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Rotor
Seasoning for Street or Light Track Applications
(per Baer Brakes)
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The first step in
preparing the brake system for duty is to “SEASON” the rotors. The
most visible effects are that of burning the machine oils from the surface
of the iron and establishing a wear pattern between the pad and rotor. The
most complex task it performs is that of relieving the internal stresses
within the material. If you’ve ever poured water into a glass of ice,
and noticed the ice cracking, then you’ve witnessed, first hand, the
effects of internal stresses. The rotor casting and cooling processes
leave the rotor with internal stresses.
By gradually heating the material, the crystalline matrix will reconfigure
to relieve these internal stresses. After these stresses are relieved, the
rotor is ready to accept the heat of bedding pads. Heating the rotors
before they are fully seasoned can result in material deformation due to
the unrelieved internal stresses in the material. This deformation may
cause a vibration from the brakes. In order to prevent this vibration, all
PRO-RACE+ rotors are trued before shipping.
Rotors need to be gradually elevated to “race” temperatures before any
severe use. A “nibble”, or slight vibration, normally indicates rotors
that were heated too quickly. After initial “Seasoning”, when running
your car at open track events or serious canyon carving, you should use
the first lap of a session (or first couple miles of open road), to warm
the brakes as well as the engine, gearbox, etc. Where an engine turns
chemical energy into motion, the brakes turn that motion into thermal
energy....and lots of it! And where there is no cooling system for the
brakes as there is for the engine, and there’s not, the brakes could use
the courtesy of a warm-up lap.
Remember to ALWAYS WARM THE BRAKES before any heavy use!
Seasoning Procedure:
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Before you begin, please note: The following
represents the minimum recommended “Seasoning” process. If your
situation offers any opportunity to perform gentle preliminary “Seasoning”
outlined in Step 2 below for a longer period of time, this will
generally render even better performance and increase further long
term rotor life.
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Use the vehicle for 5 to 6 days of gentle
driving. Use the brakes to the same extent that you used the stock
brakes, DO NOT TEST PERFORMANCE or ATTEMPT HEAVY USE UNTIL ALL ITEMS
OUTLINED HAVE BEEN COMPLETED. It is imperative that excessive heat is
not put into the rotors at this stage. They need temperature-cycling
to relieve the internal stresses.
Note: Zinc plated rotors (which are an extra cost option) need a
couple of extra days of driving to wear through the plating before “Seasoning”
actually will begin.
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Find a safe location where the brakes can be
run to temperature.
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Your goal is to gradually increase brake
temperatures with progressively faster stops. Start by performing
four 60 to 70 mph stops, as you would in the normal course of
driving.
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Next, perform four medium effort partial
stops (about 50 %) from 60 mph down to 15 mph. Follow this with
five minutes of freeway driving with LITTLE to NO BRAKING to allow
the rotors to cool.
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Then, perform four medium-hard effort
partial stops (about 75 %) from 60 mph down to 15 mph. Follow this
with ten minutes of freeway driving with LITTLE to NO BRAKING to
allow the rotors to cool.
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Park the car and allow the brakes to
cool overnight to ambient temperature. You are now 50 % done with
the rotor “Seasoning/Bedding” procedure, proceed to STEP 4 the
following day.
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Return to the safe location where the brakes
can be run to temperature.
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Make sure the brakes are warmed to full
operating temperature and then, perform four medium effort partial
stops (about 50 %) from 60 mph down to 15 mph. Follow this with
five minutes of freeway driving with LITTLE to NO BRAKING to allow
the rotors to cool.
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Then, perform four medium-hard effort
partial stops (about 75 %) from 60 mph down to 15 mph. Follow this
with ten minutes of freeway driving with LITTLE to NO BRAKING to
allow the rotors to cool.
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NOW, make six HARD partial stops from
60+ mph down to 15 mph or until rotors have reached an operation
temperature of between 900 and 1,100° (Note: Temperature paints
to accurately measure rotor temperature may be purchased from Baer
Racing). Every effort should be made to perform this procedure
without locking a wheel. Follow this with ten minutes of freeway
driving with LITTLE to NO BRAKING to allow the rotors to cool.
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Let the system cool off over night. The
rotors are then ready for the next step in Preparing your Brake
System: Bedding Pads.
Pad
Bedding for Street or Light Track Applications
Bedding brake pads has a couple of important
effects. The friction material in semi-metallic pads is held together by
an organic binder, usually a type of phenolic material. As the pads get
hot, the binder boils, and burns, from the top surface of the pad. Once
this burning or “Bedding” takes place the friction material makes
proper contact with the rotor.
Some race/performance pads, like the Performance Friction’s line of
pads, are designated as “pre-burnished” from the manufacturer. In our
experience these pads still benefit from "bedding”. “Bedding”
pads establishes a wear pattern between the pads and rotor. Some pads,
like the Performance Friction pads, deposit a layer of carbon in the
surface of the rotor. They need that layer of carbon to perform at peak
efficiency.
Most Baer Claw™ systems which are equipped with PBR calipers, SS/DRAG,
SPORT, TRACK, and TRACK+, come standard with metallic pads. However, PBR
based A-SEDAN systems, as well as PRO-RACE and PRO-RACE+ Systems with the
Alcon calipers feature carbon metallic pads from either Pagid, Performance
Friction or Tekstar.
Bedding Metallic or Carbon/Metallic Pads - (NEVER DRAG the brakes)
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Note: Never “Bed” pads on rotors which
have not first been “Seasoned.” Always allow a substantial coast
down zone when bedding pads that will allow you to safely drive the
car to a stop in the event of fade.
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Perform four repeated light to medium stops,
from 65 to 10 mph, to bring the rotors to temperature.
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Perform two heavy stops, back to back, at a
point just pending wheel lock, from 65 mph to about 5 mph.
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Drive for five to ten minutes to create
cooling airflow, without using the brakes if at all possible.
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Perform three light stops in succession.
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Perform eight heavy stops, back to back, at
a point just pending wheel lock, from 65 mph to about 5 mph.
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Drive for ten minutes to create cooling
airflow, without using the brakes if at all possible.
Metallic brake pads need high temperatures to
keep the pad “Bedded”. If you drive the car for a period of time
without using the brakes extensively, you may need to “Bed” the pads
again. This is not a problem. Simply repeat the procedure.
When switching from Performance Friction Carbon Metallic pads to
semi-metallic brake pads (something we do not recommend), you will need to
wear through the layer of carbon that the PFC pads have deposited in the
rotor surface. The new pads won’t grip well at all, until this layer of
carbon is removed.
Racers should “Bed” a few sets of pads at a time. In the event you
need to change brake pads during a race, you MUST use a set of “Bedded”
pads. Racing on “non-bedded” pads leads to a type of “fade” caused
by the binding agents coming out of the pad too quickly. This is called
“green fade”. These binders may create a liquid (actually a gas) layer
between your pads and rotors. Liquids have a very poor coefficient of
friction. This condition is the reason for reverse slotting or cross
drilling rotors, as it allows a pathway for the gasses to escape.
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