Lets
look at some common rotor modification and performance upgrades
that you may have been exposed to and try to separate the marketing from the
engineering
Super Sizing
Bigger rotors will make your friends think you are cool, bigger rotors
look sexy, but bigger rotors do not stop the car. What a bigger rotor will do is lower the
overall operating temperature of the brakes which is a GREAT idea IF your
temperatures are causing problems with other parts of the braking system. Take for example
a F500 racecar a small 800 pound single seat formula car. While the brakes are
certainly much smaller than those found on a 3,000 pound GT1 Camaro, that does not
necessarily mean that they need to be made larger. In fact, swapping on a GT1 brake
package would probably do more harm than good thats a lot of steel hanging on
the wheel that needs to accelerate each time the go pedal is pushed. So, the
motto of this story is bigger is better until your temperatures are under control. After
that point, you are doing more harm than good
unless you really like the look (and
hey some of us do!).
Crossdrilling
Crossdrilling your rotors might look neat, but what is it really doing for
you? Well, unless your car is using brake pads from the 40s and 50s, not a
whole lot. Rotors were first drilled because early brake pad materials gave
off gasses when heated to racing temperatures a process known as gassing
out. These gasses then formed a thin layer between the brake pad face and the rotor,
acting as a lubricant and effectively lowering the coefficient of friction. The holes were
implemented to give the gasses somewhere to go. It was an effective solution,
but todays friction materials do not exhibit the same gassing out phenomenon as the
early pads.
For this reason, the holes have carried over more as a design feature than
a performance feature. Contrary to popular belief they dont lower temperatures (in
fact, by removing weight from the rotor, the temperatures can actually increase a little),
they create stress risers allowing the rotor to crack sooner, and make a mess of brake
pads sort of like a cheese grater rubbing against them at every stop. (Want more
evidence? Look at NASCAR or F1. You would think that if drilling holes in the rotor was
the hot ticket, these teams would be doing it.)
The one glaring exception here is in the rare situation where the rotors
are so oversized (look at any performance motorcycle or lighter formula car) that the
rotors are drilled like Swiss cheese. While the issues of stress risers and brake pad wear
are still present, drilling is used to reduce the mass of the parts in spite of these
concerns. Remember nothing comes for free. If these teams switched to non-drilled
rotors, they would see lower operating temperatures and longer brake pad life at
the expense of higher weight. Its all about trade-offs.
Slotting
Slotting rotors, on the other hand, might be a consideration if your
sanctioning body allows for it. Cutting thin slots across the face of the rotor can
actually help to clean the face of the brake pads over time, helping to reduce the
glazing often found during high-speed use which can lower the coefficient of
friction. While there may still be a small concern over creating stress risers in the face
of the rotor, if the slots are shallow and cut properly, the trade-off appears to be worth
the risk. (Have you looked at a NASCAR rotor lately?)
Too cool!
Last year we bought 4 rotors. Two were bone stock, and two were subjected
to a process know as Cryogenically Treating one of the high-tech buzzwords floating
around the paddock. The rotors were run back-to-back on the same track on the same car on
the same day with temperatures taken to make sure that they saw the same level of heat.
Following the track session, the parts were removed and we had them literally dissected by
a materials lab.
The testing conducted included surface hardness, grain structure analysis,
density, and surface scanning with an electron microscope. Guess what after seeing
the heat of use, the rotors looked identical in every regard. This is not to say that
there is not a benefit from treating other parts which see lower temperatures and/or have
different material properties, but treating our rotors on our car showed no tangible
benefits (note that it didnt seem to hurt anything either). Come to your own
conclusions, but in our case, well pass.
Summary
So, whats the secret recipe? Again, there is no absolute right or
wrong answer, but like most modifications, there are those which appear to be well-founded
and those that look cool. If ultimate thermal performance is your goal, look
to what the top teams are running (relatively large, slotted rotors). However, if
image is your thing, break out the drillpress and be prepared to
replace your brake pads on a regular basis.
