I don't know if this is relevant, but many years ago (1970 something) I had a link pin front end VW beetle. A motorcycle company called Maiko (Maico?) made an aftermarket disk brake conversion for link pin VW and B series Porsche.
Being low volume, they used existing parts for seals etc, and being for a car with very light front axle loads they had very small calliper pistons, so other calliper parts were to small. They were a very high quality part with the disk being steel, the hub being magnesium and the calliper and piston being mainly magnesium and stainless steel.
To cut to the chase, they sealed the calliper piston with a Reo truck master cylinder rubber cup type seal and used what looked like a cylinder ring with a coil spring behind it in the land to retract the piston. The ring and spring package was set up maybe 0.020" from coil bind.
The stainless steel piston ran in a stainless steel sleeve, so corrosion was not a problem. The bulk of the dust was kept out by an "O" ring seal close to the outside edge of the calliper bore. There was no further dust seal.
As pads were not available, I had my original aluminium backing plates relined with DS11 material.
These were a very unusual design with 5 spokes from the hub bending in just inside the tyre change well of the rim and the disk mounting to the spokes, with the friction area on the stub axle side of the mounting bolts, and the calliper straddling the disk from the stub axle side.
This gave about a 12" disk on a very light car with a rear weight bias, so I guess the brakes never got real hot despite my efforts to the contrary.
I used to reduce dust contamination by coating the area where a dust seal would be with lithium based grease. In over 100,000 miles, I never had a problem with the callipers binding.
This is all from memory from the 1970's so there might be some inaccuracies, but the concepts and most details are correct.
Regards
pat pprimmer@acay.com.au
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