Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 3,520
Likes: 12
From: Colorado Springs, CO
Bikes: 1959 Bottecchia Milano-Sanremo (frame), 1966 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1971 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1973 Bottecchia Gran Turismo, 1974 Bottecchia Special, 1977 Bottecchia Special (frame), 1974 Peugeot UO-8
Implementation of the design is also a critical factor. Recently a guy at work gave me an old mid 90's mountain bike. Like my Panasonic, it has canti brakes. Both have standard Shimano pads. The difference is amazing. Why? The Panasonic has the traditional hanger attached by the headset locknut. When you apply the front brake it flexes giving the brakes a spongy feel. The Mountain bike has a CNC machine aluminum brake bridge attached to the fort and the brake cable mounts there. Flex is virtually non-existant. It feels so much better - absolutely solid like it could throw you over the handlebars. The Panasonic's brakes feel ok but similar to the centerpulls on my other vintage bikes and the single pivot sidepull on my fixie. For comparison, the dual-pivot sidepulls on my Bianchi could throw you right over the bars too.
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1959 Bottecchia Milano-Sanremo(frame), 1966 Bottecchia Professional (frame), 1971 Bottecchia Professional (frame),
1973 Bottecchia Gran Turismo, 1974 Bottecchia Special, 1977 Bottecchia Special (frame),
1974 Peugeot UO-8, 1988 Panasonic PT-3500, 2002 Bianchi Veloce, 2004 Bianchi Pista