It has been bugging me for ages how both pads apply an equal amount of pressure, and this video has cleared everything up... Thank you for publishing it...
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Exactly, some of other videos demonstrates like disc moves sideways. But this video shows exactly how two pads actually work.
you have shown how the brakes are squeezed & thus causing the friction to slow down the vehicle - here’s the question: how does the brake pads move back to a ready position? does it get slammed back in position once the hold of the caliper gets released?
Thank you very much, great video ... I have a question please< Is there a space between the break pad and the break disc? Or the break pad is in in contact condition to the break disk
There is a extremely small little gap a tiny bit of play when you put the bread pads on the caliber the break caliber hold the break pad away from the disk under pressure and when you push the break pedal it adds more pressure and makes the break pad push against the disk on both sides
@@Natsuki_Cover fk that bish natsuki, Yuri no1. And yh i found out the pads arent pulled away at all, it just touces slightly with the rotor disk after reasling brake peddle, but since there is no pressure apply, theres hardly any friction.
That is down to the construction and technology used. They withstand huge forces of heat and pressure. As you will appreciate, manufacturers invest significant sums to make brakes optimised for certain conditions and applications. More to them (composition) wise than meets the eye.
Sorry, but the explanation about the movement sequence of the pads is incorrect. The piston stops moving at the first contact with the disc, not because it finished its travel. For continuing its pressure the piston needs a counter part for pushing, and that is why the caliper moves in order to create the opposite brake pad contact.
Think it’s semantics. It has finished its travel, it stops but thanks for adding as the principle is important and interesting, the other side travels because the first can’t continue and it’s quite a clever yet simple mechanism. Equal and opposite and all that. All constructive comments are appreciated and hopefully this will shed more light or discussion for some, thank you.