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12th September 2002
Page 28
Page 28, 12th September 2002 — SIMPLE LOGIC
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Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

May I congratulate the Vehicle Inspectorate on its speedy response to a problem I first raised through a Vehicle Safety Defect Report back in JuN 2000—the compatibility between discs and drums ( CM11-17 July).

I trust Transport Minister John Speller, or whoever is doing the job this week, will not take quite as long to reimburse hauliers/operators, many of whom have suffered substantial financial loss through the use of such braking systems.

Why should the Department of Transport pay? Because it gave Type Approval in the first place. It decided that the marriage between Formula 1 Ferrari-type electronic disc brakes and Morris 1000-type drum brakes was a suitable system for trucks running at up to 44 tonnes. Or is the wonderful EC to blame?

The manufacturer of my vehicle did eventually admit that it had not been aware that to marry discs with drums required massive adjustment. However, changing back to a disc/disc combination would require another massive change.

Hauliers who have had accidents with vehicles running discs and drums should take another look at what realty happened. With discs an the front and drums on the rear, not adjusted for compatibility, a bit of heavy braking on a roundabout or bend is all it will take to tip you over.

Think about it: an eighttonne tractive unit with great disc brakes and a 36-tonne trailer with poor drum brakes... it's simple physics.

Peter F Orr,

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Organisations: Department of Transport

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