A newb question
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A newb question
Postby Shaolin_stud » Thu Oct 15, 2009 4:46 pm
I had just finished climbing (in my opinion) a pretty big hill. Upon reaching the top I ofcourse decided to go down it:P...
The point to this is ofcourse, How good are road bike breaks when speeds start to exceed 60km/h?
I ask this question because I intend to eventually upgrade my Mountain Bike for a road bike and seeings as i have hydraulic disck breaks im just worried the breaks on the road bike wont match the breaks I have now.
I know this may seem stupid to ask, but Im wondering what a proper road bike is like as I see a fair few guys on them around my area but cant usually catch up to talk to them
Thanks in advance for ignoring my stupidity
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Re: A newb question
Postby USM TOM » Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:11 pm
they wont come close to your MTB brakesShaolin_stud wrote:s i have hydraulic disck breaks im just worried the breaks on the road bike wont match the breaks I have now.
D
road bike brakes are pretty crap IMO
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Re: A newb question
Postby m@ » Thu Oct 15, 2009 5:20 pm
You won't necessarily stop as fast as you would on a mountain bike, but my understanding is that all other things being equal, that's due to the difference in tyre pressure and contact patch size; not the brakes per se.
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Re: A newb question
Postby didge » Thu Oct 15, 2009 6:15 pm
If you're above 60km/hr and your road bike breaks you are in big trouble.Shaolin_stud wrote:How good are road bike breaks when speeds start to exceed 60km/h?
Sorry
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Re: A newb question
Postby Jonny Rochester » Thu Oct 15, 2009 7:30 pm
If you have modern Shimano Sora or Tiagra brakes, they will work very well. I noticed the Shimano 105 brakes do work a bit better.
The tyres are narrow, so it won't be hard to lock up the back. I read that Lance Armstrong got up to 110km/h in one of the tours recently. Their brakes are not so different to what you could afford on a modern road bike.
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Re: A newb question
Postby Shaolin_stud » Fri Oct 16, 2009 8:51 am
but yeah i really thought that the breaks of a road bike would just be in scale with the rest of the system, why need such hardcore breaks if the over all bike is lighter? but i see what your all saying.I spoke to my Gfs dad last night whos an ex racer and he pretty much said the same thing. In fact hes words were something like "above 80km/h those breaks arent good for nothing, they just slow you down anyway", so im thinking I might stick with the mountain bike for a while yet before my skills improve:P
THanks for all the helpful answers
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Re: A newb question
Postby philip » Fri Oct 16, 2009 10:23 am
+1, you have to remember the force slowing you down is between your tyres and the road, not the brakes and the rims.JV911 wrote:or you just have crap tyres with inadequate grip. stickier tyres will enable you to brake harder
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Re: A newb question
Postby m@ » Fri Oct 16, 2009 10:30 am
True... though even with grippy tyres, modern road calipers should be able to lock the wheels... The point I was trying to make is that if you can lock the wheels, stronger brakes won't stop you any faster.JV911 wrote:or you just have crap tyres with inadequate grip. stickier tyres will enable you to brake harderm@ wrote:If they can lock the rear wheel, they're stronger than they need to be...
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Re: A newb question
Postby DanielS » Sat Oct 17, 2009 6:56 pm
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Re: A newb question
Postby toolonglegs » Sat Oct 17, 2009 11:12 pm
My brakes work harder than LA's most days of the week anyway...I can go faster down hills cause I weigh a lot more and when I need to stop I have 30-40 kilos more to slow down .
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Re: A newb question
Postby JV911 » Mon Oct 19, 2009 3:15 pm
you really dont want to lock the wheel as if you're skidding you're not slowing down plus you'll loose the ability to steer if the front locks - hence ABS for carsm@ wrote:True... though even with grippy tyres, modern road calipers should be able to lock the wheels...
had a moment on a bunch ride last week...i was sitting 3rd wheel and as we approached a roundabout "clear" was called and a moment later the call was "CAR!" so i jumped on the brakes to avoid ploughing into the bloke in front. the wheels didnt lock but the rear tyre was a good 30cm off the deck
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Re: A newb question
Postby m@ » Mon Oct 19, 2009 3:27 pm
Exactly my point - the brakes themselves are more powerful than they need to be for optimal deceleration...JV911 wrote:you really dont want to lock the wheel as if you're skidding you're not slowing down plus you'll loose the ability to steer if the front locks - hence ABS for carsm@ wrote:True... though even with grippy tyres, modern road calipers should be able to lock the wheels...
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Re: A newb question
Postby lukas » Mon Oct 19, 2009 3:29 pm
I bought the koolstop salmon's for the DA brakes on my R3. I've got to say I'm a little bit disappointed. They just feel way too mushy for me. I'm going to try the Swisstops.DanielS wrote:Clean rims + Koolstop salmon pads + decent calipers = pretty damn good brakes actually!
Canyon Ultimate AL
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Re: A newb question
Postby steambao » Wed Oct 28, 2009 2:03 pm
What's the fastest and safest way to stop? Pump the brakes!! Your stopping distance will be the shortest if you pump (Press, release, roll, press, release, roll) because its the rolling resistance that slows you down the most. That's what you get in a Car with assisted braking
That way you can never flip over your bars too.
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Re: A newb question
Postby toolonglegs » Wed Oct 28, 2009 6:41 pm
steambao wrote:Don't forget your HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICS.
What's the fastest and safest way to stop? Pump the brakes!! Your stopping distance will be the shortest if you pump (Press, release, roll, press, release, roll) because its the rolling resistance that slows you down the most. That's what you get in a Car with assisted braking
That way you can never flip over your bars too.
