This will be extremelly interesting to see, especially as it is such a Major Safety issue, the look cool, but so does a piece of turd some times.
Good luck with the test, be very interesting to see what happens to them after a few heat cycles as well
PS, where are they manufacrured then, and what metal is used in them
I fear the day technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots! ALBERT EINSTEIN
Yeah just flick me a pm. It'll only tell us whether they leak under extreme pressures, but it might give you some free piece of mind
I expect they'd be fine, if anything the pads might be a bit soft (cheaper to make them like that) and could cut out quicker than expected, but you won't know that till a few sets have been around the block a little. Having said that, some people cut out pads quite quickly anyway, and there's a couple of brands of aftermarket motorcycle pads on the NZ market already that do this.
I don't know if you're doing discs yet, but maybe having a look at the Metal Gear Australia site might be worthwhile.
"It would be spiteful, to put jellyfish in a trifle."\m/ o.o \m/
Before you judge a man, walk a mile in his shoes. After that, who cares? ...He's a mile away and you've got his shoes
Can anyone explain why the bolt mounting pattern of calipers has any effect on braking performance? I always understood that braking was more or less a function of pressure applied to the pad, and friction between the pad and rotor, so assuming nothing changes apart from the manner of bolting the caliper to the fork leg, why should radially mounted calipers be better?
Genuine question, not a piss-take.
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
I'd say its to do with directional forces, old calipers that bolted from the side have to deal with twisting from the caliper trying to go the same way as the disc is rotating.
Radial mounted can cope better because they're mounted inline so its not so much a twisting force.
Then there's mono block calipers which are milled from one piece of alloy, further reducing twisting etc.
The less distortion from mounting or calipers the more direct braking force can be applied to the disc/rotor.
Thats how I understand it with my limited knoweledge anyways.
It is an interesting question though. My bike with non-radial mounted brakes will stoppie or lock the front. How much more braking force (on a road bike) can you use?
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