I can't say with 100% certitude as I was ushered in as the panic was dying down as everything was moved to some form of semi-metallic or organic when I was hired into the labs back in that time as to ALLTHE WHY'S. I was told unalaterally time and time again from the new engineers right down to the very oldest one left with a key card; the man to design the very first two viable PRODUCTION hydraulic designs (non-mechanical) for General Motors via DELCO that the change was brought upon due to the safety concerns of asbestos - just like we migrated cad plating out of our processes while I was there. I got chest X-rays even though I hardly ever entered the asbestos production area quarterly, so I would gander there was something to it. Lots of the younger engineers even made crude jokes of some of such things, "Just because some guy with an air hose dies, we have to..." or "Who cares if some Union guy gets cancer; why should we have to reinvent the wheel?"George Ryals wrote:I always thought that semi metallic pads came about to speed up heat tranfer from the braking surface to the backing plate and away. I did prove on my Harley FXE that semi matallic pads were the wrong choice on ductile iron disk. They didn't stop as good as organic on the iron and they ruined the disk in short order. Stainless disks with semi metallic pads are almost as good at brakling as organic on iron and the stainless disks aren't eaten up by the semi metallic pads.
The statement about semi-mettalics and iron discs could not be more true Sir - or at bare minimum the early ones. No need to repeat what you said your words are spoken wisely and you experienced it. I did daily as they looked for answers and then personally as I went "Oh crap!" with my Buick when said combination equaled four new discs and God knows what else by the time I was done chiseling though discs and replacing broken studs! (Simple brake job gone wrong. )
The rest of your statement is what I have been trying to say ever so poorly I guess, but no one seems to agree, or is somehow trying to make it more complicated. Thank you for your statement, not for reinforcing anything I've said, I only wished you would have posted it earlier, so none of my commentary would have been involved...
Everyone may freely disagree, I'll not be offended or anything. I do my best to share as best as I can recall things. I am fallible as I am human; you need not agree, but with regard to George's statements, they mirror a great deal of experiences I've had both personally and in the workplace.