MR2 Owners Club Forum banner

Corner bias brakes!????

2K views 6 replies 5 participants last post by  CJMR2T 
#1 ·
I've seen a lot of things in the many cars I've had in the past 30 years, but, I just came across a new thing. This does not have anything to do with an MR2, but possibly noteworthy in any forum. Corner bias brakes. Front left to rear right and front right to rear left. Is this a mistake from the assembly line or some engineered method of controlling the less enthused driving style? The car in question here is a 1987 AE82 (Corolla FX16 GTS). Anybody ever see this before? I drive the car rather hard and have never had any trouble braking in any situation. Is this some weird attempt at reducing the possibility of locking up front or rear axle? An early form of "antilock" brakes? I need to find out if this is normal for this car before I change things to what I have come to know as 'normal'.
 
#4 ·
I am guessing it has nothing to do with bias and that front to rear bias will be balanced as it should when everything is working right. I would assume that it's just in case of a system failure.
If one line fails you have one wheel in front slowing you down and one wheel in the rear slowing you down.

If only your front brakes worked it could cause unpredictable understeer. Even worse if only your rear brakes worked it could cause extremely fast and unpredictable oversteer.

If each side was tied together then it could be a problem trying to brake in a corner where the brakes went out on the weighted side. It would also very heavily pull the car in the direction of the braking side.
 
#6 ·
A lot of cheap FWD cars use diagonal dual-circuit brakes. Like others have said, its a safety concern in that if one circuit fails, you still have one front and one rear brake working in order to retain a greater level of stability under emergency braking (which you are probably already doing, or will be doing shortly if you have a brake circuit failure!). Being front heavy and prone to exceptional levels of pitch and roll, these econobox FWD cars were deemed to require this extra braking stability in case of circuit failure.
 
#7 ·
^^^ This exactly.... The bias is still front to rear, just the circuit split is diagonal instead of front and rear. If you were to look at the Prop valve's from these cars, they are actually two valves in one.

In my opinion though, any front engine car should be like this even if they are RWD. Even cars with a near or at 50/50 weight distribution still are significantly front heavy under braking and run quite a bit more front bias as is from the brakes. Anyone how has ever had the front circuit fail on a front / rear split circuit setup on a front engine cars knows that its almost impossible to stop the car. I'm pretty sure this is the exact reason why Nissan runs a diagonal split on the 350Z as Karl (ScarecrowX) pointed out. I'm pretty sure they continued this config on the 370Z's also.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top