Wear on ceramic discs after 12k miles
Discussion
1hardwork said:
Hi,
I'm just about to purchase a Portofino with around 12k miles on. I noticed on the 190 check trhat the ceramic discs have a wear of 18.6 on the front and 11.6 on the rear. Does this sound normal? I'm sure the ceramics on my 911 turbo were no way near those figures with 30k on.
Ferrari CCB’s are only expected to last about 125k km. That’s c.77k miles. If the car has done 12k miles then that’s 16% of the expected disc life. The computer estimate of disc wear seems about right. I'm just about to purchase a Portofino with around 12k miles on. I noticed on the 190 check trhat the ceramic discs have a wear of 18.6 on the front and 11.6 on the rear. Does this sound normal? I'm sure the ceramics on my 911 turbo were no way near those figures with 30k on.
Caddyshack said:
I am guessing that maybe they get heavier and not thinner by taking on pad material?
No. They get lighter. A brand new disc has a smooth and uniform surface - almost mirror like. Within that surface, you can see the carbon matrix and ceramic wear material. As the disc wears, the wear component (ceramic I believe) is worn out from between the carbon matrix. You can see the effect in the photo of my car’s disc below. They’ve done approx 20k miles.
Just found this...
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/aldousvoice.com/201...
Seems like they lose weight as bits flake off but the overall thickness may not decrease (max permîtes is a barely measurable 0.5mm in any case).
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/aldousvoice.com/201...
Seems like they lose weight as bits flake off but the overall thickness may not decrease (max permîtes is a barely measurable 0.5mm in any case).
ANOpax said:
R8Reece said:
I thought you could only measure ceramic disc wear by weighing them?
You’re correct that the only true way to know the wear is to weigh them. However, to save that hassle, the car’s computer keeps a log of brake usage and creates an estimated wear figure. ANOpax said:
Caddyshack said:
I am guessing that maybe they get heavier and not thinner by taking on pad material?
No. They get lighter. A brand new disc has a smooth and uniform surface - almost mirror like. Within that surface, you can see the carbon matrix and ceramic wear material. As the disc wears, the wear component (ceramic I believe) is worn out from between the carbon matrix. You can see the effect in the photo of my car’s disc below. They’ve done approx 20k miles.
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