Cannon1891
Member
The diameters are machined or ground so the part is rotated in a chuck. It would be very hard, almost impossible to produce the bores on different centres.
Cannon1891 said:The diameters are machined or ground so the part is rotated in a chuck. It would be very hard, almost impossible to produce the bores on different centres.
j3nks79 said:Cannon1891 said:The diameters are machined or ground so the part is rotated in a chuck. It would be very hard, almost impossible to produce the bores on different centres.
Plus if this wasn’t centric it would be like a “cam” once fitted to the hub and would vibrate and touch the caliper.
To machine the inner drum faces would they not have to mount the disc on something akin to a lathe?Beerman said:j3nks79 said:Cannon1891 said:The diameters are machined or ground so the part is rotated in a chuck. It would be very hard, almost impossible to produce the bores on different centres.
Plus if this wasn’t centric it would be like a “cam” once fitted to the hub and would vibrate and touch the caliper.
When diameters are machined at different times to each other of course they can be eccentric to each other.
The OP explained in the opening post that the garage have said the drum diameter is not concentric with the centre of the disc. The shoes are fouling on the inside of the drum.
The rest of the disc could be running perfectly concentric and perpendicular, but the bore for the brake shoes could be eccentric. You would not see the discs moving about. Just the brake shoes fouling inside.
It's an easy measurement for the mechanic.
enuff_zed said:To machine the inner drum faces would they not have to mount the disc on something akin to a lathe?Beerman said:j3nks79 said:Plus if this wasn’t centric it would be like a “cam” once fitted to the hub and would vibrate and touch the caliper.
When diameters are machined at different times to each other of course they can be eccentric to each other.
The OP explained in the opening post that the garage have said the drum diameter is not concentric with the centre of the disc. The shoes are fouling on the inside of the drum.
The rest of the disc could be running perfectly concentric and perpendicular, but the bore for the brake shoes could be eccentric. You would not see the discs moving about. Just the brake shoes fouling inside.
It's an easy measurement for the mechanic.
I have no idea, just asking the question.
If so, and the other diameters are correctly machined, how would the drum face be off centre?
Rockhopper said:I’ve watched a few videos now on making brake disks and I’m yet to find any where they machine the braking surfaces. They seem to be left as cast. Maybe I’ve not searched hard enough![]()
pvr said:Hopefully the OP / mechanic will shed some light on the actual issue
Roberltd2 said:Still waiting for replacement discs. Not been a very good time for the Zed recently, a few weeks ago I had to return a couple of new Vanos solenoids under warranty as they were faulty, then the brake disc saga and, on Monday had a puncture which resulted in a new tyre (the old one only went on last October). They say things come in threes so let's hope it stays that way!
Still, it's nice to be back in the Zed again after spending two days commuting to work on the bus.
I will update on the discs as soon as I can. I hope there is something measurably wrong with them or else I'll be bl**dy fuming :x







legin said:Got to say Im smelling a rat with your mechanic, shoes always need adjusting with new discs as the tolerance band in manufacture will be quite wide. That dimension you have measured doesnt mean much other than the casting was bored a bit off centre and is not the issue. The dimension that is relevant is the concentricity of the spigot bore to the drum bore nothing else matters. This is best done in a lathe or mounted on a hub backwards and spin it with a dti on the drum bore.
Oh what is clear though is Pagid discs are junk as that will certainly run with an imbalance