Do brake calipers expand with heat?

Do brake calipers expand with heat?

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Discussion

ecs0set

Original Poster:

2,486 posts

299 months

Monday 29th March 2021
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I have larger brakes on my car and even with bigger wheels the clearance is tight. I've just had new tyres fitted and the clearance between the brake calipers and the lead wheel weights is about 3 Rizla papers (maybe 1-2mm in reality).

I could go back to the tyre fitters and ask them to move the weights back. However there is definitely clearance at the moment so as long as the brake calipers don't expand it will be fine.

I'd rather not give them another opportunity to scratch the wheels.

Thoughts?

bimsb6

8,434 posts

236 months

Monday 29th March 2021
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Are the calipers on sliding pins ? Sounds a bit close to me , a rizla is about 1/1000 of an inch so 3 are nowhere near a mm .

Chris32345

2,137 posts

77 months

Monday 29th March 2021
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If they move the weights back it quite easily could then not be balanced soi Doubt moving a weight back is a solution

ecs0set

Original Poster:

2,486 posts

299 months

Monday 29th March 2021
quotequote all
bimsb6 said:
Are the calipers on sliding pins ? Sounds a bit close to me , a rizla is about 1/1000 of an inch so 3 are nowhere near a mm .
Don't think so, 4 pot calipers. Rizla papers were a comedic exaggeration, looks around a mil by eye, maybe 2.

kambites

69,546 posts

236 months

Monday 29th March 2021
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1mm is plenty of clearance. Steel expands to roughly 1.000011 times its size for every degree rise in temperature so for a 100mm piece of steel (from mounting point to rim) to expand 1mm would require a change in temperature of roughly 1000 degrees, which would come pretty close to melting the caliper. smile

Edited by kambites on Monday 29th March 19:20

stevieturbo

17,781 posts

262 months

Monday 29th March 2021
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All metals expand with heat. Various metals will move when under load too, including wheels, calipers etc etc

GreenV8S

30,894 posts

299 months

Tuesday 30th March 2021
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Caliper expansion is unlikely to be a problem. Bearing flex could very easily be a problem, especially when the bearings are hot.

Dave Brand

939 posts

283 months

Tuesday 30th March 2021
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I had a similar problem with balance weights catching on the calipers (not sure which car, probably the Alfa 145) after having tyres fitted by a mobile fitter. Didn't spot it straight away, as I didn't move the car until a few hours after he'd gone.

When the fitter came back he said there was nothing he could do! The solution, obvious to me but not to him, was:

1. use lead rather than steel weights

2. check the thickness of the new weights against the old

3. lay the new weights on a flat surface & hammer them down to reduce thickness

Guess which tyre company I've never used again?

ecs0set

Original Poster:

2,486 posts

299 months

Tuesday 30th March 2021
quotequote all
Thanks for all the comments. Based on the above, I'll leave it and keep an eye on it.

Krikkit

27,455 posts

196 months

Tuesday 30th March 2021
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Dave Brand said:
I had a similar problem with balance weights catching on the calipers (not sure which car, probably the Alfa 145) after having tyres fitted by a mobile fitter. Didn't spot it straight away, as I didn't move the car until a few hours after he'd gone.

When the fitter came back he said there was nothing he could do! The solution, obvious to me but not to him, was:

1. use lead rather than steel weights

2. check the thickness of the new weights against the old

3. lay the new weights on a flat surface & hammer them down to reduce thickness

Guess which tyre company I've never used again?
Sounds like a pain in the arse for the fitter at what, £10/wheel?

Dave Brand

939 posts

283 months

Wednesday 31st March 2021
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Krikkit said:
Sounds like a pain in the arse for the fitter at what, £10/wheel?
His problem, not mine! If he'd just taken the simple precaution of turning the wheels before dropping the car off the jack he would have avoided having to come back. I t was the "nothing I can do" attitude that amazed me.

thebraketester

15,051 posts

153 months

Wednesday 31st March 2021
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I get my front wheels static balanced so the weights avoid the caliper. Small increase in wheel vibration but only above speed which are irrelevant for 99% of use.

Matt_E_Mulsion

1,738 posts

80 months

Saturday 3rd April 2021
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If they are not hitting the caliper then I wouldn't worry about it.

The Wookie

14,151 posts

243 months

Sunday 4th April 2021
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If they’re a cheap Chinese aftermarket caliper I’d worry more about caliper flex under high pressure but a few mm is unlikely to cause you a problem

TEKNOPUG

19,819 posts

220 months

Tuesday 6th April 2021
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I fitted AP Racing calipers and bigger discs on my WRX with maybe 1mm clearance between the caliper and inside of the wheel spokes. Ran it for 60k without any issues.