Overrun
Automotive
- Dec 30, 2014
- 45
Is there a need for enhanced brake heat rejection? There seems to be an attitude that heat rejection is fully mature with no room for improvement –not even a brake thread in this forum.
What I have is a cross discipline new means –additive to the existing convection/radiation mechanisms -for heat rejection that avoids the conventional heat sinking for delayed cooling. I’d be happy to go into more detail is there’s interest, but my question is essentially to the need and profile of the brake industry. My background is a bit eclectic but includes suspension enhancements and midlevel race engineering (shoestring but the team did win a TV race). But I have few present contacts.
Any thoughts?
What I have is a cross discipline new means –additive to the existing convection/radiation mechanisms -for heat rejection that avoids the conventional heat sinking for delayed cooling. I’d be happy to go into more detail is there’s interest, but my question is essentially to the need and profile of the brake industry. My background is a bit eclectic but includes suspension enhancements and midlevel race engineering (shoestring but the team did win a TV race). But I have few present contacts.
Any thoughts?