The invention relates to automotive brakes, and more particularly relates to noise-damping shims for disc brake systems.
In a disc brake caliper, a hydraulically actuated piston forces, by action and reaction, a pair of opposing brake pads to pinch a rotor attached to, and rotating with, a vehicle wheel. Each brake pad has a stiff backing plate with a friction pad affixed to the inner side of the plate. The backing plate of the outer brake pad is attached to the caliper housing. The backing plate of the inner brake pad is proximate to the piston so that the piston, when actuated, moves the brake pads towards each other so that the friction pads engage the friction surfaces of the rotor such that the resulting frictional forces reduce the rotational speed of the rotor, and hence wheel.
A shim of a thin material is often used on the outer side of each plate. The shim on the outer brake pad (the “outer shim”) is in contact with the caliper housing, and the shim on the inner brake pad (the “inner shim”) is contacted by the piston. The caliper is secured to a support member of the vehicle. Typically a shim is a steel plate with thin layer of synthetic rubber, which may be, for example, 0.1 millimeters thick. The rubber layer may be further coated with a coating to reduce the coefficient of friction.
The shim's function is to reduce the frequency of occurrence of a loud and annoying squeal noise from what otherwise may be mechanically perfect brakes. Movement of the backing plate of the outer brake pad relative to the caliper housing and movement of the backing plate of the inner brake pad relative to the piston may cause squeal noise. At least some of the noise comes from the fact that, to prevent jamming, the backing plates have some freedom of radial movement within the caliper so that the rotor can be freed, while the piston has little freedom of movement.
In braking, the rigid rotor is frictionally engaged by the hard friction pads (which are in turn supported by their hard backing plates). The brake pads can frictionally slide to some degree against the rigid piston and caliper housing. High frictional forces are generated during this sliding movement which can cause squeal. Like a stick of chalk forced at an angle across a rigid board, friction can lead to very severe vibrational noise. As well, these recurring forces can lead to fretting and chipping of the piston rim. A great many designs of shims have been tried over the years to fit between the piston and the plate to reduce such friction and resulting squeal. None has been entirely satisfactory.
Brake squeal is an expensive problem for car and brake manufacturers as customers invariably want the noise remedied under warranty, even though the noise has no impact on the proper operation of the brakes to stop the car.
The invention provides a noise-damping shim system for use in a disc brake having a caliper housing, inner and outer brake pads and a piston adjacent to the inner brake pad, the caliper housing having a caliper forcing member adjacent to the outer brake pad, the shim system comprising:
The coefficient of friction of the low friction outer surface of the outer shim may be between 0.05 and 0.4 and the coefficient of friction of the high friction outer surface of the inner shim may be between 0.5 and 1.0. In a preferred embodiment, the coefficient of friction of the low friction outer surface of the inner shim is between 0.05 and 0.2 and the coefficient of friction of the high friction outer surface of the outer shim is between 0.75 and 1.0.
The inner shim may be a single metal layer, which may have a thickness of between 0.4 millimeters and 0.8 millimeters.
The outer shim may be a single layer of elastomeric material, which may have a thickness of between 0.2 millimeters and 0.8 millimeters.
The inner shim may comprise an outer layer of metal providing the low friction outer surface and an inner layer of elastomeric material. The thickness of the metal may be 0.1 millimeters to 0.5 millimeters and the thickness of the elastomeric material may be 0.2 millimeters to 0.5 millimeters. The outer layer of the inner shim may be coated with polytetrafluoroethylene.
The inner shim and outer shim may have the same composition such that the inner shim comprises an inner layer of metal and an outer layer of elastomeric material providing the high friction outer surface. The shim system may then be used in the disc brake wherein the inner shim is placed between the inner brake pad and the piston with the metal layer adjacent to the piston, and the outer shim is placed between the outer brake pad and the caliper forcing member, with the elastomeric material layer adjacent to the caliper forcing member.
The caliper piston 9 has a hollow center 11 and slideably fits in the caliper cylinder 12 which is part of the caliper 1. The caliper 1 slideably connects to a caliper carrier and to a vehicle's suspension system via bosses 13 (only one shown). When the brake is applied, the piston 9 is forced from the cylinder 12, and, simultaneously, the caliper 1 is made to slide on caliper pins (not shown). This action causes the caliper forcing member 10 and piston 9 to approach each other, forcing the two opposing friction pads 3, 5 to pinch the rotor 6 thereby slowing its rotation because of the resulting friction.
In the absence of noise-damping shims, the movement of the backing plates 2, 4 against the piston 9 and caliper forcing member 10 when braking commonly causes brake squeal. However the mechanisms resulting in the squeal differ between the inner and outer brake pads and so the use of the same shim for the inner and outer pads with the same material adjacent to both the piston 9 and caliper forcing member 10 cannot be optimal for both pads. In that case, the shim may be optimized for one or the other or constitute a compromise, but in any case is still likely to perform sub-optimally and allow an unacceptable amount of squeal to continue to be produced.
