. In a two-piece floating disc assembly, the iron disc heats up more uniformly, and the controlled float which is present allows for the differential expansion of the very hot brake disc, and the relatively cool aluminum bell. This allows the disc to be used under severe conditions without having a detrimental effect.
You are right to compare the 3 basic variants.
1 piece solid - slightly heavier compared to 2 piece rotors
2 piece rotors - joint by securing nuts from bell to rotors hence slightly lighter
2 piece 'floating' rotors - lighter, allow expansion during high heat (extremely useful for trackdays)
It all depends on your application.
Cheers bro.