Rear brakes, really any need ?
Discussion
I ride motorbikes and generally you don't use the rear brake for much unless you are either tanking it along ( tighten your line on a corner ) or can't be arse to use front brake in very slow traffic.
Are the necessary on a commuter bike ? reason i ask is I have been offered a decent commuter bike very cheap on the basis that the rear brake run because of the bracket being welded too close. I was thinking, buy the bike, disable the rear brake and use it as is.
Or you you think that is a stupid idea ? Bike will be mainly used just to potter around on.
Are the necessary on a commuter bike ? reason i ask is I have been offered a decent commuter bike very cheap on the basis that the rear brake run because of the bracket being welded too close. I was thinking, buy the bike, disable the rear brake and use it as is.
Or you you think that is a stupid idea ? Bike will be mainly used just to potter around on.
SystemParanoia said:
im planning on removing my rear brake on my road bike to reduce weight due to me upgrading the front brakes to a disk.
Surely keeping the bike as it is would be better than having one stronger brake, and to be honest, i'd rather have a rear brake and a little extra weight, won't make that much of a performace difference.mchammer89 said:
SystemParanoia said:
im planning on removing my rear brake on my road bike to reduce weight due to me upgrading the front brakes to a disk.
Surely keeping the bike as it is would be better than having one stronger brake, and to be honest, i'd rather have a rear brake and a little extra weight, won't make that much of a performace difference.My commuter has no rear brake (because I haven't got around to buying the correct adapter for mounting the caliper on the rear) - and to be honest I don't really miss it. My commute is flat, and mostly off-road on tow paths and fields, so signalling and avoiding traffic isn't something I have to do very often!
pdV6 said:
mchammer89 said:
SystemParanoia said:
im planning on removing my rear brake on my road bike to reduce weight due to me upgrading the front brakes to a disk.
Surely keeping the bike as it is would be better than having one stronger brake, and to be honest, i'd rather have a rear brake and a little extra weight, won't make that much of a performace difference.Have you tried a measured stop using two rim brakes compared to the same stop using just one disc brake? You might be in for a surprise!
SystemParanoia said:
main reason is that i pull a trailer with my kids in, and the brake fade from the calipers is horrendous unless i creep along at walking pace.
the disk means ill have better braking power and i never use the rears anyway.
I'd recommend having a rear there anyway, just for when the front cable snaps / hydraulic seal fails.the disk means ill have better braking power and i never use the rears anyway.
SystemParanoia said:
im planning on removing my rear brake on my road bike to reduce weight due to me upgrading the front brakes to a disk.
Don't, especially if your towing your kids. Disks do fail - hoses can come off, cables snap, pads de-laminate - so you should keep the back brake for emergency use.In one touring trip we had three disk brakes fail on three different bikes. A hose came off my Brother-in-law's bike due to overheating. The pad de-laminated on mine on a long decent. This resulted in the piston getting so hot that it melted through the copper pad backing.
SystemParanoia said:
main reason is that i pull a trailer with my kids in, and the brake fade from the calipers is horrendous unless i creep along at walking pace.
the disk means ill have better braking power and i never use the rears anyway.
In addition to the risk of having no brakes if the front fails and such a small weight gain there's another problem.the disk means ill have better braking power and i never use the rears anyway.
Disc brakes will make a difference on mountain bikes with wider tyres. However on narrow road tyres they won't have more braking power as the extra braking won't be any use due to the reduced rubber contact and so you'd just skid with it.
im not after extra braking power.
i just want to eliminate the dangerous brake fade i get when i've got a fully loaded trailer on tow.
with the calipers i have now, almost every time i stop the braking power is reduced to almost nothing by the time i come to a halt... i believe the disks will keep a consistent level of braking unlike the calipers.
i just want to eliminate the dangerous brake fade i get when i've got a fully loaded trailer on tow.
with the calipers i have now, almost every time i stop the braking power is reduced to almost nothing by the time i come to a halt... i believe the disks will keep a consistent level of braking unlike the calipers.
my frame can only be modified for 1 disk... will have to break out the alu welder to fit a rear one.... umm no! lol.
ill be getting cyclo X forks, so ill just be googling for a while and see which name seems to be most popular, as ill probbably have to buy a new wheels to fit the disk to anyway.
ill be getting cyclo X forks, so ill just be googling for a while and see which name seems to be most popular, as ill probbably have to buy a new wheels to fit the disk to anyway.
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