Originally Posted By: Familyguy
Originally Posted By: labman
My 81 Phoenix had 9.72'' discs and my 02 Cavalier has 10.12. If anything, I would guess it is lighter. Now what I do know the rotor is thinner and so are pads and the recommended minimum thickness you let them wear. That will indeed result in more heat to the calipers.
I suspect a lot of things have changed with car brake systems since 1981.....
The amount of heat transferred to the calipers during and after braking is likely influenced by a number of factors. The "size" of the rotor merely being one of them. There's also the amount of airflow around/through the system, the ability/inability of the pad material to transfer heat through the pad meterial to the pad backing plate and then through the relatively tiny contact area between the piston and the pad backing plate (the piston is hollow so there is actually very little surface area in contact with the pad).
The article referenced above is designed to sell calipers. I suspect if you read a white paper from Gates about timing belt changes, they'll recommend changes more often than most auto manufacturers do...so they can sell more belts. Imagine that.
I wouldn't change or rebuild a caliper unless there was a demonstrable problem with it (torn piston boot or hanging piston). Of much bigger concern to me would be the premature failures of expensive ABS components when owners follow misguided advice about never needing to change their brake fluid.
In its most basic of function and design, brake systems haven't changed a whole lot. There are more modern items incorporated into the braking system, like ABS and traction control, but the rest is still pretty much the same.
replacing calipers if they aren't showing signs of needing to be replaced is just foolish. Familyguy has very good points in this post. If a wheel cylinder isn't showing signs of leaking, you wouldn't replace it, so why would you replace a perfectly working caliper?
Preventative maintenance is about checking certain items to see if they need to be replaced/addressed BEFORE they fail. That's the point. of course you don't want to wait until your brakes fail to replace them, that's why pads have wear indicators on them to squawk at you when they are getting thin.