Anyone else keeping their rim brake frames ?
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Yep. Mullet setups (27.5 rear, 29 front) are not uncommon for MTBs. Some gravel bikes have additional tire clearance in the frame with 650b wheels, allowing for a beefier setup if the need is there. None of that is possible with rim brakes.

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HARDY HAR HAR! Well slap my knee and call me cornpone, if that isn’t the best retort I’ve ever heard! And so original. Boy, you sure got me!
As I’ve said multiple times—there’s simply no need. Got more stopping power than I need. Don’t need the added drawbacks that disc brakes offer for zero stopping benefit.
But it does sound like you may be a bit less experienced in adjusting mechanical brakes if you need two fingers to get “max benefit.”
As I’ve said multiple times—there’s simply no need. Got more stopping power than I need. Don’t need the added drawbacks that disc brakes offer for zero stopping benefit.
But it does sound like you may be a bit less experienced in adjusting mechanical brakes if you need two fingers to get “max benefit.”
There's no magic in adjusting mechanical brakes. They just have limitations and follow physics. When trying to stop 400lbs going down a hill, a cable's gonna stretch. But I'll assume this'll all go over your head. There'll be another fallacy coming I'm sure.

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Since this is in your bailiwick maybe I can get a definition of what you mean by “modulation”. Everyone throws the term “superior modulation” around because they heard it or read it in some ad copy but can not define what they mean by it. What do you define “modulation” as? What should someone feel while riding the bike that would be described as “superior modulation”?
I’m not having a go at you but am really curious as to what this vaulted superiority should feel like since I really haven’t experienced it.
I’m not having a go at you but am really curious as to what this vaulted superiority should feel like since I really haven’t experienced it.

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True disk brakes are more protected than rim brakes, and they cool better so less fade, and that is the only reason they are better as brakes.
My u-brake, and the cam brakes of the past were incredibly powerful.

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There are some old school hard cores here who know exactly what they are doing and have been for 50+ years.
There's no magic in adjusting ANY brakes. There is no alchemy involved either. it's just understanding what it does and how it does it.

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I'm just glad I don't weigh 400 pounds. You should ride more.

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I'm just glad I don't weigh 400 pounds. You should ride more.
You do a lot of assuming don't you?
But I don't actually weigh 400 pounds. But me, my touring bike, my gear (four panniers + two bags), trailer, one extra person and their gear was everything combined roughly 400 pounds.

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There's no magic in adjusting ANY brakes. There is no alchemy involved either. it's just understanding what it does and how it does it.

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I think there actually IS some extra skill and attention involved in setting up and keeping single-sided mech discs running optimally.
That’s why there are such varied opinions on their effectiveness.
Similar situation with canti brakes…. At least with the initial setup.
OTOH, most hydro disc, dual-sided mech disc, v-brake, and modern road rim calipers are pretty easy to get right.
That’s why there are such varied opinions on their effectiveness.
Similar situation with canti brakes…. At least with the initial setup.
OTOH, most hydro disc, dual-sided mech disc, v-brake, and modern road rim calipers are pretty easy to get right.

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The second thing I've learned is that you can have decades of experience and still be absolutely incomptetent. That nugget of wisdom just came to me out of the blue with no relation to this discussion whatsoever.......

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And yet the give or flex in the system is an inherent property of cable actuated brakes and even more so in rim brakes. It's there whether you experience it or not.
We have good conditions for testing traction right now. It's raining on hard ice so the slipperiest conditions one can experience. So I did some testing. Trying to do maximal braking with the front brake only I got to a point where the front wheel was reacting like ABS so slipping, having traction, slipping and getting traction in rapid succession. With weaker brake that usually takes some concious effort. Not with this time however. Anything but on/off.
I have studs, but naturally the traction they give on wet ice is severely limited.
I have studs, but naturally the traction they give on wet ice is severely limited.
if we did a test of how much force at the lever is required for a certain amount of newtons of stopping power, hydro discs would win hands down. Too bad such a test is a bit difficult to conduct with a reasonable budget.[/QUOTE]
Yet again, I don’t find any relatively modern brake system requiring anything I would label excessive force nor do I find them “inaccurate” how ever you want to use that rather ill-defined term. Do you mean that you can stop closer to a certain point? Or that you can more accurately control speed? Neither of which I’ve found to be a problem with mechanical disc or mechanical rim brakes nor something I’ve found to be better with hydraulics. I can stop my bikes where I need to and I can control my speed where I need to.
As for force required, care to provide a source for you claims?
I see you stopped reading midway through the paragraph. How tiresome.
Let me spell it out. The mechanical brakes require two fingers worth of force to get max power out of. The hydro brake requires maybe half of one finger.
FYI, braking from the drops doesn't mean panic braking.
But while we're at it, I have had trouble stopping the touring bike when towing a trailer. Larger discs would be nice but really I'd prefer hydro discs.
FYI, braking from the drops doesn't mean panic braking.
But while we're at it, I have had trouble stopping the touring bike when towing a trailer. Larger discs would be nice but really I'd prefer hydro discs.
Before the GRX I couldn't really understand how people with road bikes were launching themselves over the bars, because for me (and my weight) that was quite inconceivable. But with the GRX I now understand. With great power comes great responsibility etc...
The trailer problem isn’t due to the brakes…at least not entirely. The problem is due to adding an unbraked mass to they system that lifts the front wheel and pushes the bike in direction that are difficult to anticipate. Trailers would be slightly better if they had their own brakes.
Man my hands and forearms have been shot after doing some long technical descents. But I also probably weigh a fair bit more than you do and as we know that has an effect. Our terrain is also exceedingly technical as we don't have trail management. It's not really allowed.
Some avids were nice, but they've had more issues than successes.
The speed thing is of course far more relevant in mtb. Not as big of an effect on road especially in good conditions, mainly because on road one rarely needs to pulse brakes.
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While on my 20+ year old, v-brake equipped, singlespeed MTB, I had a young rider express his concern that my brakes might not be adequate for the trails in the area. I informed him that this bike, with these brakes, have been handling the same trails without a problem for a very long time. I'm not sure he believed me. I'll cut him some slack, however, since he was probably younger than my bike.

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Yes, I know there is some flex in the cables but that’s not a bad thing in my opinion. One of the problems I had with hydraulics was the lack of that flex. The brakes were on or off with nothing in between. With cables, that flex results in some fine control…modulation if you like…of the raw power.

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My dual-pivots are so good that I actually shudder to think what would happen if I actually replaced the stock Shimano pads with Kool Stops.

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Im my experience, the biggest advantage of disc is the control of the power And I find Hydro better than mechanical in this regard.
I never realized how much of my attention was going into braking until I got a good set of hydros. Sort of like thinking it is silent until the hum that you were not aware of stops.
I still like good mechs, as I prefer the more frequent, predicable minor adjustments of mech to the less frequent, less predictable - and sometimes big - headaches of hydro. So I just run hydros on my FS MTB where every bit of control helps. For my fat bike and road/gravel bike… mechs are fine.
I never realized how much of my attention was going into braking until I got a good set of hydros. Sort of like thinking it is silent until the hum that you were not aware of stops.
I still like good mechs, as I prefer the more frequent, predicable minor adjustments of mech to the less frequent, less predictable - and sometimes big - headaches of hydro. So I just run hydros on my FS MTB where every bit of control helps. For my fat bike and road/gravel bike… mechs are fine.
Last edited by Kapusta; 01-13-23 at 05:57 AM.

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