Disc brakes and quick releases – what's the deal?
#76
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#77
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I purchased a new high end CX bike from an LBS 3 years ago and it did not come with any reflectors on it. They didn't provide these or say anything about it at all. I didn't even really think about it until a few months later when one of these threads came up on the internet. A year later I bought a kids bike from them and it came with all the reflectors on it.
I'm guessing some shops are just making assumptions that buyers of certain types of bikes are just going to take them off anyways.
I'm guessing some shops are just making assumptions that buyers of certain types of bikes are just going to take them off anyways.
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I purchased a new high end CX bike from an LBS 3 years ago and it did not come with any reflectors on it. They didn't provide these or say anything about it at all. I didn't even really think about it until a few months later when one of these threads came up on the internet. A year later I bought a kids bike from them and it came with all the reflectors on it.
I'm guessing some shops are just making assumptions that buyers of certain types of bikes are just going to take them off anyways.
I'm guessing some shops are just making assumptions that buyers of certain types of bikes are just going to take them off anyways.
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Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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I can see it now .... a sign in the window of the LBS, "Quality Lip Grinding---Ask Inside."
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You missed the part about “prior to the introduction of disc brakes”. Most every fork I’ve bought since the mid 90s has had lawyer lips on them. In the early 90s most bikes didn’t have lawyer lips but that changed prior to the introduction and widespread use of disc brakes.
On the topic of reflectors (not to belabor the point…) I’m curious about how shops are supposed to deal with installing clipless pedals in new bikes? Seems like CPSC rules requires reflectors on pedals, but most clipless pedals don’t have them. When I bought my last bike I also bought new pedals - the shop installed them for me. The first time I saw the bike (and the point where I actually paid and was handed a receipt), the bike rolled out the door with no reflectors, no dork disc (is this really a CPSC requirement?) and the shop had installed the aftermarket pedals and two bottle cages. Same with aftermarket wheels - my Zipp wheels didn’t ship with reflectors stalled and I don’t recall any in the boxes. I assume many shops are swapping new aftermarket wheels onto customers new bikes at the time of sale and not adding reflectors to them.
Is the law different when customers buy additional/different parts and ask a shop install them? I’m also curious about custom build bikes. If a shop builds up a bike from frameset/groupset are they still required to add reflectors before it rolls out?
The shop I purchased from has been in business for decades and is a dealer for several big name brands. I can’t imagine they’re just rolling the dice on lawsuits to avoid installing a few dollars worth of reflectors, but maybe?
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Concur - I had a 1996 Rock Shox Indy fork that had lips on it. This was several years before disc brakes started hitting the market.
On the topic of reflectors (not to belabor the point…) I’m curious about how shops are supposed to deal with installing clipless pedals in new bikes? Seems like CPSC rules requires reflectors on pedals, but most clipless pedals don’t have them. When I bought my last bike I also bought new pedals - the shop installed them for me. The first time I saw the bike (and the point where I actually paid and was handed a receipt), the bike rolled out the door with no reflectors, no dork disc (is this really a CPSC requirement?) and the shop had installed the aftermarket pedals and two bottle cages. Same with aftermarket wheels - my Zipp wheels didn’t ship with reflectors stalled and I don’t recall any in the boxes. I assume many shops are swapping new aftermarket wheels onto customers new bikes at the time of sale and not adding reflectors to them.
On the topic of reflectors (not to belabor the point…) I’m curious about how shops are supposed to deal with installing clipless pedals in new bikes? Seems like CPSC rules requires reflectors on pedals, but most clipless pedals don’t have them. When I bought my last bike I also bought new pedals - the shop installed them for me. The first time I saw the bike (and the point where I actually paid and was handed a receipt), the bike rolled out the door with no reflectors, no dork disc (is this really a CPSC requirement?) and the shop had installed the aftermarket pedals and two bottle cages. Same with aftermarket wheels - my Zipp wheels didn’t ship with reflectors stalled and I don’t recall any in the boxes. I assume many shops are swapping new aftermarket wheels onto customers new bikes at the time of sale and not adding reflectors to them.
Is the law different when customers buy additional/different parts and ask a shop install them? I’m also curious about custom build bikes. If a shop builds up a bike from frameset/groupset are they still required to add reflectors before it rolls out?
The shop I purchased from has been in business for decades and is a dealer for several big name brands. I can’t imagine they’re just rolling the dice on lawsuits to avoid installing a few dollars worth of reflectors, but maybe?
I will say that although I hate lawyer lips with a burning passion and agree with the CPSC about their interfering with the proper use of a quick release, I’ve never ground one off. If the bike passes from my hands to someone else, I don’t want to be on the hook if some lawyer notices that it doesn’t have the lips and comes for my personal belongings. Been sued once. Don’t want to have it happen again.
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Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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Reflectors are not a legal requirement on a bicycle. Even if some LBS choose to put them on, majority of people will remove them especially on higher end bikes...Lights are a legal requirement when riding during dark hours but reflectors are optional. I've heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having lights, but I never heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having reflectors.
