It had a strange shift pattern: the first was back on the left, the second and third were inline, and the fourth (or the S) could be engaged only by turning the lever to the right from the third. Reverse was opposite 1st. Although this may seem an odd layout, it is in fact brilliant. The idea is to put most used gears opposite each other - for parking 1st and reverse, for normal driving 2nd and 3rd. This layout was adopted from the H-van's 3 speed gearbox.
I was going to add something slightly on-topic here... of newer cars actually applying the brakes lightly in the rain, to keep them primed for use and to prevent a film of moisture from building up between the pad and disc... I read about this somewhere about Mercedes brakes, but for the life of me, I can't find it now.![]()
If pads do touch the surface of the disk, the disk surface would always be shiny and clean from the constant contact wouldn't they, even if the car is used infrequently (which is pretty criminal with the sort of car it is).
Carroll Smith says................
http://www.stoptech.com/tech_info/wp_warped_brakedisk.shtml
..........brake discs don't warp.
Scaff
The rotors on both my cars will get that haze of surface rust on them within hours of being parked.
Besides, if that rust was there while driving, it would have been wiped clean by the last stop when the car was parked, not left by the pads not touching the rotors while driving.
I suspect we are arguing semantics or a minute difference. The thing that I'm just not sure that you guys are getting is that there is no device that retracts the pads from the rotor. Nothing pulls the pads away when you release the brake; they just relax their grip, so the gap (if any) is utterly miniscule.
Bentley Head TechnicianThe dust boots and indeed flex on the seals is designed to pull the pad slightly back from the disc surface. If it remained in contact it would just eat away the pad, glaze itself up and generaly be quite miserable with itself. Almost like a sticking caliper.
So if someone drove for a bit with rusted rotors yet didn't use the brakes...that could possibly tell us whether the pads are always in contact with the rotor or not?
Bentley Head TechnicianThe dust boots and indeed flex on the seals is designed to pull the pad slightly back from the disc surface. If it remained in contact it would just eat away the pad, glaze itself up and generaly be quite miserable with itself. Almost like a sticking caliper.
For bikers too lazy to pull on a set of leathers and a helmet![]()
Yeah,mostly because people use hydraulic e-brake.
FamineThe dust boots and indeed flex on the seals is designed to pull the pad slightly back from the disc surface. If it remained in contact it would just eat away the pad, glaze itself up and generaly be quite miserable with itself. Almost like a sticking caliper.
Wouldn't the pad need to be somehow attached to the piston for this to be possible?Bentley Head TechnicianThe dust boots and indeed flex on the seals is designed to pull the pad slightly back from the disc surface.
Asses? What did you think I meant?[regarding Previas and fannies]
haha, slightly different meaning depending where you are.
Yeah, as far as I've ever heard the pads are always in contact with the rotor. Not pressure necessarily, but just barely rubbing along.Wouldn't the pad need to be somehow attached to the piston for this to be possible?
I should start getting sound clips of me spinning the wheels on each car I work on. You can CLEARLY hear a "ssssss" sound as the wheel spins around, which comes from the pads touching the rotors. I'm not saying the entire surface of the pad always touches the rotor, but I've never ran into one that wasn't touching at all.
Asses? What did you think I meant?
Wouldn't the pad need to be somehow attached to the piston for this to be possible?
Type in "mercedes dry-braking" on google and it comes up with a number of links. I couldn't find one concise enough to link to here though, apart from maybe this one on the Mercedes-Benz India site.
Something interesting I've thought of due to a recent need for Spark Plugs on my part...
What's with some of these weird designs coming up, (your Bosch +2/+4, Splitfire, etc..,) ...and will they resist fouling in a cylinder that seems to have bad rings and thus oil blow-by, and the owner doesn't want to take the engine entirely apart because he doesn't have an alternative way to work and school?
as it is, I have to replace the set once a year, though this time, it's only #1 that was badly fouled.