DISC BRAKE
20190063534 ยท 2019-02-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16D69/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/0972
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D55/227
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D69/04
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/183
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/0971
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D55/226
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D2069/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F16D69/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D55/227
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16D65/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A disc brake comprising a brake caliper, an actuation mechanism, a first brake pad support arrangement configured to be inboard of a brake rotor, and a second brake pad support arrangement configured to be outboard of a brake rotor and at least two brake pads mounted to the first support arrangement or the second support arrangement.
Claims
1. A disc brake comprising: a brake caliper; an actuation mechanism at least partially accommodated within the brake caliper; a first brake pad support arrangement configured to be inboard of a brake rotor; a second brake pad support arrangement configured to be outboard of the brake rotor; and at least two brake pads mounted to one or other of the first and second brake pad support arrangements.
2. The disc brake of claim 1 wherein the at least two brake pads includes a first brake pad having friction material and a second brake pad having friction material, the first and second brake pads being mounted to one or other of the first and second brake pad support arrangements, wherein the friction material of the first brake pad has a different property to the friction material of the second brake pad.
3. The disc brake of claim 2 wherein the friction material of the first brake pad has a greater wear resistance than the friction material of the second brake pad or the friction material of the second brake pad has a greater wear resistance than the friction material of the first brake pad.
4. The disc brake of claim 3 wherein the first and second brake pads are mounted to the first brake pad support arrangement, wherein the first brake pad is a leading pad and the second brake pad is a trailing pad, and wherein the friction material of the first brake pad has greater wear resistance than the friction material of the second brake pad.
5. The disc brake of claim 3 wherein the first and second brake pads are mounted to the second brake pad support arrangement, wherein the first brake pad is a leading pad and the second brake pad is a trailing pad, and wherein the friction material of the second brake pad has greater wear resistance than the friction material of the first brake pad.
6. The disc brake of claim 2 wherein the actuation mechanism comprises two pistons.
7. The disc brake of claim 6 wherein the first and second brake pads are mounted to the first brake pad support arrangement, and wherein the actuation mechanism includes a first piston configured to act directly on the first brake pad and a second piston configured to act directly on the second brake pad.
8. The disc brake of claim 1 further comprising a brake carrier configured to support the brake caliper, wherein the brake carrier includes at least one of the first brake pad support arrangement and the second brake pad support arrangement.
9. The disc brake of claim 1 wherein the actuation mechanism includes a single piston.
10. The disc brake of claim 1 wherein the at least two brake pads are mounted to the first brake pad support arrangement, and the disc brake further comprises a plate configured to transmit actuation force from the actuation mechanism to the at least two brake pads.
11. The disc brake of claim 10 wherein the plate includes the first brake pad support arrangement.
12. The disc brake of claim 10 wherein the actuation mechanism includes a piston and the plate is integral to the piston.
13. The disc brake of claim 10 wherein the plate includes a brake pad abutment surface arranged to contact a corresponding surface of one of the brake pads.
14. The disc brake of claim 13 wherein the brake pad abutment surface comprises a portion inclined to a horizontal direction.
15. The disc brake of claim 14 wherein the brake pad abutment surface comprises a generally horizontal portion.
16. The disc brake of claim 10 wherein the plate is arranged to support the brake pads across an entire rear surface of each of the brake pads.
17. The disc brake of claim 1 further comprising the brake rotor.
18. A brake pad arrangement for a disc brake, the brake pad arrangement comprising: at least two brake pads configured for location in a shared brake pad support arrangement on an inboard or an outboard side of a brake rotor.
19. The brake pad arrangement of claim 18 further comprising first and second brake pads, each having friction material, wherein the friction material of the first brake pad has greater wear resistance than the friction material of the second brake pad.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0064] As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
[0065] Actuation
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[0067] Various orientations of the disc brake are described. In particular the directions inboard and outboard refer to the typical orientation of the disc brake when fitted to a vehicle. In this orientation, the brake pad closest to the center of the vehicle is the brake pad directly actuated by an actuation mechanism, and being the inboard brake pad, and the outboard brake pad being the brake pad mounted to a bridge or frame portion of the caliper. Thus, inboard can be equated with an actuating side of the disc brake, and outboard with a reaction side. The terms radial, circumferential, tangential and chordal describe orientations with respect to the brake rotor. The terms vertical and horizontal describe orientations with the disc brake mounted uppermost on an axle, though it will be appreciated that in use such a disc brake may adopt any axle orientation depending upon packaging requirements of the vehicle.
