Brake Me!
The sound of screeching tires may be one of the most annoying
things you get to hear on the streets. However, for some people,
the violent screech of tires and the nauseous whiff of brake
fluid can mean something totally different: that their brakes
are doing their job of keeping passengers safe from a collision.
Brakes are devices that are used to slow rotating wheels until
they stop. Friction brakes are the most common examples of such
brakes. Brakes like the ones used on everyday vehicles such
automobiles, bicycles, trucks and trains use friction between
brake pad and a wheel to slow the motion of a vehicle.
However, the friction created by the brakes generates a great
deal of heat. The brake system should be able to dissipate this
heat or else the brake could lose its efficacy.
There are many kinds of brakes - the most common of which are
the ones used in automobiles: the disc and drum brakes. Both,
however, rely on hydraulics, or the use of brake fluid pressure
to activate the brakes.
The drum brakes work by the constriction of brake shoes
installed on the inside of the wheel. The friction generated by
this action slows the motion of the vehicle.
The disc brake works by clamping the rotors of the wheel itself.
Disc brakes are superior to drum brakes due to the fact that
disc brakes are not prone to malfunction even when wet or
immersed in water. This malfunction is called brake fade. Disc
brakes can also handle higher braking temperatures and dissipate
heat more quickly. Also, disc brakes do not trap water as drum
brakes can.
In 1985, the first antilock brake system (ABS) was introduced
for motor vehicles in the United States. ABS works as a safety
feature to give drivers more control when braking. ABS has a
microprocessor and individual wheel-speed sensors that monitors
the brakes of a vehicle. The hydraulic control valves for each
brake circuit prevent skidding during panic stops or when
braking hard on wet or slippery surfaces. By 1990, ABS was
available on about 25 percent of all new cars and trucks. Today,
ABS is available on over 90 percent of all new vehicles.
Other Braking Systems
In 1869, George Westinghouse invented a different system of
applying brakes. Instead of using liquid pressure to apply the
brakes, he used a system wherein it is the air pressure that
prevents the brakes from applying.
This is helpful since the Achilles heel of hydraulic brakes is
that when there is a loss of pressure, the brakes become
ineffective. In Westinghouse's system, when there is loss of air
pressure, the brakes automatically apply.
This is a safer alternative that is useful in high-load
transportation such as trains.
Large, heavy-duty trucks, as well as buses and trains, use
compressed air pressure rather than hydraulic fluid to operate
their brakes.
Tomorrow's Brakes
While we still mostly rely on friction for braking, many
technological advances call for new braking methods.
For example aircraft also use spoilers, and flaps to slow its
velocity through the air.
Electric cars and other electric vehicles use drum and disc
brakes to stop, but some vehicles also make use of magnetic
brakes, which create opposing magnetic fields to resist motion.
This type of braking is called regenerative braking. This
technique recaptures some of the vehicle's momentum as
electrical energy. Regenerative braking uses the magnets within
the electric motor itself to slow the vehicle. When the driver
releases the accelerator pedal, the electric motor changes into
a generator, thus recapturing the energy from the moving car and
transforming it back into electricity
As transportation becomes faster, safety becomes a primary
concern. More powerful means of controlling speed are needed,
and the evolution of braking systems is not far off.