I did a little web searching on this subject too and it comes back to me as a mixed review. The technical answers seem to support that it is a waste of time and money. On rotors, the cross drilling serves to vent the out gassing of hot pads which if not controlled cause the pads to sort of hydraulic across the rotors. However you only get brakes hot enough to cause the materials to out gas in racing conditions. It is ( at least according to some web sites) highly improbable that street rotors will get that hot. Drilling drums is argued that if you run through a flood, they will drain quicker. Having had the experience my self on multiple cases, water never had any problem getting in or out of drums. While they were wet if you dragged the brakes a bit after leaving the flooded area, they dried out rather quickly and would not cause a problem. As far as drum brakes failing due to heat, that was a typical failure mode and I have experienced that too. It was always my understanding that heat caused the drum to expand thus reaching a point where the travel supplied by the wheel cylinder was exceeded so the wheel cylinders capability of supplying pressure to the brake shoes was greatly reduced. Even under the condition of over heated, they did not get anywhere near the temperature of a disc brake assembly that was working normally or even hard. Of course when the wheel cylinder of the drum system tried to work under these conditions you would loose travel with the brake pedal. I would be willing to bet that those who are actually reporting improved operation of drum brakes when holes are drilled in the surface of the drum are; 1. Trying to sell you the process of drilling holes. (Translated the objective was to remove $ from the pocket.) Or 2. The brakes needed work anyway and when the effort was expended to rebuild the brakes with quality materials they worked better than they did before and it made no difference at all whether holes were drilled or not. A situation I find to be quite common in many areas. Front brake design though is a significant factor in how the car stops. For example the dual wheel cylinder system used in Chrysler cars on or about the 1960's was quite iffy in the capability of stopping a speeding Plymouth as compared to the dual servo system many other cars used at the same time. But Buick around the same time interval had massive finned drums on the front that had a reputation for doing and outstanding job of woeing up those big heavy Electra 225s and is still the front drum conversion of choice if building a street machine for both looks and performance if you want to build something with drums. For what it is worth, that is what I come up with. Or you could use the cooling systems my Uncle used for his off road logging trucks that clambered up and down the cut out temporary dirt roads in the hills of Oregon. You mounted a 50 gallon water tank behind the cab and dribbled water over the big huge drums they had then and still do. About half way down the hill you would stop and refill the water tank so you could have brakes for the rest of the trip. ;-) John. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.amc-list.com/pipermail/amc-list/attachments/20070218/b50dfafb/attachment.htm _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list