[0068] The disc brake 2 comprises a brake caliper 3 having a housing 6 to accommodate the actuation mechanism, and which is slidably mounted on a brake carrier 4 for movement in an inboard-outboard direction.
[0069] As can be seen best from the view in
[0070] With reference to the cut-away view of
[0071] In order to urge the piston assembly in the direction of arrow 14, the operating shaft 21 is pivoted about rollers 23 which are located along a transverse axis 28. In this embodiment, there are two rollers 23, which are spaced from one another circumferentially. Each roller 23 is located on a single bearing surface, each bearing surface being curved to accept the roller 23. Curved surfaces, in this case convex surfaces 21a, of the operating shaft 21 are located opposite the roller 23. The operating shaft has an axis 22, being the radial center of the arc defined by the convex surfaces 21a, which is parallel and offset from the transverse axis 28. Each convex surface 21a locates in a semi-circular recess of a yoke 20. A surface of the yoke 20 opposite the recess is in contact with an inboard end face of the piston 15. The operating shaft 21 further comprises a lever 24 having a pocket 25 adapted to receive an output push rod of a brake actuator (e.g., an air chamber). The lever 24 is, in this embodiment, shaped as an inverted U (see
[0072] In other embodiments, another form of cam surface instead of the convex surface 21a of the operating shaft 21 may be employed (e.g., a plain bearing) and/or the arrangement may be reversed with the rollers 23 being in contact with the yoke 20, and the convex surface 21a being located in the recess of the caliper housing 6.
[0073] Application of a force in the direction of arrow 26 (
[0074] Dual Brake Pads
[0075] Referring now to
[0076] The first inboard pad 104 comprises a backplate 108 and friction material 110 that is attached to the backplate 108, as shown in
[0077] In this embodiment the first inboard brake pad 104 and second inboard brake pad 106 have the same swept area of friction material and are in effect a mirror image of each other. However, in other embodiments, the first and second brake pads are asymmetrical, and have different swept areas of friction material. For example, the first and second brake pads are in some embodiments asymmetrical about a radial centerline of the brake pads, set midway between the circumferential edges of the brake pads.
[0078] Both the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 are mounted on a shared brake pad support arrangement. In this embodiment, the brake pad support arrangement is a spreader plate 116. As well as locating and supporting the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106, the spreader plate 116 engages surfaces of a brake carrier 105.
[0079] The backplates 108, 112 of the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 are configured to fit adjacent to one another in an opening 118 of the spreader plate 116 (see
[0080] In an alternative embodiment a strap or straps are used to retain the pads. A central strap in combination with a pad spring can be used, or two straps, one extending over each brake pad. In other embodiments, the pad spring may not be required.
[0081] The first inboard brake pad 104 has a circumferentially outer surface 104a and a circumferentially inner surface 104b. The second inboard brake pad 106 has a circumferentially outer surface 106a and a circumferentially inner surface 106b. When the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 are located in the opening 118 of the spreader plate, the circumferentially inner surfaces 104b, 106b engage one another. The circumferentially outer surfaces 104a, 106a of the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 engage corresponding vertical abutment surfaces 120a, 120b (see
[0082] As can be seen from
[0083] When the disc brake 102 is actuated, and the spreader plate 116 is moved towards the rotor by the actuation mechanism, the friction material 110, 114 of the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 contacts the rotor, to retard rotation of the wheel. As the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 contact the rotor, a drag force acts on the first and second inboard brake pads 104, 106 in a circumferential direction. The force transmission path is from the friction material 110 of the first inboard brake pad 104 (as it is the leading brake pad), through the circumferentially inner surface 104b of the first inboard brake pad 104 to the circumferentially inner surface 106b of the trailing second inboard brake pad 106, and then through the circumferentially outer surface 106a of the second inboard brake pad 106 and to the vertical abutment surface 120b of the spreader plate 116. Force will also pass directly from the friction material 114 of the second inboard brake pad 106 to the outer surface 106a of the second inboard brake pad 106. The spreader plate 116 is configured to transmit substantially the entire braking induced torque load that would otherwise conventionally be transmitted directly from a brake pad to the carrier 105.
