Boy did you miss the mark! The biggest benefit of larger brake rotor
is the increase in the brake pads moment arm (lever length) & a heat
dissipation improvement due to increased rotor surface area.
I've done both. 1st was installation of the larger rotor for a
dramatic improvement. 2nd I added SS brake line for negligible
braking improvement but much esthetic improvement.
--- In
DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com, "Eric L. Green"
wrote:
> Well, my front brake gave a little metal-to-metal squeal yesterday.
I
> looked down when I got home, and sure enough, it's time for new
brake
> pads. And, for that matter, possibly a new brake rotor, because
this guy
> is looking a bit tired and worn -- the previous owner put sintered
> metallic pads on the thing. We'll see what happens when I clean it
up. The
> good news is that the cycle accessories place down the street is a
Galfer
> dealer. The even better news is that his Galfer distributor is
about 1
> mile away from his shop, so that even though he'll have to order
pads,
> they shouldn't take long to arrive.
>
> I looked at the "big rotor" kit. I'm not convinced. Braking
efficiency is
> detirmined by three things:
>
> 1) Temperature of the rotor and brake pads. This is reduced by the
big
> rotor, but modern brake pads aren't as sensitive to temperature.
However,
> the big rotor does allow more heat dispersal.
>
> 2) Area of brake pad in contact with the rotor. This is identical
between
> the two.
>
> 3) Amount of force exerted against the rotor by the brake pads.
This,
> along with the coefficient of friction, detirmines how much
directional
> energy will be transformed into heat energy. The calipers continue
to
> exert the same amount of force against the rotor, and steel
continues to
> have the same coefficient of friction that it's always had.
>
> Now, there seem to be people absolutely convinced that the big
rotors make
> their brakes stop better. They point to the amount of suspension
dive.
> However, suspension dive is not only a matter of weight transfer,
it is
> also a matter of moment arm. The relocated brake pads, being
further out
> on the fork, will transfer additional torque to the fork. This is
not
> causing additional braking by any means -- amount of braking is
detirmined
> by how much forward energy is converted into heat energy. This has
> absolutely nothing to do with fork dive.
>
> The other thing they point to is how much easier it is to do
a "stoppie".
> But again, this is a matter of moment arm, not of braking
efficiency.
>
> Another confounding issue is the fact that most people also upgrade
to the
> Galfer stainless steel lines at the same time. The Galfer lines
will cause
> greater braking power with less lever motion, because they have a
slightly
> smaller inside diameter, meaning less buffering by the fluid column
in the
> brake line. More of the force instead goes against the calipers. So
people
> may be confusing the better feel from the Galfer lines with the
effects of
> the rotor. People also often update to the Galfer green brake pads
at the
> same time, which will increase the coefficient of friction between
brake
> pad and rotor, and thus stopping power.
>
> It appears to me that the temperature issue is the only one where
the
> larger rotor will produce better results. If I were intending to go
down a
> 4% slope using my brakes rather than my engine to slow me down, I
might
> think it's worth it. But at the moment, looking at the simple
physics
> involved, it seems to me that it'd make more sense to just put
another
> OEM-style rotor by EBC or etc. on there (for half the price or less
of the
> big rotor kit) and go with the Galfer Green pads and stainless
steel brake
> line.
>
> From what I can tell, the only way that the bigger rotor would
result in
> more braking power would be if there were bigger pads and more
powerful
> calipers to go with it. Without that, it seems like a vanity
project to
> me, not to mention that it puts forces onto the fork that the fork
wasn't
> designed for. Am I overlooking something? Is physics lying to me?
Did I
> overlook a coefficient of friction somewhere that is improved by the
> bigger rotor? Do the big rotor kits include something that isn't
shown on
> the web sites (which show a rotor, and a bracket for moving the
calipers
> upwards)? Scientific minds want to know!
>
> -E