Brembo Formula 1 Brake Facts for Qatar
November 19, 2021 by Brembo
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After verifying the quality of its monobloc calipers on the track, Brembo transferred them to the production line for today's most prestigious and popular sports cars. The large quantities of calipers to be produced and a duration equal to the lifespan of the car, represented an additional challenge. This high quality distinguishes the B-M family of Brembo calipers, designed for drivers who want the very best from their car. Machined from a single billet of cast aluminum, using a 4D technology casting process and with internal fluid channels rather than conventional external rigid tube connections, these calipers ensure outstanding rigidity and minimized deformation. This technology means that the technical characteristics of the B-M4, B-M6 and B-M8 are similar to those of billet or forged racing calipers. From 10 to 16, all without braking Unlike the MotoGP bikes, forced to use the brakes on 12 of the 16 turns at Losail International Circuit, the Formula 1 drivers only brake on seven corners. However, on the first half of the track, Turn 5 is the only one where the bikes brake and the single-seaters don't. On the other hand, for the second part, the Formula 1 cars only brake on turns 10 and 16, whereas the MotoGP bikes also brake on turns 9, 12, 14, and 15. This results in a time on the brakes per lap of just 8.7 seconds for Formula 1 compared to MotoGP's 34 seconds. From start to finish, the braking system operates for 10.7 percent of the time on the single-seaters, compared to 30 percent for the MotoGP bikes. Deceleration is also completely different. Just once per lap over 110 km/h (68.35 mph) for Formula 1 and five for the bikes. No, it's not like MotoGP Of the seven braking sections at Losail International Circuit, none are classified as very demanding on the brakes, whereas four are of medium difficulty and three are light. Compared to MotoGP, where the hardest braking section is on the first corner, the single-seaters enter it more than twice as fast - 208 km/h (129.25 mph) compared to the bikes' 98 km/h (61 mph) - so the toughest braking section for the cars is on the sixth turn. They go from 258 km/h (160 mph) to 98 km/h (61 mph) in just 2.47 seconds as they travel 103 meters (338 feet). On that section, the drivers are subjected to deceleration of 4.2 g. •The circuit identity card with all the information on all the braking sections, in .pdf format: http://www.mediakit.brembo.com/index.php/circuits/f1-2021#english •The video of the hardest braking point of the GP, in mp4 format (low and high resolution): https://we.tl/t-wlhOyRQamC •The video can also be consulted at the YT link: https://youtu.be/Lc6GGRBjWnM •The comment of the Formula 1 Qatar Grand Prix according to Brembo, in web format: https://www.brembo.com/en/company/news/gp-formula1-qatar-2021-brembo-brakes
posted on conceptcarz.com
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