hydraulic brakes

Articles, guides, and products tagged "hydraulic brakes" — a combined view of every catalogue resource on this topic.

User guide

Hydraulic disc brakes on an electric scooter: bleeding, DOT vs mineral oil, pads, common mistakes

How hydraulic brakes work on an electric scooter, why ALL common scooter brake brands (TRP/Tektro, Magura MT, Nutt, Zoom, Xtech) run on mineral oil rather than DOT, which symptoms mean it is time to bleed, how to two-syringe bleed Nutt/Zoom (15 ml, T10 at the lever, T15 at the caliper) and gravity-bleed Magura/Tektro, how to pick and bed-in organic / sintered / semi-metallic pads, the ~500 km pad life on Apollo, and which mistakes to avoid. Built on the Magura MT owner's manual (2017), Tektro's Bleed Procedure PDF, EScooterNerds, Fluid Free Ride, BikeRadar, RevRides, and Levy Electric.

14 min read

User guide

E-scooter brake system engineering: physics, DOT fluids, friction materials, EN/ECE/FMVSS standards and thermal management

Engineering deep-dive into the brake system — paralleling the behavioural «Braking technique» guide and the «Brake bleeding and pad care» maintenance protocol: physics of converting kinetic energy KE=½mv² into heat and why a 90-kg rider at 30 km/h must dissipate ~3 kJ per stop; hydraulics via Pascal's law and why master/caliper area ratio delivers 10–30× mechanical advantage; full comparative matrix of friction materials — organic resin-bonded (μ≈0.35–0.45, fade at 250 °C), semi-metallic (Cu + steel fibres, stable to 400 °C), ceramic (phased out by California SB 346), sintered (powder metallurgy, to 600 °C); brake fluid chemistry — DOT 3 (polyalkylene glycol, dry 205 °C / wet 140 °C, SAE J1703), DOT 4 (borate ester, 230/155, SAE J1704), DOT 5 (silicone, 260/180, SAE J1705, NOT ABS-compatible), DOT 5.1 (high-boiling glycol, 260/180), Shimano/Magura mineral oil — hygroscopy and why the «2-year change» rule exists; disc geometry — 304/410 stainless, 120/140/160 mm, vented/wave-cut/floating, m·c·ΔT thermal mass; thermal-management physics — Stefan-Boltzmann P_rad=ε·σ·A·(T⁴-T_amb⁴) ≈85 W + convection ≈450 W at 25 km/h = ~535 W sustained dissipation vs 2.8 kW burst on emergency stop; brake fade phenomenon — gas-out of organic pads vs sintered margins; complete comparative matrix of safety standards — EN 17128 (Europe PLEV ≤25 km/h, ≤4 m stopping from 20 km/h), EN 15194 (EPAC e-bike), EN ISO 4210-4 (bicycle drag test), ECE R78 (motorcycle Type Approval), FMVSS 122 (USA motorcycle), FMVSS 116 (brake fluids), UL 2272 (e-scooter system NYC LL 39); brake-by-wire, eABS, regenerative-blend integration; engineering ↔ user-facing symptoms (spongy lever / fade / screech / pulsating).

17 min read