The width of the tyre has no bearing on calculations of braking.
Friction is an emperical value with no units and is independant of contact area.
If you look at the charts that Clayton lodged you will see that the deceleration is stated at 0.8 g .This is based on the co-efficient of friction between the road and the tyre.
Typical g value on normal roads is 0.5 to 0.7 and in the wet it can be down to 0.1 - 0.2. It has to be a good road surface to get 0.7.
The 0.8 is more akin to a race track that has "rubbered up". It can be higher dependant on the track material
Where they tyres come into play is then being able to transmit the braking force to the road way. The contact patch needs to be sufficiently large enough to cope with the heat generated, The size of the contact patch required is dependant on the compound of the tread. For any given compound if the contact patch is too small the contact patch overheats and a "structural failure" occurs at the interface. If the contact patch is too large the tread may not get hot enough to get maximum grip. All racing tyres have an optimum temperature at which they develop maximum grip. ie improve the CoF between road and tyre. This same principle applies in cornering.
The same principle applies to brake pads, too small a pad will over heat (fade) too large a pad may not get hot enough. Typical pads have a higher CoF Hot than they do Cold.
You may have at times noted a letter code on the edge of brake pads which could be EF, or FF what this means is that the CoF cold is E and the CoF hot is F, the value for E I thing (without looking it up) is 0.5 and for F 0.6. The higher the CoF the greater the braking force generated at the disc face. So you can see that if the pads are too cold you may be not getting max braking (at the disc)
Any chart used for calculating brake force is a great starting point followed by physical tests.. A generalised chart cannot deal with all the variables.
There are different schools of thought on wet setup as opposed to dry, it is not uncommon on heavy cars ie racing cars with roofs on them,to not change bias from wet to dry, you are going slower, brake pedal effort is less, weight transfer is less.
Lighter cars can be a different story, although with modern super soft wet weather tyres it may not be necessary.
It is all a case by case situation wet or dry and the car and driver package on the day.
Serious track work requires a cockpit adjustable bias so it can be fine tuned as conditions change.
Now look at which should lock first front or rear.
When wheels lock they lose directional stability, that is why you cant steer with front wheels locked- you just go straight ahead.
Now if your rear wheels lock first they have lost directional stability and the car will spin or in the least be very unstable.
Try this, disconnect your front brakes and do a hard application of the brakes at say 150Km/h to lock the back wheels then simulate turning into a corner, if you already have not spun!!
Dont try this on a public street , a disused airfield would be more appropriate -

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