eastern sierra Adj Services wrote: > As I said, before , I would prefer to have discs, on a freeway > full-boogie stop, from above 70 mph. I've found that MOST 'stops' only > require a "slowing-down" , to some extent, to avoid a hazard. > How many of y'all have actually brought yer car's speed down to ZERO, in > a true panic STOP, @ highway speeds???? > Neil 1976 Merc Gran Marquis 9 pass wagon, one big hummer of a wagon, 4 wheel Disks, Stop on a dime and give change. This had the ford 9" rear with a better front/rear ratio setup on brakes, could lock all 4 up. I believe the key here was the fact that the rears shared more of the braking action then a lot of the other 4 wheel disk setups. With all the ones I have seen/owned/driven, I thought the braking action was shared better on that wagon then GM and Mopar. Most 4 wheel disk cars that I know of still allocated the majority of braking action to the front wheels. Or at least seemed to. I know on several vehicles that the rear pads lasted 3-4 times longer then the fronts. Looking at the wear factor, just how much braking was the rear doing???? Whats the average wear factor ration on rear drum, front disk, 2-3 times??? -- Paul Holmgren Hoosier Corps #33, L-6 2 57 300-C's in Indy -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Over 25,000 pages of archived Forward Look information can be easily searched at http://www.forwardlook.net/search.htm Powered by Google!
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