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Back in 2016 bought a set of front and rear bracket set and changed all 4 corner discs and caliper

 

i was checking the car and seen rust like or in another word crumbled part of the bracket which came off with a air blow

 

is this normal? This had happened in two areas and car from 2016 has mostly been in garage/ doing less than 2000 miles over past 8 years or so

pic with areas highlighted in red

 

https://ibb.co/NtmWXZt

 

also anyone knows the torque spec for the bracket as want to retorque them, one bolt had come off half way !

 

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https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/485954-alpha-omega-racing-bracket/
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Dissimilar metal corrosion. Aluminium is less noble than steel/iron, and will corrode preferentially when in contact with it and a conductive solution (ie, wet road salt).

Tends to suggest that those brackets should be made in steel for a shitty climate like the UK.

  • Haha 1
21 minutes ago, drifter17a said:

guess road salt is a nightmare for Japanese car

'Sgot nothing to do with them being Japanese. The climate in the north of Japan has similarities to the UK - the cars are made in the knowledge that they have snow and salt, and they rot there. Cars made in the US rot like buggery in the US. British cars have always rotted regardless of the weather. They will rot indoors in a climate controlled bubble!

The brackets are not unsafe yet, but they will get that way. They may well corrode where the bolt threads are in contact and the bolts could just jump out without warning.

  • Sad 1
10 minutes ago, drifter17a said:

does painting on aluminium work or stop them from corroding?

Yes, but no. You need to keep the mating surfaces bare (ie the flat faces where the caliper and upright pads touch the dogbone) and also the internal threads will remain bare (unless there are no internal threads - do they use nuts on all the bolts?). So you can slow down obvious external corrosion, but not all of it.

Anodising would be required to provide decent protection to the alloy, but I'm not actually sure if you should anodise something that is all about the strength. Anodising does reduce strength significantly. Like, up to 50% on some alloys for high thickness coating.

appreciated it thanks

 

There are threads on the adaptor. I rear re anodising but didn’t know it will reduce strength

 

re mating services needing to be flat/ not painted, why would that be? I am devastated as car been off for a year, fixed power steering then installed bm57 master cylinder and just before driving it this came up. So annoyed

 

worried and afraid to drive it, no fun caliper coming off

 

 

Paint is only structural when applied to the outside of Chinese and Indian cars. Otherwise it should never be present between mechanical joints that were intended to be metal to metal. Pain slips, slides, cracks, compresses, and add thickness that wasn't intended to be there. It comes firmly under the category of "just no".

Thanks again, really helpful

chap from alpha omega wanted to speak to me, little concerned if this is meant to he aero alloy/ airospace quality and car sitting on drive has caused this.  Airplane are subject to much more changing temp and conditions than road salts! My caliper, many other components much older have surface rust but never eating part of the metal

 

Had I not seen it , could have been a disaster!

specifically on rear part of bracket coming off like biscuit

will update on what they say, helpful people so far

Edited by drifter17a

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