Those are all good points. I have some experience with these brakes. As a point of information the caliper is about 1" x 1.5" x 2.5". The pads are removable. The motion seems to be fairly precise. To adjust the caliper location, you actuate the caliper so it is locked to the disc, then lock down the holding screws. Pretty simple. I wonder if the other guy was using a mechanical caliper which is less precise?
How large in diameter do you envision your air cylinder? Double action is a good idea. I assume the 4th axis will need substantial braking force to prevent motion by the cutting tool? I would be concerned that a narrow radius disc would not provide the needed leverage with either setup?
Robert
I don't recall what kind of brake he was using exactly, but he actuated it with a small air cylinder and lever, so that may have been mechanical. The thing that worried me is that any wiggle in the brake could lead to chatter in the cut.
The cylinder I designed as a .75" bore, with .3649in^2 of usable surface area. The brake disk is 4" in diameter and the center point of the clamp is at 3.5". I am not positive how the physics there works (and my knowledge of the other physics is limited to 2 college classes, so it might be wrong as well) but my math says:
.3649in^2 * 2 * 100 PSI = 72.98 lbs
72.98 lbs * 4.45 (newton conversion, this could be wrong) = 324.8N
Coefficient of friction for aluminum on aluminum is 1.05 (may not need a pad in that case, not sure) so 324.8 * 1.05 = 341N
1.75" (radius of brake disk at center of clamp) = .0445 m
341N * .0445m = 15.2Nm
I am not sure if tangential cutting force is the correct force to use to determine how much force the machine must resist during a cut, but even the heaviest cuts I might take were around 20 lbs of force. Guessing the largest part I might work on is 4", that translates into 4.5Nm of torque.
I am not sure how much the thickness of the brake disk will play into the equation since all it does is translate the holding force from the brake to the spindle. As long as the force isn't so great that it crumples, I figured it would suffice.