A while ago I was sitting on a bench in downtown St. Louis with a grande bold coffee in my paw and a reflective mood infusing me with big thoughts. Or maybe just regular-sized thoughts, but definitely about big things.
Embracing the Age of the Air Disc Brake
A while ago I was sitting on a bench in downtown St. Louis with a grande bold coffee in my paw and a reflective mood infusing me with big thoughts. Or maybe just regular-sized thoughts, but definitely about big things

No surprise, really. I'd spent the day talking and hearing about future technologies that might elevate trucks and trucking to new levels of efficiency, and might even save the planet if about a zillion stars aligned the right way.
I was also just a couple of football fields away from the famous and quite captivating Gateway Arch that rises above the Mississippi. It's an inspiring structure, and I found myself staring at it whenever I headed to the nearby Starbucks for fuel.
This really was a vital gateway city, and all manner of people passed through here a century or two ago on their way to the glory and often the tragedy of the burgeoning West.
Not far away I could see the Old Courthouse, too, an elegant, even majestic white structure with a big dome and a history of its own. Slaves asked politely for their freedom in that building once upon a time, and not really so very long ago.
So there I sat, assailed by knowledge of tomorrow and strong images of yesterday. And you know what I concluded? That, collectively, we hang on too tightly to the past. Important though it is, I prefer to look ahead.
In trucking terms I've long thought that we're maybe a little too mired in what worked for us yesterday, whether we're talking management practices or the hardware we rely on so much. It really doesn't help us, I fear.
This general thought occurred to me again more recently when I learned Peterbilt had declared that front air disc brakes are now standard fare on all its Class 8 models. It's a first, and a bold move, but I think it's a mighty good one. Somebody had to start this. Air discs offer the shortest stopping distances possible today. They also trim weight, reduce maintenance demands, and will help meet new stopping-distance standards coming up Aug. 1. Drivers uniformly love the extra stopping power discs provide, not to mention their fade resistance. Mountain drivers, take note.
Yes, there might be balance problems at the outset if a disc-braked tractor is mated to a poorly maintained S-cammed trailer, so this won't be the right option for all players. There are electronic ways around this to some extent, but poor maintenance is hard to defeat by whatever means. So there are challenges, but I really do believe that this is a path we have to follow, as our European counterparts have long since done. Air discs dominate the Euro scene today, after being launched in a widespread way ages ago, in 1996 to be exact.
Back then, the Mercedes-Benz Actros tractor was introduced at the monstrous IAA commercial vehicles show in Hannover, Germany, with standard air discs. Not only that, it also came with EBS (electronic braking System) as standard fare. With such a system, actuation at the wheel is still done by means of air, but the signal from the pedal is electronic. There's pneumatic redundancy throughout, and anti-lock technology is of course at the core.
The advantages of EBS are many. Far shorter response times, significantly shorter stopping distances, straightforward tractor-to-trailer balance, brake-wear monitoring, optimized brake wear, axle-to-axle harmonization, simple diagnostics and easier maintenance.
My friend Bob Murphy, a prominent man-about-trucking in Australia, reminded me about some of this after reading my brief note concerning Pete's announcement in my Product Watch e-newsletter. He noted that Paccar Australia engineered EBS brakes into its Australian model line-up a few years ago. Not incidentally, the Aussies also started using air disc brakes soon after that 1996 Hannover introduction. It's a unique market down under, truck operators enjoying a mix of European and American technology and getting, I suppose, the best of both.
Anyway, like I said, somebody had to start us down this path toward better braking, and I'm glad it's been done. This isn't a case of "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." We CAN do better, and I believe it's an obligation.
All our present purveyors of braking systems can make this leap more or less easily. It only remains for fleet owners at large to develop a more pronounced sense of adventure.
From the May issue of HDT.
More Maintenance

Hendrickson Unveils Watchman Smart Wheel-End System at TMC
Hendrickson’s new sensor platform integrates with its TireMaax system to deliver real-time tire and wheel-end insights, targeting uptime and cost savings.
Read More →
Over-the-Air Updates and the Modern Powertrain Explained
Over-the-air updates are moving beyond recalls, and expanding how fleets manage performance, compliance, and uptime.
Read More →
SKF, TMC Expand Hands-On Training to Boost Technician Skills at Annual Meeting
A new partnership between SFK and TMC brings certified, on-site instruction focused on wheel-end reliability and maintenance best practices.
Read More →
Why Higher Pay Isn’t Fixing the Heavy-Duty Technician Shortage
Hiring heavy-duty truck technicians has become a bidding war, but shops that focus on culture, training, and career paths are gaining an edge. That's the takeaway from a TMC panel discussion.
Read More →
Technology & Maintenance Council 2026 Annual Meeting [Photos]
Couldn't make it to Nashville for TMC's 2026 annual meeting? Check out these images.
Read More →
Fullbay Report: Heavy-Duty Shop Revenue Up, Rates Rising, but Shops Still Short on Techs
Strong growth across the heavy-duty repair sector is being tempered by workforce shortages and an aging technician pipeline.
Read More →
How Mack Sees the Next Era of Fleet Intelligence
Telematics has evolved from simple vehicle tracking into a connected service platform that can help fleets boost uptime, improve specifications, and move toward predictive maintenance. Mack executives say AI is now giving fleets a way to turn all that vehicle data into faster, smarter decisions.
Read More →
Clarios Expands Battery Monitoring Into Subscription Service with Battery Manager Pro
A new battery-monitoring-as-a-service program from Clarios Connected Services uses predictive analytics and automatic replacement to reduce downtime and smooth fleet maintenance costs.
Read More →
SAF-Holland’s BrakeSight Aims to Take the Guesswork Out of Air Disc Brake Maintenance
New Haldex sensor technology from SAF-Holland integrates with telematics systems to give fleets continuous insight into air disc brake condition.
Read More →
Vanair Introduces Solar, Battery Power Ecosystem for Class 8 Trucks
The company’s expanded EPEQ ecosystem includes flexible solar panels, lithium batteries, hydraulic power systems, and a portable fast charger for electric trucks.
Read More →
