ChatterBank24 mins ago
Disc Or Drum Brakes.
I have only ever owned 'bread and butter' cars, not swanky stuff.
They have all had disc brakes at the front and drums at the back.
Why?
They have all had disc brakes at the front and drums at the back.
Why?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Interestingly, Gingejbee, what you call modest performance now was well into the boy-racer category a couple of decades ago. On top of that, people drive much harder than they used to do and, because of traffic density, use their brakes more frequenly, so better cooling is required.
I happened to come across a collection of old Aston Martins at a National Trust property a couple of years ago. One of the owners was saying that the current boy-racers expect to give him a race. They forget, he said, that the suspension and brakes on these cars are upto 50 years old so they don't stop or corner like the current bread-and-butter cars.
I happened to come across a collection of old Aston Martins at a National Trust property a couple of years ago. One of the owners was saying that the current boy-racers expect to give him a race. They forget, he said, that the suspension and brakes on these cars are upto 50 years old so they don't stop or corner like the current bread-and-butter cars.
Drum brakes are self boosting. The leading edge of the shoe is pushed onto the drum and the friction forces drive it harder. Hence it takes less force to operate the brake.
This is what makes them more suitable as a handbrake.
In fact some cars with rear wheel discs have a small separate drum brake built into the centre of the disk just for the hand brake.
This is what makes them more suitable as a handbrake.
In fact some cars with rear wheel discs have a small separate drum brake built into the centre of the disk just for the hand brake.