On Tue, 2007-06-26 at 17:10 -0500, Class Guy wrote: > Again, it's not the surface area or the amount of pressure to push on > the shoe. When you apply more pressure, you step into the realm of > coefficient of friction, heat, etc. etc. until you stop the rotation. > Then all the stopping power transfers from the brake system to the > traction of the tires. Can 1/2" extra lever be that effective??? With > the levels of force we are dealing with here, yes it can. How much > additional force is applied with a 1/2" extra stroke in an engine? > Quite a bit. OK, thanks. The answer is, the friction/force formula is more complicated than it appears. I meant to question it, eg. to illuminate it, not to doubt it. Clearly the factory went to the bother -- and there's not too many left-handed-lug-nut foolishness in mechanical design. I SUPPOSE I could go read a book or sumptin' :-) Thanks for the additional info! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list