Braking System: Prepared By:-Jagseer Singh Sukhpal Singh Kamaljeeet Singh Lalit Kumar Atish Kumar
Braking System: Prepared By:-Jagseer Singh Sukhpal Singh Kamaljeeet Singh Lalit Kumar Atish Kumar
Braking System: Prepared By:-Jagseer Singh Sukhpal Singh Kamaljeeet Singh Lalit Kumar Atish Kumar
Prepared By:-
Jagseer Singh
Sukhpal Singh
Kamaljeeet Singh
Lalit Kumar
Atish Kumar
Brake
The device used to stop any vehicle by
applying frictional forces.
One of most important control componants
of vehicle.
They are required to stop vehicle within
smallest possible distance.
This is done by converting kinetic energy of
vehicle into heat energy which is dissipated
into atmosphere.
Braking Requirements
1. Brakes must be strong enough to stop vehicle
with in a minimum distance in an emergency.
2. Brakes must have good antifade
characterstics i.e. their effectiveness should
not decrease with prolonged application. This
requirement demands cooling of brakes
should be very efficient.
Types
• The brakes of an automobile are classified
according to as :-
1. Purpose
2. Location
3. Construction
4. Method of actuation
5. Extra braking effort
• Purpose:- From this point of view Brakes are classified
as service or primary and parking or secondry brakes.
• Location:- From this point of view brakes are located at
wheels or at transmission.
• Construction:-From this point of brakes are drum
brakes and disc brakes.
• Method of actuation:- This criterion gives following
brake type :
a) Mechanical Brakes
b) Hydraullic Brakes
c) Electric Brakes
d) Vaccum Brakes
e) Air Brakes
f) By-wire Brakes
Drum Brakes
• Shoes press against a spinning surface. In this
system, that surface is called a drum.
• Drum brakes have more parts than disc brakes
and are harder to service, but they are less
expensive to manufacture.
Drum Brakes
Disc Brakes
• A disc brake consists of a cast iron disc bolted
to wheel hub and stationary housing called
calliper. Calliper is connected to some
stationary part of vehical like axle.
• When brakes are applied, piston move friction
pads into contact with disc, applying equal
and opposite force on disc.On releasing
brakes, the rubber sealing rings act as return
springs and retract piston and friction pads
away from disc.
Disc Brakes
Mechanical Brakes
• Mechanical brakes are assemblies consisting of mechanical
elements for the slowing or stopping of vehicle. They use
levers or linkages to transmit force from one point to another.
• There are several types of mechanical brakes. Band brakes,
the simplest brake configuration, have a metal band lined with
heat and wear resistant friction material. Drum brakes, which
are commonly used on automobile rear wheels work when
shoes press against a spinning surface called a drum. Disc
breaks are constructed of brake pads, a caliper, and a rotor.
During operation, the brake pads are squeezed against the
rotor. Cone brakes are made with a cup and a cone, which is
lined with heat and wear resistant material. During actuation,
the cone is pressed against the mating cup surface.
Band Brakes
• The principle is that a band is wrapped part
round a rotating drum. Tension can be
applied to the band using a lever. The
restraining torque results from the difference
in tension between the two ends of the belt.
Hydraullic Brakes
• The hydraulic brake is an arrangement
of braking mechanism which uses brake fluid
specialy ehtylene glycol to transfer pressure from
the controlling unit to the actual brake
mechanism of the vehicle.
• Parts of hydaullic brakes:-
1. Brake Pedal
2. Push rod
3. Master cylinder assembly
4. Brake calliper assembly
Cont….
System Operation
• as the brake pedal is pressed, a pushrod exerts
force on the piston(s) in the master cylinder.
• This forces fluid through the hydraulic lines
toward calipers.
• The brake caliper piston(s) then apply force to the
brake pads. This causes them to be pushed
against the spinning rotor, and the friction
between the pads and the rotor causes a
braking torque to be generated, slowing the
vehicle.
Electrical Brakes
• Electric brakes are actuator devices that use an
electrical current or magnetic actuating force to
slow or stop the motion of a rotating vehicle.
• There are two main types of electric brakes:
magnetic and friction.
• Magnetic brakes are non-contact brakes that use
magnetic fields to actuate the braking components.
• Permanent magnetic brake
• Electromagnetic brake
• Eddy current brakes
• Hysteresis powered brakes
Permanent Magnetic
Brake
1. Applications:- electric motors, Robotics
2. Advantages:- High and accurate Torque,
long life, unaffected by power supply, safe
and easy to use
3. Disadvantages:- Require a constant current
control to offset the permanent magnetic
field.
Electromagnetic brake
1. Applications:- Copy machines, conveyor drives,
packaging machinery, printing machinery, food
processing machinery and factory automation.
2. Advantages:- Fast response time, smooth, reliable,
and backlash free operation, produce high torque,
automatic air gap available.
3. Disadvantages:- Braking force diminishes as speed
diminishes, load cannot be held at a standstill
causing safety concern.
Eddy current brakes
1. Applications:- Train and roller coaster brakes.
2. Advantages:- Noncontact, Frictionless,
resettable, light weight, few moving parts.
3. Disadvantages:- Unusable at low speeds,
generates heat.
Hysteresis powered brakes
1. Applications:- Food and drug packaging operations,
clean rooms, environmental test chambers, load
simulation for life testing on rotating devices, capping,
bolting and other screwing applications.
2. Advantages:- Long, maintenance-free life, cost
effective, operational, smoothness, torque
repeatability, broad speed range, environmental
stability, high-dissipation capability. The torque
remains constant and smooth and responds with
increases and decreases in current.
3. Disadvantages:- Experience a salient-pole
phenomenon called "cogging", an undesirable,
pulsating output torque which prevents smooth and
efficient operation of these systems
Servo Brake System
1. Servo Mechanism:- A servomechanism, or servo,
is an automatic device that uses error-
sensing negative feedback to correct the
performance of a mechanism. It applies only to
systems where the feedback or error-correction
signals help control mechanical position, speed or
other parameters. It is an electronically controlled
mechanical or hydraulic device permitting a large
action or strong forces to be controlled by a small
electrical signal.
Power Brakes
• These are the brakes in which power of engine or
battery is used to enhance the braking effort.
• These are of four types:- Vaccum Brakes, Air Brakes,
Hydraulic Booster Brake and Electro-Hydraulic Booster
brake.
1. Vaccum Brakes:- Vacuum brake system is controlled
through a brake pipe connecting a brake valve in the
driver's cab with braking equipment on every
vehicle. The operation of the brake equipment on
each vehicle depends on the condition of a vacuum
created in the pipe by an ejector or exhauster.
2. Air Brakes:- The operatiom of air brakes is similar to
hydraullic brake except that compressed air is used to
apply brakes instead of hydraullic pressure. Air brakes
are commonly used on heavy vehicles like trucks,
buses etc.
3. Antilock Brake System (ABS):- Due to excessive braking
brakes are locked which causes skidding. Skidding is
avoided by releasing braking pressure just before
wheels are lock up and then reapplying same. This
process is calles pressure modulation. A modern ABS
consists of an electronic control unit (ECU)., one
sensor on each wheel,an electrically driven hydraullic
pump and pressure accumlator. Accumlator is used to
store hydraulic fluid to maintain high pressure in
braking system. It is charged with nitrogrn gas. ECU
monitors and controls the antilock function when
required.