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Technical Paper

Characterisation of Material Transformation during Cast Iron Brake Disc Bedding

2006-10-08
2006-01-3185
Cast iron brake discs are commonly used for road and race applications. The graphite flake arrangement of grey cast iron matches the high thermal conductivity requirements of brake discs, although with the brittleness characteristic of this material. Therefore the design of cast iron brake discs is a compromise between a thermally efficient design to reduce the operating temperature and a design generating a controlled tensile stress level to prevent crack failure, with as little mass penalty as possible. The most critical failure mode on competition brake discs is catastrophic crack propagation in the early stages of service life. Dynamometer testing has shown that the initial bedding process greatly reduces the likelihood of catastrophic disc failure. This fact leads to the hypothesis that a heat treatment process occurs on the discs during bedding, increasing their crack resistance.
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