Author Topic: Can somebody explain this? Drilling a rotor increases it's surface area.  (Read 5544 times)

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Offline gnarlycharlie4u

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I'm surprised noone mentioned this but when you drill a rotor, yes it does cool faster but it heats up a lot faster too ;)

Offline Syscrush

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(Pi x D) x L x N

Pi =3.14159....
D=drill dia
L= thickness of rotor
N= number of holes


Opps, what can say I'm old.

That gives the gain due to the sides of the drilled hole, but it doesn't account for the loss in swept area on the faces of the disc.  So the correct formula for the net increase would be:
((Pi x D x L) - (2Pi x (D/2)^2)) x N

Consider the case where D = 2L (hole twice the size of the rotor thickness):

(Pi x 2L x L - 2Pi x (2L/2) ^ 2) x N
= (2Pi x L^2 - 2Pi * L^2) x N
= 0

So, if the diameter of the hole is less than TWICE the rotor thickness, then you'll have a net gain.  If it's more, you'll have a net loss.
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FWIW, I'm not a shill for Race Tech - I've just got a thing for good suspension and the RTCE's are the most cost-effective mod for these old damping rod front ends.