How big is it in an f1 car?
Thats a difficult one, I have no info, but lets see:
1- we have got an x pressure [psi, kgf/cm2] in the hidraulic line
2- supposing that hydraulic pressure is effectively transmited to brake pad (6 piston calipers in the middle, I think)
3- pressure transmited to brake pad * brake pad area = force transmited to the disc [N]
4- force transmited to the disc * disc radius = "stopping momentum"
5- this "stopping momentum" is transmited to the tyre (tyre radius) and we have got breaking force, we have to make this = to what the tyre can handle just a fraction before locking (this is maximun when braking at high speed due to downforce)
6- To calculate this maximun we should have some input data like: how much does the car decelerates in the first fraction (the fraction depends on the accuracy of the calculus, the speed first derivate would be ideal data here but who dares to approximate an ecuation there???

, with telemetry speed vs time graphic will be enough for an overall -4 wheel- calculation)
Overall:
stopping momentum / tyre radius = car mass * negative acceleration
individual:
individual tyre stopping momentum / tyre radius = friction coeff * normal load (max downforce)
and max downforce = weight + mass transfer the fraction we have selected + aero downforce
As you see, I need some data I don´t know, maybe can find and some data and we have to suppose some other. Tons of simplifications here (homogeneous load distribution in the piston-caliper-pad and tyre-ground, cog position to calculate mass transfer, etc)
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