SANLUIS Rassini
Two-Piece Rotor Chosen for 2014 Chevrolet Corvette
Stingray
Industry’s First Ductile
Iron-Gray Iron Rotor Design Offers Up to 18 Percent
Weight Savings, Higher Performance
LYMOUTH,
Mich., February 27, 2013 – SANLUIS Rassini, a
leading automotive supplier of suspension and brake
components in North America, was selected by the
Chevrolet Corvette engineering team for its unique
two-piece rotor design, which offers significant
weight savings and extreme performance at high
speeds.
Rassini’s Automotive team has
produced the industry’s first-ever rotor with a
ductile iron hat and gray iron brake plates for the
2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray, which makes its
debut this summer. The unique combination of ductile
and cast iron provides a weight savings of up to 18
percent while also improving the Corvette’s heat
management capabilities, giving the sports car
reliable and consistent stopping power.
A component of the Corvette
Stingray Z51 Performance Package, the Rassini
dual-cast braking system affords confident stopping
power to the 6.2-liter engine that powers the
Stingray from 0 – 60 mph in less than four seconds.
The rotor features an I-Beam
extension design instead of a solid extension
design. It is the only composite rotor on the market
that can accommodate a drum in hat, a rotor design
in which the internal surface of the hat serves as a
brake drum.
“By optimizing both the design
and the materials used in the rotor, we are able to
achieve weight savings and performance improvements
that were not attainable before,” said Eugenio
Madero, CEO, SANLUIS Rassini North America. “This
technology was developed for high-performance
vehicles like the 2014 Corvette that require better
heat transfer capabilities at lighter weights.”
Incorporating the I-Beam design
increases air flow through the vent passage for
better thermal heat transfer. The use of the
stronger ductile iron in the hat allows Rassini
engineers to use thinner sections of material while
maintaining structural performance. The use of the
center connection to the hat optimizes air flow
throughout the system, dissipating heat more
effectively and minimizing the stress traditionally
present in a conventional full-cast design.
The manufacturing process for
the rotor is contained within SANLUIS Rassini’s
manufacturing facility, as it is the only supplier
in the Americas industry with a fully integrated
brake rotor facility. The company’s facility in
Puebla, Mexico, features an integrated foundry and
features machining, coating, stress relief and FNC (Ferritic
Nitro-Carburizing) processes.
“We offer a unique combination
of competencies in raw materials and can provide our
customers with complete solutions,” said Madero.
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