|
I
get emails almost every day on the subject of
‘new’ O-ring calipers. The fact is
they are not new at all. Only the marketing is
new.
There
is no requirement in the patent office that an
idea has to have merit, only that the application
be unique. In my opinion, for C-2 and C-3 Corvettes
that are driven on the street, O-ring pistons
are an idea without merit.
I
have condensed the following from a 20-page engineering
paper written by Zora Arkus-Duntov and copyrighted
by the Society of Automotive Engineers in 1982.
Direct quotes are indicated:
There
are three disc brake design types, each with
their own unique advantages and disadvantages.
The C2-C3 caliper is a floating piston design.
The other two types are floating caliper and
floating disc. (The C4 caliper is a floating
caliper design, and has O-ring seals.) As you
can see, the common factor is that something
has to float in all three disc brake types.
Floating
piston-type brakes (like the C2-C3 brake system)
must address piston knock-back resulting from
deflections generated primarily from cornering
forces.
The C2-C3 brake system was designed with a feature
known as a ‘constant
contact shoe’. The brake
pad floats on the surface of the rotor (at a
friction loss of approximately .8 HP at 100
MPH) in order to reduce response time and increase
pedal pressure reserve. This float is a delicate
balance between the lip seal and the spring
behind the piston.
“...it
has been found
to be necessary that the piston be free to follow
the disc. This is accomplished
with the spring urging the piston toward the
disc. This spring force must be light enough
to avoid a dragging situation. In turn, the
seal friction must be less than the spring force.
A lip style seal satisfies this requirement
and provides complete
freedom from the piston knock-back
problem.”
The
reduced piston to wall clearance inherent with
the O-ring design (when installed in a floating
piston caliper), eliminates what Duntov said was
necessary.
Obviously, the O-ring piston is not free to follow
the disc (rotor). The designed-in balance between
the lip seal and the piston spring is completely
ignored with the aftermarket O-ring pistons. When
cornering forces cause spindle deflection, the
brake system is put in a bind. As Duntov said,
lip seal pistons have the clearances necessary
to eliminate this bind and piston knock-back.
O-ring sealed pistons do not, and are subject
to sticking in the bores unless the caliper in
which they are installed is a floating
caliper design.
Here
is a graphic from the SAE report:

The floating shoe feature is a safety, as well
as performance advantage. Only 5 thousandths of
an inch retraction (of the pad from the surface
of the disk) equals an inch of pedal travel and
410 PSI of pedal pressure reserve. The C2-C3 brake
system was designed to rely on that 410 PSI pedal
reserve, which is not available unless the pad
is floating on the surface of the disk.
Bottom
Line: If your Corvette is a static
display show car, O-ring calipers are a good option.
If you drive your Corvette, stick with Duntov’s
design. If you drive your car only once a month,
just depress the brake pedal every couple of weeks,
and your lip seals should be leak free for at
least a decade.
|