To address this, different types of shims may be used for the inner and outer brake pads to take into account the differing causes of squeal. The use of an inner shim 7 with a relatively low coefficient of friction on the piston (outer) side of the shim and an outer shim 8 with a relatively high coefficient of friction on the caliper forcing member (outer) side of the shim is believed to provide significantly better noise suppression than the use of the same shim for both the inner and outer brake pads where the shims are configured to place their low friction surfaces adjacent to the piston and the caliper forcing member as is done in existing brake shim systems.
In general, the methods for attaching such shims to backing plates and the caliper housing are well known and any usual method may be employed.
In the simplest case, the inner shim 7 may be a single layer of metal, such as plain steel, on the inner brake pad backing plate 2, and the outer shim 8 may be a single layer of rubber, or other elastomeric material, adhered to the outer brake pad backing plate 4. In general the metal used may be ferrous or non-ferrous.
The outer surface of the inner shim 7, which contacts the piston 9, should have a coefficient of friction in the range 0.05 to 0.4, and the outer surface of the outer shim 8 in contact with the caliper forcing member 10 should have a coefficient of friction in the range 0.5 to 1.0. More preferably, the outer surface of the inner shim 7 should have a coefficient of friction in the range 0.05 to 0.2, and the outer surface of the outer shim 8 should have a coefficient of friction in the range 0.75 to 1.0.
In general, multi-layer shims are preferred so that the coefficient of friction of the inner surfaces of the shims that contact the backing plates 2, 4 can be chosen to be relatively high. Generally the layers of a multi-layer shim may be bonded via a heat-resistant adhesive or may be mechanically bonded. Such bonding methods are well known in the art.
In a preferred multi-layer embodiment, both the inner and outer shims 7, 8 may employ a high friction material forming their inner surface. The high friction material may be an elastomeric material, such as rubber or synthetic polyisoprene, or woven fabric, with a self-adhesive side that is attached to the backing plates 2, 4.
The outer shim 8 may be constructed with metal, such as steel, and an elastomeric material. The outer side, which will be the side in contact with the caliper forcing member 10, may have an elastomeric coating to produce a high friction effect, with a coefficient of friction between 0.5 and 1.0, between the outer brake pad assembly and the caliper forcing member 10. The high friction effect results in the damping of vibration and noise by minimizing the movement of the outer backing plate 4 against the caliper forcing member 10.
The inner shim 7 may be constructed with thin metal, such as steel, forming the outer surface. The inner shim 7 may employ a low friction coating or a smooth metallic material as the outside layer that will be in contact with the piston 9. This design allows movement between the piston contact surface and the inner brake pad backing plate 2 under braking pressure to permit the brake pad to locate itself while moving in the caliper housing before making contact with the rotor 6.
This may prevent the scenario shown in an exaggerated form in
For the outer sides of the shims that contact the backing plates, the choice of material is less important, but is preferably a high friction elastomeric material. In general the materials used in the shims must be capable of withstanding high temperatures, so that anything that melts or degrades at temperatures above 450 degrees Celsius would not be suitable. For a high friction surface, on either the inner or outer shim, nitrile rubber, silicone rubber, Kevlar®, cotton, or a high friction coating on metal would be suitable materials. Other materials, such as glass fiber, inorganic filler, carbon and cork may be also be incorporated in a composite layer with an elastomeric material.
In a low cost embodiment, the shim system may employ the same physical shims for the inner shim 7 and outer shim 8 with one layer being metal, such as steel, and the other being an elastomeric material, such as rubber. In this case the inner shim 7 would be installed with the metal layer adjacent to the piston 9 and the outer shim 8 with the metal layer adjacent to the outer backing plate 5. While not providing performance as good as shims optimized for inner and outer use, this approach utilizes the key aspect of the invention whereby the coefficient of friction of the surface of the shim adjacent to the piston 9 is significantly less than that of the surface of the other shim adjacent to the caliper forcing member 10, but allows the same part to be used for both the inner and outer shim, thereby reducing manufacturing and inventory costs.
The foregoing description illustrates only certain preferred embodiments of the invention. The invention is not limited to the foregoing examples. That is, persons skilled in the art will appreciate and understand that modifications and variations are, or will be, possible to utilize and carry out the teachings of the invention described herein. Accordingly, all suitable modifications, variations and equivalents may be resorted to, and such modifications, variations and equivalents are intended to fall within the scope of the invention as described and within the scope of the claims. In particular, any stated thicknesses of materials in example embodiments of the invention described herein are only examples of suitable thicknesses; the invention is not limited by these examples, and thicknesses less than any stated lower limit or greater than any higher stated limit are generally possible and within the scope of the invention as it would be understood by a skilled person.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2,715,608 | Sep 2010 | CA | national |