[0084] As the braking forces are reacted directly by the spreader plate 116, this arrangement allows for thinner backplates (e.g., 5 mm or less, or potentially 3 mm or less as opposed to 8 mm or more as is conventional for heavy vehicles) to be used compared to brake pads of the prior art. This means that less material is needed for manufacture, which has cost and environmental benefits. Further, manufacturing two separate inboard brake pads rather than one large single brake pad may result in further cost savings. It is also easier to maintain the brake pad flatness during processing of the brake pad for smaller separate brake pads compared to a larger single brake pad. Cracking of the friction material due to thermal or mechanical effects is less likely, so that slot features to address cracking may not be required, and complexity of manufacture is reduced. As the brake pads are held by the spreader plate 116 the risk of the thinner backplate forming depressions in the abutment surfaces of the carrier 105 are mitigated. Holding the brake pads in the spreader plate 116 also reduces the risk of ejection of the brake pads via the gap between the carrier and the rotor as the spreader plate is thicker than the backplate of the brake pads, supports the backplates, and itself is supported by the carrier 105.
[0085] Having separate brake pads also enables different friction materials to be used on each brake pad. This can help reduce so called taper wear, where the leading edge of a conventional brake pad wears quicker than its trailing edge. In this case, the friction material 110 of the first inboard brake pad 104 may be made from a more wear resistant material than the friction material 114 of the second inboard brake pad 106, resulting in the two brake pads wearing at a more even rate.
[0086] In this embodiment, two individual brake pads are also used at the outboard side of the disc brake 102. First and second outboard side brake pads are supported in a further brake pad support arrangement provided by an opening in the bridge 111 of the brake caliper 103. Generally vertical abutment surfaces of the opening react the forces from the first and second outboard brake pads in use.
[0087] At the outboard side of the disc brake 102, taper wear typically reverses compared to the inboard side. Therefore, in this case, the outboard trailing brake pad has friction material of higher wear resistance than the leading brake pad, so that the brake pads wear at a generally even rate.
[0088] The first and second brake pads of other embodiments have alternative differing properties, such as temperature resistance, friction coefficient, desired noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) properties, squeal resistance and/or compressibility.
[0089] In an alternative embodiment, the disc brake has first and second inboard brake pads, and a single outboard brake pad. In a further alternative embodiment, the disc brake has first and second outboard brake pads, and a single inboard brake pad.
[0090] In an alternative embodiment, the disc brake has more than two inboard and/or outboard brake pads.
[0091] In this embodiment, friction element retaining members, also known as pad straps, may be required to retain the inboard and outboard brake pads.
[0092] A further embodiment of the invention is shown in
[0093] The disc brake 202 shown in
[0094] As shown in
[0095] The disc brake 202 of this embodiment has outboard brake pads also having friction material defining a substantially vertical slot.
[0096] A further embodiment of the spreader plate of the invention is shown in
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[0098] Either spreader plate 116, 316 can be used with the disc brake 102, 202 of either of the embodiments shown in
[0099] In an alternative embodiment, the brake pad support arrangement is the brake carrier. In such an embodiment, the brake actuation mechanism has a single or two pistons. A spreader plate can be used in such an embodiment to evenly distribute load between the two brake pads, with the spreader plate being supported in the carrier. Alternatively, no spreader plate is used, and the piston or pistons act directly on the backplates of the brake pads. In one alternative embodiment, the brake actuation mechanism has two pistons with equal piston travel, and no spreader plate is used. In this embodiment, each piston acts on one of the inboard brake pads. The actuation force is thus evenly split, and taper wear is reduced. In a further alternative embodiment, the backplate of each brake pad has a formation comprising a lug or lugs extending therefrom away from the friction material that fit to a corresponding slot or recess in the spreader plate, instead of, or in addition to the steps 122, 322 in order to mount the brake pads to the spreader plate.
[0100] It will be appreciated that numerous changes may be made within the scope of the present invention. For example, certain aspects of the invention may be applicable to other types of disc brake, such as electromechanically actuated brakes.
[0101] While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.