Brake Bias
Author
Discussion

Exige77

Original Poster:

6,523 posts

208 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
Can someone please explain how different brake master cylinders can give a different brake balance between front and back ?

Many thanks

Ex77

Mr Sparkle

1,932 posts

187 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
I thought you would usually use a balance bar or proportioning valve to do this. But as I understand a larger cylinder will displace more hydraulic fluid but at a cost of greater force required for the same pedal travel.

Do you have a specific problem you are trying to solve?

Exige77

Original Poster:

6,523 posts

208 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
Just fitted an AP Motorsport master cylinder which is supposed to move the brake bias to the back. You need to use this in conjunction with a bake bias valve which I have so you can move it slightly forward again to achieve the desired balance.

I would like to understand how the single master cylinder sends more torque to front or back ? How is the force distributed ?

Thanks

Ex77

Nick1point9

3,920 posts

197 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
Different area pistons for front and rear circuit will generate different pressures.

Nick1point9

3,920 posts

197 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
Repost, stupid phone.

Exige77

Original Poster:

6,523 posts

208 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
Nick1point9 said:
Different area pistons for front and rear circuit will generate different pressures.
Think the bore is the same throughout its length.

Ex77

Nick1point9

3,920 posts

197 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
quotequote all
The bore will be the same but there will be a rod/shaft running the length of the cylinder and by changing it's diameter you change the area of the piston.

one eyed mick

1,189 posts

178 months

Thursday 30th May 2013
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EH!!!!!!!

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

260 months

Friday 31st May 2013
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1. Ring AP, it's their product.

2. Report back here and put us out of our misery.


In the past I have found them to be very knowledgeable, helpful and forthcoming with information about their own products, including even sending me working drawings.

Mark_r33

16 posts

200 months

Friday 31st May 2013
quotequote all
The original cylinder doesn't have a bias valve built in, does it?

Never seen a Lotus one, but Chapman always liked simplicity, and having everything in the cylinder may, perhaps, be described as that!

Kozy

3,169 posts

235 months

Tuesday 25th June 2013
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Is it a tandem cylinder, with a diagonal split circuit?

If so, I'm not sure the cylinder will have any effect on bias.

You normally need twin cylinders for that. The smaller the cylinder, the more pressure it supplies, the more brake force the axle it feeds delivers.

FrogPower

14 posts

147 months

Tuesday 25th June 2013
quotequote all
Exige77 said:
Can someone please explain how different brake master cylinders can give a different brake balance between front and back ?

Many thanks

Ex77
By having differential bore sizes/swept volumes within the respective areas that feed front/rear lines, but they aren't very common as a standard fitment, it's easier to manage bias with calipers or bias valves. (FYI - Porsche 944 master cylinder has different cylinder bores)

Edited by FrogPower on Tuesday 25th June 20:54