Not wanting to be argumentative, but I think your physics are out there. The rotational force, which is what the friction property of the brake is reducing, is the result of the rotational force of the cars forwards energy (unless the brakes sole purpose is to lock the wheel and the car continue forward, in which case your argument's valid)adsgreen wrote:I've seen some older ceramics with a worse co-efficient of friction rating than traditional pads.Graeme4130 wrote:For everyday driving, standard brakes are more than good enough
Ceramics don't actually provide any improvement in braking, they just don't overheat and fade on sustained track work like the standard ones do
The overall improvement though is that with less rotational inertia of the wheel assembly more braking force can be used to slow the car.
There is a benefit to braking efficiency, but it'll be almost immeasurable as it's only the overall vehicle weight saving the ceramics have on the car
For suspension movement, then yes, unsprung weight allows a tyre to track the road better due to decreased reaction times of mass movement
Besides that, they still look the bollocks and I wish I'd spec'd them on my car to be honest