In reply to Tom_Spangler (Forum Supporter) :
Increasing pad surface area in contact with the rotor increases how much heat the pad can absorb during a braking event.
But, increasing pad arc length without spreading out the clamping force from the pistons along the new length can lead to NVH issues as well as poor pad wear.
So we redesign the caliper to use multiple pistons, to distribute the clamping force on the longer pad. These multiple pistons are smaller diameter than the "big single", and since volume varies with diameter squared, we choose the new piston diameters such that the total volume of brake fluid consumed is the same between a big single and an equivalent multi-piston.
example: the area of a single 60 mm piston is (ignoring the pi/4 since it cancels out) 3600 mm^2.
if I wanted to use a two-piston caliper with equal diameters, each piston would be 1800 mm^2, and the diameter of each piston would be sqrt(1800), or about 42.4 mm.
in your case, IIRC the OE S197 caliper was a 2 piston with 42 mm diameters, so the 3600 mm^2 area is close enough for this example. To do this with 3 pistons per pad, even making them 3 unique diameters, it's just math:
3600 = 1000 + 1200 + 1400
In this case the piston diameters would be
sqrt(1000) = 31.6 mm
sqrt(1200) = 34.6 mm
sqrt(1400) = 37.5 mm
now, you may be wondering why I'm only counting pistons on one side of the rotor. That's because the total pad movement, therefore total fluid volume, is the same between a sliding caliper and an opposed piston aka fixed caliper.
Consider there's a 1mm gap between pads and rotors. In a sliding caliper, the piston travels 1 mm to make inboard pad touch rotor, then the piston pushes out another 1 mm to make the caliper slide inboard to pull the outboard pad 1 mm to contact the rotor. Total piston travel 2 mm.
Now consider fixed mount, opposed piston caliper. Same 1 mm gap between pads and rotor. Inboard pistons move 1 mm to put inboard pad in contact with rotor. Outboard pistons also move 1 mm to put outboard pad in contact with rotor. Total piston travel = 2 mm, so total fluid volume consumed is the same.