#83
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Reflectors are not a legal requirement on a bicycle. Even if some LBS choose to put them on, majority of people will remove them especially on higher end bikes...Lights are a legal requirement when riding during dark hours but reflectors are optional. I've heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having lights, but I never heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having reflectors.
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Reflectors are not a legal requirement on a bicycle. Even if some LBS choose to put them on, majority of people will remove them especially on higher end bikes...Lights are a legal requirement when riding during dark hours but reflectors are optional. I've heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having lights, but I never heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having reflectors.
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I live in California and state law requires some reflectors as most of the other states. The rear reflector. pedal reflectors and wheel reflectors. They state if your tires have a reflective surface on the side this meets the requirement. The cycling shoes I have purchased have reflective surfaces on the back and sides. So this should Meet the pedal reflector requirement. My last new bicycle was purchased in Mar 2014. I was at the shop when they opened. I didn't allow the CPSC reflectors. The Schwalbe Marathon Supreme tires had reflectors. the Edelux headlight came with a reflector. The pedals had them. I took the bicycle home and ree did the brakes. I contacted Peter White and ordered a taillight and had him explain how to wire the Schmidt Son SL dino hub. The one and only shop mechanic stated he didn't know about dino lights. I lived in an apt. at the time and just expected better service from a bicycle shop.
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To the OP's concerns about the safety of Q/R's on disc braked bikes. The T/A system is a recent invention. Q/R disc braked bikes have been around since the mtb scene became popular in the late 80's. All disc braked bikes until the last decade have been designed with the Q/R system. High end low end, it didn't matter...they all came with dropouts for Q/R wheels. So with that many bikes out there that have used this system for so long, why now has it become a major safety issue? As others have alluded to it is the combination of lawyers & user error.
While the first disc brakes for mtbs were produced in the 80s, they were a tiny niche thing that most people never even saw once in the wild. It was not until the mid-late 90s when Hayes came out with their first disc brake that you could even find a non-custom frame/fork with mounts. Until than it was basically all rim brakes.
But disc caught on fast and by the early-mid 2000’s they were the standard on any mid-high end bike.
TA, have actually been around since before 2000. Not sure when, but I remember them existing around 2000, and by the early 2000s there were many 20mm TA forks available, But it took a lot longer for TA to take over than it did for disc. And it took longer for rear wheels to go TA than forks.
My 2004 RS Pike is 20mm TA, my 2007 Reba is QR. both disc.
But the point that there have long been QR disc forks and frames still stands.
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The Code of Federal Regulations would beg to differ. All bikes (with some limited exceptions) are required to have reflectors at point of sale.
That’s not true for all states. Colorado, for example, say the following about reflectors and lights
Note that our state law says that a white headlight is required. A red rear reflector is required but a rear light is optional. Also note that stupidly enough, you can run a side light in lieu of a reflector. I don’t agree with the requirement for a rear reflector and prefer active lighting, but that is the law.
To pick a couple of states at random:
New Jersey
That’s better than the Colorado regulation.
Georgia
Kansas
Reflector and light as well as an amber light on the person. Good luck finding an amber light.
Even if some LBS choose to put them on, majority of people will remove them especially on higher end bikes...Lights are a legal requirement when riding during dark hours but reflectors are optional. I've heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having lights, but I never heard of cyclists being ticketed for not having reflectors.
- Every bicycle, electrical assisted bicycle, electric scooter, or EPAMD in use at thetimes described in section 42-4-204 shall be equipped with a lamp on the front emitting a white light visible from a distance of at least five hundred feet to the front.
- Every bicycle, electrical assisted bicycle, electric scooter, or EPAMD shall be equipped with a red reflector of a type approved by the department, which shall be visible for six hundred feet to the rear when directly in front of lawful lower beams of head lamps on a motor vehicle.
- Every bicycle, electrical assisted bicycle, electric scooter, or EPAMD when in use atthe times described in section 42-4-204 shall be equipped with reflective material of sufficient size and reflectivity to be visible from both sides for six hundred feet when directly in front of lawful lower beams of head lamps on a motor vehicle or, in lieu of such reflective material, with a lighted lamp visible from both sides from a distance of at least five hundred feet.
- A bicycle, electrical assisted bicycle, electric scooter, or EPAMD or its rider may beequipped with lights or reflectors in addition to those required by subsections (2) to (4) of this section.
To pick a couple of states at random:
New Jersey
39:4-10 Lights on Bicycles.
When in use at nighttime every bicycle shall be equipped with: 1) A front headlamp emitting a white light visible from a distance of at least 600 feet to the front; 2) A rear lamp emitting a red light visible from a distance of at least 600 feet to the rear; 3) In addition to the red lamp a red reflector may be mounted on the rear.Georgia
40-6-296: (a) Every bicycle when in use at nighttime shall be equipped with a light on the front which shall emit a white light visible from a distance of 300 feet to the front and with a light on the back which shall emit a red light visible from a distance of 300 feet to the rear. Any bicycle equipped with a red reflector on the rear that is approved by the Department of Public Safety shall not be required to have a light on the rear of the bicycle.
