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Is it just me or are the early serial number galaxy jet's brakes hard to get used to?
After extending the gear, pump the brakes 3x.
Not sure how this gets reversed on airplanes or carbon brakes but I'm all ears.
My understanding was that they would glaze if they didn't get hot enough. I was once told by a D.O. That if you were going to use carbon brakes then light the suckers up because small light applications were harder on them than heavy use. The reason being that they wold glaze and become less effective causing more wear as they 'de-glazed' and the brakes would bite. I'm not claiming to be an expert, but I've never been able to prove the other two theories presented though experimentation.
My ability to explain glazing would be uninterpretable to the layperson due to my advanced degrees in metallurgy, chemistry and training - or I am full of crap but still have an idea of what brake glazing is and don't want to F it up. If you think anything but the latter, you probably think that glazing happens from brakes not getting hot enough... I will offer that I am just having fun svcta - so take it easy...BTW - I don't know that my examples - others writings are scientifically accurate, but they demonstrate what I believe to be correct.
After you have installed the new pads, it is a good idea to break them in (unless the pads are the "fully cured" type that do not require an initial break-in period). Not breaking in a new set of pads increases your risk of pad glazing and brake noise. A driver can glaze and ruin a new set of pads if he fails to go easy on the brakes for the first 200 miles. If he overheats the brakes by mashing down on the brake pedal at every stop light, he can cook the resin in the pads before it can cure and glaze the pads.
Disk brake pads do sometimes develop a glaze which causes squeaking, etc. IIRC, heat can sometimes form a glaze on the surface of ceramic brake pads. In layman's terms, the glaze is like a layer of glass, formed out of the ceramic material in the pad.
My ability to explain glazing would be uninterpretable to the layperson due to my advanced degrees in metallurgy, chemistry and training - or I am full of crap but still have an idea of what brake glazing is and don't want to F it up. If you think anything but the latter, you probably think that glazing happens from brakes not getting hot enough... I will offer that I am just having fun svcta - so take it easy...BTW - I don't know that my examples - others writings are scientifically accurate, but they demonstrate what I believe to be correct.
After you have installed the new pads, it is a good idea to break them in (unless the pads are the "fully cured" type that do not require an initial break-in period). Not breaking in a new set of pads increases your risk of pad glazing and brake noise. A driver can glaze and ruin a new set of pads if he fails to go easy on the brakes for the first 200 miles. If he overheats the brakes by mashing down on the brake pedal at every stop light, he can cook the resin in the pads before it can cure and glaze the pads.
Disk brake pads do sometimes develop a glaze which causes squeaking, etc. IIRC, heat can sometimes form a glaze on the surface of ceramic brake pads. In layman's terms, the glaze is like a layer of glass, formed out of the ceramic material in the pad.
P.S. Take it easy.
.Glazing is do to long application of brakes, making them too hot. Which would mean big brakes are less likely to glaze. Not sure how this gets reversed on airplanes or carbon brakes but I'm all ears.
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Okay, this conversation lead me to our DOM, who is one of those very smart people when it comes to stuff like this. And he even showed me a video that was quite informative.
First of all, carbon brakes as installed on airplanes do not have ceramic in them. So, they don't "glaze" in the way that auto brakes do (which was cited in this conversation).
When carbon brakes are used, carbon bits are worn off of the brake components and create friction between each other (rotors and stators). At first these carbon particles are very big and consequently cause A LOT of wear at lower temperatures. As the temperature in the brakes increases these particles get smaller and smaller and ultimately become almost like a film between the rotors and stators. As the brakes are heated toward 150 deg C the level of wear increases rapidly, until the 150 degree point is crossed, at which point the wear rate decreases to its lowest level. So the hotter they are, the lower the rate of brake wear.
The point being that when you use a set of carbon brakes (on airplanes) you want to get them as hot as possible as quickly as possible. And once they're hot, keep them that way. Long brake applications during taxi are still taboo, as we agreed. The preference being short bursts of braking from around 20 knots to a near stop. Let it speed up, then slow it down, never just drag them.
The manufacturer even suggested that turboprop operators use the brakes instead of reversing the props when possible, for example. The main thrust of the thing being this: If you're going to use the brakes, then light those suckers up. Don't be gentle with them. They must get hot to work their best.
Yes - note to self ;-)Realize that what you posted is concurrent with what I said regarding taxi technique.
landing downhill?and then let the speed build back up.
landing downhill?