Tomba wrote:Considering the heat currently in discs under breaking, could any more brake force be applied to the discs without putting them in flames?
Not neccesarily, increasing brake cooling through larger brake ducts would probably compensate for the increased heat dissipation in that particular area.
Although the additional heat from the brakes would possibly affect surrounding areas, such as tire temperature, suspension. Materials sensitive to extreme heat would need to be replaced more often, or would need additional protection.
-----Current F1 CF brake sytems reach temperatures up to 1200°C during actual cornering-----
Tomba wrote:And second, the added weight may be a problem for cornering and such.
Would the addition of four more brake pads overall have a significant affect on the cornering speeds and/or capabilities?
Does anyone have a thought as to how much an actual F1 brake pad weighs?
Besides, there wouldn't be four more similarly sized brake pads, the current pads would be reduced in size, in order to allow the new incoming brake pads to properly fit.
1 pad per caliper -> 2 smaller pads per caliper.
I come to that idea because the wheel diameter will not undergo change, simply the brake pad design (and caliper design as well).
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@ Scarbs: Great photo. Is CF for this application usually that color(powdery grey)? Before use I would imagine.