8-1592. Lamps, brakes and other equipment on bicycles. (a) Every bicycle when in use between sunset and sunrise shall be equipped with a lamp on the front which shall emit a white light visible from a distance of at least 500 feet to the front and either: (1) A red reflector on the rear which shall be visible from all distances from 100 feet to 600 feet to the rear when directly in front of lawful lower beams of head lamps on a motor vehicle; (2) a lamp on the rear that shall emit a red light visible from a distance of 500 feet to the rear; or (3) the operator of such bicycle shall be wearing a device that emits a red or amber light that shall be visible from a distance of 500 feet to the rear.
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Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
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Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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The Code of Federal Regulations would beg to differ. All bikes (with some limited exceptions) are required to have reflectors at point of sale.
That’s not true for all states. Colorado, for example, say the following about reflectors and lights
Note that our state law says that a white headlight is required. A red rear reflector is required but a rear light is optional. Also note that stupidly enough, you can run a side light in lieu of a reflector. I don’t agree with the requirement for a rear reflector and prefer active lighting, but that is the law.
To pick a couple of states at random:
New Jersey
That’s better than the Colorado regulation.
Georgia
Kansas
Reflector and light as well as an amber light on the person. Good luck finding an amber light.
That’s not true for all states. Colorado, for example, say the following about reflectors and lights
Note that our state law says that a white headlight is required. A red rear reflector is required but a rear light is optional. Also note that stupidly enough, you can run a side light in lieu of a reflector. I don’t agree with the requirement for a rear reflector and prefer active lighting, but that is the law.
To pick a couple of states at random:
New Jersey
That’s better than the Colorado regulation.
Georgia
Kansas
Reflector and light as well as an amber light on the person. Good luck finding an amber light.
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If reflectors are a legal requirement as you say, then why aren't cyclists being fined and ticketed for not having any reflectors on their bikes ?
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Where the law comes into play-0---and you know this too---is in the case of an accident, when liability is assigned. if you are riding ninja and get slammed by a car .... oops, no reflector ... no insurance coverage. Die poor and crippled. Have reflectors, get the driver's insurance to pay all your bills.
And you know this.
We cannot have a decent conversation if we are always playing "Gotcha" or always playing dumb or just not doing our best.
You knew better but pretended otherwise ... it just makes you look deliberately and obnoxiously ignorant.
The laws are there to be researched. if you wanted to know the facts, you didn't have to come here being obnoxious and confrontational ... you could have googled the laws, just like @cyccommute did. But you didn't want to learn ... you wanted to bicker childishly,. You didn't care about fact, youo wanted to fight.
Well, .... you lose.
Maybe next time ... we try to pretend we actually respect each other?
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I don’t like Colorado’s law with regard to reflectors. I think reflectors are about the dumbest thing required on bicycles. But I also understand that I need to do some CYAing and thus run lights with reflectors that are integrated into the light or I put a rear red reflector on the bike somewhere. This study by the CSPC reaches the conclusion that reflectors…especially side reflectors…are mostly useless and that active lighting is far better but they decided to stick with the reflectors. Some state laws have changed since that study to require rear lights but not every state has done that.
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Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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Hello all. Long time reader, first time caller, etc. I have a 2019 Rockhopper 29, which has quick releases and disc brakes. Recently came across the discussions about the safety issues with disc brakes and quick releases. The physics makes sense to me, but most of the bikes I'm seeing on the market (I've been looking at upgrading) still have disc brakes and QRs, so I'm a bit confused. (Also wondering about the safety of my Rockhopper.). Are manufacturers just ignoring the issue, or has the disc brake/QR issue been eliminated somehow? Cheers all.
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I didn't read the entire thread, so don't know if this was mentioned, but Rad Power, an e-bike company, has a class action lawsuit in which an individual employed his front brake suddenly to avoid an automobile and the front wheel disengaged throwing him to the pavement causing injury. As an aside I've noticed that my front wheel was loose twice in the last couple of years, but thought off road brush disengaged the skewer. Fortunately the "lawyer lips" retained the wheel.
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Some folks figured that if you aim the front handle up and back along and behind the fork it is very hard for anything to grab it .... I do the same with the rear .... I have no desire to have a branch open the skewer and not find out until I crest a hill and start bombing down the other side ......
With the skewer open, at speed I think the lateral movement might be enough to wreck a rider even if the wheel didn't actually come off. Gravity might keep it from falling out (weight of bike and rider) but the thing could wobble as much as it wanted ......
With the skewer open, at speed I think the lateral movement might be enough to wreck a rider even if the wheel didn't actually come off. Gravity might keep it from falling out (weight of bike and rider) but the thing could wobble as much as it wanted ......
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It's a good thing you didn't take advice from some bikeforums experts who advocate grinding the lawyer tabs off because they say that those lawyer tabs are annoying and serve no useful purpose.
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They are annoying, unless you’re not good at using quick releases, or don’t recognize that they’ve loosened before even swinging a leg over the frame.
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