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What is your favorite type of brakes?

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Old 01-06-24, 03:03 PM
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currently have a a disc bike, a canti bike and a V brake bike...order of like....disc, v, canti......I for the life of me can not get the canti's to feel good no matter what and have tried two different sets ie tektro and diacomp. 3 different bike shops canti (see what I did there )either.....
I am guessing that you have tried the Salmon pads. If not I would try these on your cantis. There are also better working cantis available.Yokozuna sales a remake of the mathauser finned salmon brake pads that I used on my touring bike years ago.
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Old 01-06-24, 04:58 PM
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Originally Posted by Rick
I am guessing that you have tried the Salmon pads. If not I would try these on your cantis. There are also better working cantis available.Yokozuna sales a remake of the mathauser finned salmon brake pads that I used on my touring bike years ago.
The only things that go on my touring bike cantis are Salmons.
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Old 01-06-24, 05:33 PM
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Jake brakes work pretty good and sound awesome.
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Old 01-06-24, 05:44 PM
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Originally Posted by seypat
Jake brakes work pretty good and sound awesome.
You can get that sound on a bike. But your butt has to come off the saddle and it won't stop the bike. Probably not good on group rides unless you are riding with close friends.
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Old 01-06-24, 06:27 PM
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Originally Posted by t2p
Digging the light chain rings on darker crank look; I thought I was the only one.
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Old 01-06-24, 11:55 PM
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Oh boy
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Old 01-07-24, 12:36 AM
  #57  
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Originally Posted by GamblerGORD53
Most bikes didn't have front brakes till the late 1960s, SS anyway. I didn't have one until 1974. LOL
ROD brakes are or ever were brakes?? LOL hahahahahahahahaha


I'm not going anywhere without my PERFECT SA drum brakes now.
My tour bike before the Rohloff14 had both drum hubs. Maiden ride I went 45.5 mph. >>>
I never tire of these pics as well as the one with the handmade fairings or whatever insane thing you did to the purple bike.
Keep posting pics, they are straight crack for me!

Serious note- why do both bikes look like the forks are bent significantly?
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Old 01-07-24, 02:00 PM
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My favorite breaks are the ones you take once you reach the top of a difficult climb.
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Old 01-07-24, 02:35 PM
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Yah, the green fork was abused for decades and crashed more than once. Bike is older than me, 1940 to1950?.
My dad rode it from 1974 till he died. He got it from his uncles estate in 1967 for $20. The frame and fork were gone to the scrap heap in 2017. The HB is on my CCM.
The purple fork was weak to start with and brazons made it worse. Broke 3 times in Asia. Have a tandem one now.
Nothing on it wasn't changed since then. LOL.

Last edited by GamblerGORD53; 01-07-24 at 03:32 PM.
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Old 01-09-24, 05:25 PM
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...brakes only slow you down. What's teh point ? Might as well be dragging an anchor.
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Old 01-10-24, 07:53 AM
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Originally Posted by 3alarmer
.
...brakes only slow you down. What's teh point ? Might as well be dragging an anchor.
I know you are being facetious but I gotta say I don’t disagree. I live in mountains and ride in mountains (road bikes and mountain bikes) and have for all of my life. I use brakes sparingly. I can go years without having to replace pads of any kind. In fact, even though I have used disc brakes for about a decade now, I have yet to replace any of the original pads on several bikes.

I’ve used just about every brake type that is currently available including bad Diacompe center pulls, bad Diacompe side pulls and even rod brakes on this amazing piece of crap…




…which as been deemed so unsafe that we bolted it to the counter.

Brakes are less about what kind of brake you have and more about how you use them. In 40 years of mountain riding, I’ve never overheated a brake of any kind either.
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Old 01-10-24, 07:14 PM
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brakes that dont break, don't dual as a mechanical horn when engaged, are hydraulic, easy to maintain, & have inexpensive parts readily available...

maybe i'm too picky & should stop at just the "don't break" part. Could alternatively use high rolling resistant tires. max watts gains!
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Old 01-11-24, 05:15 AM
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Use them a bunch, barely use them, flat land, mountain... all good stuff, but none of that really matters to the question at hand.

Disc brakes simply stop the bike better. Whether you use them or not - they stop the bike better. My disc brake bikes stop like a Ferrari accelerates. My rim brake bikes stop like a 40 hp diesel VW Rabbit accelerates with the AC on.
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Old 01-11-24, 06:52 AM
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Originally Posted by Jughed
Disc brakes simply stop the bike better. Whether you use them or not - they stop the bike better.
So...If I don't use disc brakes, they still stop the bike better than other brakes I use to stop the bike?

I have read a lot of claims on BF about the superiority of discs, but this is a new one.
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Old 01-11-24, 10:01 AM
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Mechanical disk brakes. No use to complicate things, and most people can adjust them theirselves.
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Old 01-11-24, 10:38 AM
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My least favorite right now are my Honda Fit's ones, cause I gotta do all 4 this weekend, and the front are disc and the rear are rim, I mean drum....
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Old 01-11-24, 11:42 AM
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Originally Posted by tcs
Spoon.
Hydraulic spoon gives you better modulation.
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Old 01-11-24, 12:25 PM
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Originally Posted by tomato coupe
Hydraulic spoon gives you better modulation.
The idea with these ↓ rear wheel spoons is to get off the saddle with one foot on the mounting step (this gets your CG relatively low and rearward) and step on the actuator with your other foot—easy lock-up power, modulation not so much.

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Old 01-12-24, 11:34 AM
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Rim brakes. Not a fan of v-brakes. I like cantis the best. Easiest to set up IMO

Last edited by JustinHS777; 01-12-24 at 01:15 PM.
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Old 01-13-24, 12:08 PM
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Disc or drum, something I can ride through six inches of mud with and not have a horrible graunching noise where the brakes are destroying the rims at the end of it, I must admit to rim brakes on my sports bike that never goes out in the rain and road touring bike that never sees a dirt track.
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Old 01-13-24, 02:08 PM
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Old 01-13-24, 02:36 PM
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"Right Foot & Curb" brake. Love it.

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Old 01-13-24, 02:46 PM
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I must admit this worn out debate thread has been more interesting than the past 100 or so times it has been flogged into submission. Usually the old timer rim brake brigade dominates the more progressives through overwhelming force and shear doggedness shutting down the discussion. This time we had some new players including surprisingly the “I rarely brake crew” making a strong showing. These forums never fail to entertain.

Last edited by Atlas Shrugged; 01-13-24 at 08:42 PM.
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Old 01-13-24, 03:56 PM
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Weinmann center-pulls.
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Old 01-15-24, 06:40 PM
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I’m having trouble grasping with 2 of the fingers on my right hand, so I love how easy it is to operate the hydraulic brakes on my new bike.
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