Just How Critical is Brake Rotor Direction?
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I would think it is all about putting the spokes in tension, which is why they are invariably mounted with the spokes pointing forward. If you mount them that way then the spokes will tend to straighten out under load. If you mount them as per the arrow, the spokes will tend to collapse under load.
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If center lock rotors are used, they only go on one way.
https://carsoncitybikeshop.com/brake...xoCwgoQAvD_BwE
https://carsoncitybikeshop.com/brake...xoCwgoQAvD_BwE
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For those who think the rotational direction of the rotor arms represents anything other than a marketing decision, perhaps you'd be interested in acquiring these cranks:

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The problem here is that the OP's disc has the direction arrow opposing the normal mounting convention for disc rotors. It's not made out of some magic material, so it's obviously a production error. I would mount it like any other disc, i.e. ignore the arrow in this case.
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Not that I'm academically qualified to disagree with you, but I think should've been stated the other way around: If the spokes are pointing forward, they would be "pressed" towards the hub under braking, as opposed to being "stretched outward" if they were pointing backward - which is also in opposition to what Darth Lefty said earlier about the rotor buckling if the spokes were pointing to the back.
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While those crank arms are complete bs, it's not really applicable to the stress distribution on disc spokes. The latter is not merely a marketing decision.
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I'm sticking with my first answer. If in the top photo on your first post, the wheel is rotating anti-clockwise as per the arrow, then if you clamp the disc the wheel will try to press the spokes toward the hub. The wheel is applying an anti-clockwise torque against the clockwise braking torque. Even with a degree in mech eng I still find forces and reactions tricky to visuslise,but I think this is correct. Otherwise the conventional direction of disc rotation would not make sense.
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I'm sticking with my first answer. If in the top photo on your first post, the wheel is rotating anti-clockwise as per the arrow, then if you clamp the disc the wheel will try to press the spokes toward the hub. The wheel is applying an anti-clockwise torque against the clockwise braking torque. Even with a degree in mech eng I still find forces and reactions tricky to visuslise,but I think this is correct. Otherwise the conventional direction of disc rotation would not make sense.
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Mounted correctly that same bending moment would be straightening the spokes away from the hub
Whether or not it really matters is less clear. But the latter makes more sense to me.
Last edited by PeteHski; 01-28-23 at 11:57 AM.
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Agreed. So, the next question is why are most rotors mounted to put the spokes in compression during braking? I'm guessing it's because they want to utilize higher compressive versus tensile strength, and aren't worried about buckling. Maybe?
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Another thought is that the asymmetrical profile is probably less prone to resonance than a radial design, regardless of mounting direction.
It would be interesting to find out, but I can’t find anything obvious without digging further.
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Regardless of the reason - be it technical or esthetic - just how dangerous is it to mount a brake rotor the "wrong" way around? There are rotors from Grimeca with the arrow seemingly pointing in the wrong direction...


And there are some Hope Tech rotors that don't have an arrow at all...


I mean, in both cases, it would probably make more sense to mount the rotors with the "spokes/arms/whatever" pointing forward so that they compress rather than stretch out under braking, but, from a non-competitive, everyday-use kind of perspective, is the direction the rotor is mounted in really that critical?


And there are some Hope Tech rotors that don't have an arrow at all...


I mean, in both cases, it would probably make more sense to mount the rotors with the "spokes/arms/whatever" pointing forward so that they compress rather than stretch out under braking, but, from a non-competitive, everyday-use kind of perspective, is the direction the rotor is mounted in really that critical?
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So my first thought was that if arm orientation really makes a difference in some tangible way, then by now, all disk rotors would be designed with the arms in the same orientation. Are they? Did a search . . .
Looked on Amazon for 180-mm disc brake rotors. Found many. The majority have the center portion of the disc rotated in one orientation with regard to the braking surface. A minority have the opposite orientation. (I checked the photos on the pages for a couple of those rotors, and they do show them installed with that orientation on a fork, so it's not that the main photo was inadvertently reversed.) A small number have the arms arranged tangentially.
By the way, a lot of the rotors I saw in my Amazon search had what looked to me like implausibly thin arms connecting the inner part of the rotor to the outer. I was picturing far more metal in the connecting material. So it definitely looks as if I was wrong and there might be some windup going on.
That said, I don't see how any such windup can somehow serve to protect the spokes from seeing greater forces than they would if the rotor were solid. I would think that the braking force transmitted through the hub and transferred to the tire is going to be what it is, regardless of what the rotor looks like.
So I'm far less sure than I was that rotor arm orientation is strictly a matter of marketing, but I'm hoping that someone will show up who has either designed bike disc brakes or at least done some of the pertinent math.
Last edited by Trakhak; 01-28-23 at 01:49 PM.
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That said, I don't see how any such windup can somehow serve to protect the spokes from seeing greater forces than they would if the rotor were solid. I would think that the braking force transmitted through the hub and transferred to the tire is going to be what it is, regardless of what the rotor looks like.
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By the way, I'm running both of these rotors on my bike - a folding Dahon that I ride mostly on flat ground - and while I've got the Avid mounted in the orientation the arrow points to...

I mounted the Grimeca the "wrong" way around (according to Grimeca)...

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So you need to look more closely at the arrow in the OP's first pic. It's the opposite to yours and that is the question raised in this thread.
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It looks like some disc rotors are designed to be installed with the arrow facing inside in order for the rotor spokes to have proper orientation. The second pic of a rotor in OPs post is the outward side and the arrow is meant to be inside.
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The first rotor needs to be installed with the arrow inside ( facing towards the fork leg ) in order for the spokes to have proper orientation. The manufacturer should really be printing that arrow on the other side of the rotor.
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If I put the rotor on with the arrow on the inside (which I did - see earlier post) then the arrow would be pointing in reverse!