I might suggest someone has adjusted the rear brake lever pushrod too much and the piston is not uncovering the compensating port in the master cylinder. Fluid becomes trapped in a closed circuit, overheats and locks the brakes.![]()
i dont think my brakes have been worked on from new. The pads have more than half of there pad left. Unless the dealer has adjusted them in the services they havn't been touched by me or the dealer. Shit at the last service the bike had only done 5000ks so they shouldn't have been touched. My 2c
I'm surprised some twat hasn't said it was your fault for not anticipating it.
A safety buffer for the rear locking up when giving it a slight nudge? If I'm riding and have inspected/tested brakes before beginning the ride that should not bloody happen which means no safety buffer for that event. That would be like creating a safety buffer for the throttle jamming open all of a sudden, or the screen flying off and hitting you in the face even though you check the throttle cable and the screen's secure... no one sits there expecting that to happen.
I always ride with the theory that I don't know what is around the next corner or on the corner (animal,gravel,diesal or whatever) that im about to turn into but i would never have thought my rear brake would seize mid corner for no reason at all. That is something that i will always watch for from now on though.
I'm all for not riding at 100% on the road in case shit like this happens. But the reality is you cannot plan for everything all the time and in a case like this it could easily go either way depending on a number of factors (experience, severity of failure, other distractions, and sometimes plain dumb luck to name a few).
I'm glad this went the right way, and I'm glad we don't have to put up with people saying that it serves you right.
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