
i saw this pic, and i was wondering if these brakes are carbon fiber, or ceramic.
Ceramic is about 160g lighter than carbon but yet, more stiffer...
i heared there are 2 teams using ceramic brakes on this year's grid, any information about it??
I have'nt heard any car on the grid now uses ceramic brakesmanchild wrote:Ceramic is banned in F1, those are carbon discs and pads.
Nice article! Congrats Tomba!joseff wrote:http://www.f1technical.net/articles/2
I think Manchild could be wrong. Ceramic is banned in the reciprocating parts of the engine. The same article in the rules indicates that you can use it in the clutch and seals (Article 5.14.7). But I could not find anything in the rules about brakes that excludes ceramic pads. The calipers have to be made of aluminium, that is all.manchild wrote:Ceramic is banned in F1, those are carbon discs and pads.
Performance Friction Corp. solved this by weaving the brake disc from a continuous fibre in three directions. This has solved alot of problems with proper heat conduction throughout the disc as previous technology suffered from extreme surface heating. The new discs are alot more stable, and they say that the early designs have had to do away with venting holes, making the discs more rigid.Carbon fibres are very good at conducting heat down their length but they are not very efficient at conducting heat betweeen fibers.