benphyr
Guru-me-not
+1 on the discs should work better.
The only time I've had them not work as well is when a bolt was loostening and before I noticed it I was getting intermittent but regular rubbing and could never keep the brake pads in alignment. They still worked well, just made noise, rubbed and were generally annoying. Once I palm-forehead found the loose bolt it was miraculously fixed. This was BB-7 after no maintenance for a couple years of commuting.
BB-5 I have on my QX100 give a weird phenomenon: They give some play that feels kind of like a loose headset - you grab a gentle handful of brakes and rock forward and back and there is play between grab forward and grab rearward. If you pull the brakes harder it becomes much less and I think it is just some play in the way the brakes work because they work fine they just feel lower quality or worn out mechanisms when going really slowly and braking gently.
**If it is at all possible that you have gotten grease, oil, wax or any lubricant including the natural oils on your skin - anything besides water - on the rotor or pads then you definitely should clean them both properly and thoroughly. The easy way is brake cleaner - a nasty chemical that you can just spray on and it exterminates grease. Any organic solvent that does not leave a residue would work, as would a light sanding of the brake pads (same trick works for brake pads on rim brakes by the way and tends to take out any sand embedded in them too). The tiny amount of brake cleaner could be a bike shop or an auto mechanic garage, just protect the rubber from solvents....
And then be careful when your "new" brakes stop you twice as well as anything you have ever used before.
If all of the spokes are getting loose it can result in a sloppy wheel that decreases the effectiveness of braking (and pedaling too).
Here's to good predictable braking.
The only time I've had them not work as well is when a bolt was loostening and before I noticed it I was getting intermittent but regular rubbing and could never keep the brake pads in alignment. They still worked well, just made noise, rubbed and were generally annoying. Once I palm-forehead found the loose bolt it was miraculously fixed. This was BB-7 after no maintenance for a couple years of commuting.
BB-5 I have on my QX100 give a weird phenomenon: They give some play that feels kind of like a loose headset - you grab a gentle handful of brakes and rock forward and back and there is play between grab forward and grab rearward. If you pull the brakes harder it becomes much less and I think it is just some play in the way the brakes work because they work fine they just feel lower quality or worn out mechanisms when going really slowly and braking gently.
**If it is at all possible that you have gotten grease, oil, wax or any lubricant including the natural oils on your skin - anything besides water - on the rotor or pads then you definitely should clean them both properly and thoroughly. The easy way is brake cleaner - a nasty chemical that you can just spray on and it exterminates grease. Any organic solvent that does not leave a residue would work, as would a light sanding of the brake pads (same trick works for brake pads on rim brakes by the way and tends to take out any sand embedded in them too). The tiny amount of brake cleaner could be a bike shop or an auto mechanic garage, just protect the rubber from solvents....
And then be careful when your "new" brakes stop you twice as well as anything you have ever used before.
If all of the spokes are getting loose it can result in a sloppy wheel that decreases the effectiveness of braking (and pedaling too).
Here's to good predictable braking.
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