Dodge Caravan The Dodge Caravan is the best selling mini van from Dodge. How many Dodge Caravan owners here at DodgeForum.com would agree? Discuss it now!

front brake DIY replacement

Old Sep 26, 2013 | 02:40 PM
  #11  
jhhoffma's Avatar
jhhoffma
Registered User
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 6
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by Lscman
Very true, but the 12" rotors on the '08 Grand Caravan aren't exactly undersized when compared to 10" rotors found on commercial trucks and various 400+HP V8 muscle cars sold in the 70's and 80's. The difference in swept area is about double. Corvette 454 and 427 rotors were just over 10" back then, as were the rotors on some commerial trucks with dual wheels designed to carry and tow many tons. I own a 1979 Mustang Cobra with 9" factory rotors....just sayin'. Rotors have been upsized to improve braking performance and lifecycle, not just to compensate for progressively rising curb weights.

The same upsizing strategy has been taken by mfrs on clutch designs. Clutch swept area specs have risen by about 30% in the last couple decades to improve lifecycle and help prevent failures. The notable exception is BMW who stubbornly stuck with undersize clutches. They used 9-5/8" units on 400+ HP V8 vehicles while every other mfr migrated to multi-disc designs or 11" & greater. The M3, M5 and 5-er V8 clutches burn out way too often when driven by aggressive owners.
Oh, totally agree, but I thought we were discussing rotor thickness (and hence wear life), not diameter. Or did I miss something in the conversation? If I did, my bad.

I just meant that along with higher curb weights and ever thinner rotors, metal quality of rotors is more important now than ever.
 
Reply
Old Sep 26, 2013 | 09:34 PM
  #12  
Roger Dodger08's Avatar
Roger Dodger08
Thread Starter
|
Registered User
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Default

thanks for the replies. the rotors were still smooth and in good shape so i left them on.
 
Reply


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:52 AM.