The invention relates to a method for the production of a brake lining having a friction lining made of a friction material and having a grid that is made of an elastic filling material embedded into the friction material. Moreover, the invention relates to a brake lining, particularly for a motor vehicle disk brake.
It is a known procedure to create grooves having a certain pattern in friction linings made of a friction material, the depth of said grooves extending all the way down to a vibration-damping interlayer. This groove serves to diminish the stiffness of the lining so as to reduce the moment fluctuations that occur during braking.
German patent application DE 100 41 294 A1 discloses the approach of filling the grooves with an elastic filling material that does not consist of friction material. The elastic filling material raises the coherence and the strength of the friction lining that is weakened by the grooves. The reduced stiffness of the lining allows a better adaptation to irregularities on a brake disk since the friction lining can become deformed by the elastic filling material that fills the grooves. This prevents juddering noises and vibrations caused by the reduction in the moment fluctuations. Pulsating of the pedal, as well as the noises that occur during the braking procedure, are dampened.
A similar method is disclosed in German patent application DE 100 41 308 B4, in which the friction lining provided with the grooves is subjected to a scorching process, after which the elastic filling material is filled into the groove. Subsequently, the friction pad consisting of the friction lining and the filler is subjected to a drying, curing or cross-linking process.
The invention is based on the objective of improving the durability of the brake lining while minimizing moment fluctuations, and of putting forward a particularly simple method for the production of the brake lining.
The method according to the invention for achieving this objective is characterized in that first of all, the grid is made of the filling material and placed into a friction-lining compression mold in such a way that one grid side ends with a friction surface, and in that essentially pulverulent friction material is then filled into the compression mold and press-molded with the grid in such a manner that the interstices in the grid and between the compression mold and the grid are filled up with friction material, forming a flush friction surface, whereby the filling material grid is subjected to high pressing forces in the tangential as well as radial directions.
The grid structure of the filling material can be optimally shaped in a shaping procedure of its own, so that the suitable thickness and precise delineations can be prescribed for the envisaged grid pattern. The coherence between the filling material and the friction material is improved and made more uniform by the tangential and radial pressing forces that act upon the filling material grid. When the friction lining consisting of the friction material with the embedded elastic filling material is press-molded, relatively large surface areas of the material volumes are subjected to the pressing forces. Even complex grid structures can be shaped without any problem and the entire structure of the press-molded lining can be improved. The uniform press-molding procedure minimizes the need for final finishing work.
In the brake lining according to the invention, the friction lining has a press-molded part made of a prefabricated filling material grid and of friction material that is press-molded at least laterally together with the grid webs, whereby the grid webs and the friction material press-molded with them form a flush friction surface. The friction material and the filling material grid are press-molded into a dimensionally stable unit and thus exhibit high durability and stability. The embedded grid consisting of elastic filling material ensures an outstanding adaptation of the friction lining to irregularities on a brake disk, minimizes juddering noises and vibrations as well as secondary effects due to pedal pulsations and steering wheel vibrations. The shape, matrix and structure of the filling material grid can all be adapted to the configuration of the friction lining in such a way that optimal functional properties are ensured for the entire friction lining.
In an advantageous embodiment of the method according to the invention, it is provided that the filling material grid is produced by press-molding the filling material into a compression mold adapted to the prescribed friction material thickness, followed by pre-curing. The subsequent press-molding of the friction material with the filling material grid ensures an optimal bond of all of the components of the friction lining.
The friction material can be press-molded with the filling material grid over a vibration-damping interlayer. In this process, the filling material grid, the friction material and the interlayer are joined to create a unit that makes up the friction lining.
The filling material can consist primarily of rubber or rubber substitutes, optionally with the addition of abrasive materials and/or grinding media. In principle, any conventional filling material compositions can be employed that can be shaped as filling material grids with elastic properties.
Refinements of the invention are characterized in the subordinate claims.
The invention will be explained in greater detail below, making reference to an embodiment depicted in the drawings. The drawings show the following:
FIG. 1—a view of an embodiment of a filling material grid after its production by press-molding the filling material in grid form and pre-curing of the press-molded filling material grid;
FIG. 2—a perspective view of a friction-lining compression mold into which the pre-fabricated filling material grid is placed with the friction surface facing down-wards before the remaining mold cavity is filled with the friction material; and
FIG. 3—a view onto a finished brake lining for a motor vehicle disk brake, having a support plate and a friction lining on whose visible friction surface the pre-fabricated filling material grid is aligned flush in a plane with the surrounding friction material.
In the described embodiment, the prefabricated filling material grid 1 shown in
As shown in
Once the prefabricated filling material grid has been laid into the compression mold 2, the mold cavity is filled with a suitable friction material, a process in which the filling material grid is coved with friction material. Subsequently, the friction material—optionally after adding a vibration-damping interlayer on the side opposite from the friction surface—is press-molded in such a way that the friction material fills the prefabricated filling material grid 1 in all of the interstices between the grid webs 11 to 15 as well as in the interstices adjacent to the mold walls. In this manner, the filling material grid is completely surrounded by the friction material in the tangential and radial directions under high pressing forces, and the friction surface is shaped precisely in the mold plane. This creates a tight bond and accounts for a high level of stability of the components that make up the friction lining.
The described friction lining ensures a sturdy bond between adjacent material structures and thus optimal durability and a reduction of the moment fluctuations that occur during the braking operation due to the elastic properties of the filling material grid 1.
The height of the covering of the filling material grid with friction material can be freely selected as a function of the requirements in question. The same applies to the thickness, number and layout of the grid webs. Diverging from the embodiment described above, if necessary, the friction surface can also be curved and/or interrupted. As a rule, the filling material grid will be adapted to the compression mold; the same holds true of the friction surfaces of the finished friction lining and of the side of the filling material grid facing the friction surface.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated here, various changes, substitutions and modifications to the described embodiments will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without thereby departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 026 802.4 | Jun 2006 | DE | national |
This application is a national stage application (under 35 U.S.C. § 371) of PCT/EP2007/003992, filed May 7, 2007, which claims benefit of German application 10 2006 026 802.4, filed Jun. 7, 2006.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/03992 | 5/7/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/1/2008 |