Expert revisits replacement lining characteristics

At the 2000 SAE Truck & Bus meeting in Portland, Ore., Larry Strawhorn, engineering vice president of the American Trucking Associations, Alexandria, Va. (ATA), revisited a perennial subject in an oral presentation, “The Mystery of Aftermarket Brake Lining Selection.”

The theme was simple: It’s still almost impossible to shop for brake lining that’s compatible with original equipment in the aftermarket. The lining an OEM used may not even be available, meaning that “fleet maintenance people may have to guess” what lining to use to do a good brake job. It irks Strawhorn that this kind of inconsistency no longer exists when shopping for relay valves, yet continues with linings.

Why does lining compatibility matter? “Brake balance is a factor in every single stop. Replacement linings can change the balance,” is Strawhorn’s answer. And he worries that, if a brake system is out of balance because of the use of different linings at different wheel positions, electronic controls like antilock (ABS) and electronic braking, or brake-by-wire (EBS), will mask the symptoms of uneven brake force, and the driver won’t even know there’s a problem until he really needs full braking force. “Lining output is important,” he says. “Fleets need such ratings.”

What Strawhorn is saying makes a lot of sense. Think of it this way. ABS, if it’s working right, will keep all the wheels rolling fast enough to allow the tread to create lots of side force, thereby keeping the tractor and trailer in lane. But, how does it do this? By cycling the brakes. But air is highly compressible, not to mention other response-time-lengthening factors, such as the inertia and friction of a diaphragm, slack adjuster, S-cam, and all the hardware inside the wheel.

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