Well you can't see inside the brake pipes. I've got some extra virgin dot 21 fluid on order though - just you wait.
I'm not interested in the bling though. This is a serious racing machine. No other car will be able to fry eggs as well or as fast. Maintaining a minimal quality standard is important. We're not Minardi.
Ah. So it MUST be this Laplace whatever messing up with you. If you want my advice a good hit between his eyes with a hammer onr any other tool of the same shape and weight might do the trick.
Always pleased to help
I don't think that was pad, fluid or green fade though, because otherwise replacing the bits I did would have helped... Something else went wrong with the car, and I don't know if it was temperature related or not (I suspect not).
It was probably because the car was French, and they can't make cars.
i can do them without even thinking while being awake... try to beat that
on a more serious note he wouldnt perchance like to try his hands on a nasty fourier transform with singularities and everything?
Ok this thread is a bit long for such a simple suggestion. Since I did not read the whole thing I will just say this. I do not see a problem with removing the max brake pressure setting option from the setup screen for based on whether brake is mapped to an anolog control or not.
If it is then remove the option and set it to a predefigned setting. If not mapped to an anolog control show the setting and allow the user to adjust the max pressure as they lack the ability while racing to esaly modulate braking force.
Makes it more realistic for people with peddels while still being accessable to people without.
ok im not exactly sure what u guys are talking about but to clear up a few things
i run normal road pads and dot4 fluid in my car and 235-40-17 tyres
when i raced on the track the first time
after 2 laps tyres were to hot at 27 PSI along with brake fade
fade was geting worse every lap
on lap 6 the brake pedal hit the floor and had no braking what so ever the fluid was fuked.
after i let the car sit for a few hours my brakes were fine
and i have no abs or brake bias but the feeling of the pedal didnt help me to not lock the wheels that much
-
(Christopher Raemisch)
DELETED
by Christopher Raemisch : why bother...
Take out the max brake force and put it at a predefined setting. At what setting are you going to put it at? With an FZR, I would have no brakes if I had the squashball mod done in my pedals as I sometimes do if you put it at the normally seen 1600-1900. Predefine it to what I would use with the squashball mod and you will lock your brakes up by breathing on the pedal with the brake force at around 2900 (guessing, I haven't had the squashball in for quite some time.)
It's just not as simple as "you have an analog controller thus you should use pedal modulation" as all controllers are different and folks also mod theirs to be very different.
In the end does it really matter? Even in a real car you can adjust this by altering the size of the rotors, the number of cylinders/caliper and the brake boost/pressure feeding the system by using a different master brake cylinder. So who really cares if its alterable. People that set it not lock on full push are loosing out on maximum braking power as you can often brake much harder if you slowly bring up the pressue. I always set it high enough to lock all 4 tires at the end of a long brake run.
Hey guys, as most of you i've been laughing during the read of this thread. (ps. Dont let the low post count fool you as me being new, i've been reading this boards usually once a week, on and off, for the last few years). Anyways, as I was laughing because the forum's biomedical engineer posted a Laplace transform to illustrate being smarter (??), I also noticed a few posts that replied with something like this:
I want to rectify this. I study mechanical engineering in Delft, Holland, and I've designed and produced a disc brake for a bike in my first year. Although that's not the same as a car brake, it is not too far off, and this is basic engineering 101. Biomedical Engineering (BE) however, is a 2 year Master, which requires the Mechanical engineering bachelor diploma to enter.
So it is safe to assume that a biomedical engineer knows its way around mechanical systems. Also the Systems&Control (SC) part, is all about modelling reallife situations into formulas, and someone experienced in (SC) is generally quite good in understanding how a process works.
Concluding: I'm saying (BE) is a serious occupation that creates tools for better operations or small mechanical systems to replace bodyfunctions, which in my opinion is a lot more difficult (but in the same area) as engineering a brake.