Are you sure!...ABS (in a car)braking only pulsates if you are about to lock up the wheel.It does not pulsate under a smaller load.
Your stopping distance will be shortest if you get your weight back as much as possible (to have more weight over the back wheel) and hold your brakes on as hard as possible with out locking the rear wheel or the front for that matter.
It is the friction between the brake pads and rim that slows you down....NOT the rolling resistance.
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Re: A newb question
Postby thommo09 » Thu Oct 29, 2009 10:18 am
Sounds like you might be confusing the idea of "setting-up" your brakes (ie. taking up slack in cables/hydraulics) with anti-lock systems. ABS is designed solely to stop locking up and maintains traction between the tyre(s) and the road, something that usually occurs when the driver slams their foot on the brakes fast and hard. ABS will stop you faster than skidding to a halt, but much slower than if you set-up, then apply the brakes smoothly but firmly. You'll always stop faster if you use a smooth action and set up correctly before braking. Of course this is just stuff I've learnt from riding a motorbike, but most of it has transfered over to riding a pushie so farsteambao wrote:Don't forget your HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICS.
What's the fastest and safest way to stop? Pump the brakes!! Your stopping distance will be the shortest if you pump (Press, release, roll, press, release, roll) because its the rolling resistance that slows you down the most. That's what you get in a Car with assisted braking
That way you can never flip over your bars too.
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Re: A newb question
Postby JV911 » Thu Oct 29, 2009 11:57 am
+1 smooth action required. if you grab a big handful of brakes you'll lock upthommo09 wrote:steambao wrote:You'll always stop faster if you use a smooth action and set up correctly before braking.
+1toolonglegs wrote:Are you sure!...ABS (in a car)braking only pulsates if you are about to lock up the wheel.It does not pulsate under a smaller load.
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Re: A newb question
Postby drubie » Thu Oct 29, 2009 2:55 pm
I'm not sure what "pumping" the brakes on a road bike would do, other than maybe for clearing a bit of water off the rims in the rain?
but really, that's rubbish. We get none of it because the choices are illusory.
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Re: A newb question
Postby steambao » Thu Oct 29, 2009 3:04 pm
Yes, ABS only kicks in when your about to lock the wheel (on cars) because no one wants a rough ride. The idea behind stopping is through friction - friction between the road and your tyre (not the wheel and brake pad). The wheel and brake pad is just the means to the end. A break works, in the case of a bicycle, through the pads converting kinetic energy to heat, consequently slowing the wheel down. But it is the friction between the Wheel and the Ground that causes a bike to stop. A rotating wheel stops faster then a skiding wheel [static friction vs. dynamic friction]toolonglegs wrote:steambao wrote:Don't forget your HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICS.
What's the fastest and safest way to stop? Pump the brakes!! Your stopping distance will be the shortest if you pump (Press, release, roll, press, release, roll) because its the rolling resistance that slows you down the most. That's what you get in a Car with assisted braking
That way you can never flip over your bars too.
Are you sure!...ABS (in a car)braking only pulsates if you are about to lock up the wheel.It does not pulsate under a smaller load.
Your stopping distance will be shortest if you get your weight back as much as possible (to have more weight over the back wheel) and hold your brakes on as hard as possible with out locking the rear wheel or the front for that matter.
It is the friction between the brake pads and rim that slows you down....NOT the rolling resistance.
When you pulse your brakes, your wheel will slow, roll, slow roll. When you are rolling does the wheel slow down the most. This also applies to smooth action. When you apply v-brakes, you gently hold it. You a slowing down because the wheel is still rolling! It's like pulsating your brakes but at micro-intervals.
The fact of the matter is, in a emergency situation when you're going really fast, gently pressing down on your brakes will not cause you to stop in time and so the best way to prevent skipping/skidding and stopping in time is through pulses. This allows for more force and prevents locking because letting your tyre roll will ensure some co-efficient of dynamic/static friction will not exceeed the other (i forgot which way) and hence you won't skid.
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Re: A newb question
Postby sogood » Thu Oct 29, 2009 3:10 pm
As for pulsing the brakes on a long descent. My understanding is that it helps to keep the rims cooler, thereby minimises the risk of blow out and loss of braking power at higher temps.
RK wrote:And that is Wikipedia - I can write my own definition.
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Re: A newb question
Postby twizzle » Thu Oct 29, 2009 4:48 pm
(As an aside... the hill I can't stop on has claimed the lives of two cyclists that I know of - one roadie who went head on into a 4WD when he drifted across the road, and one recumbent who went under a crash barrier).
...real cyclists don't have squeaky chains...
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Re: A newb question
Postby toolonglegs » Sat Oct 31, 2009 8:22 pm
I often ride very fast tricky descents and there is no way I will be pumping my brakes before a corner...I am about a big handful on the entry and then chucking it into the apex...whether that is feet level knees tight on the top tube or outside leg down inside knee out depends on road surface and corner.
Exactly the same as when I was racing motor bikes...your hand cannot pump a brake the same as an ABS system....personally and many agree that ABS on motorbikes is actually more dangerous than a sliding wheel...but then I was big fan of the Kenny Roberts school of racing.
I don't even like ABS on my car!...well except in the middle of winter...but then it is of no help on black ice anyway.
Not many people can hold my wheel on a descent so I must be doing OK .
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Re: A newb question
Postby Kalgrm » Sat Oct 31, 2009 8:32 pm
I'm with you on this one TLL. Under steambao's theory, we'd never be able to coast on our bikes.toolonglegs wrote:Oh well we will have to agree to disagree on that one...
Steambao, the wheel only slows significantly when the brakes are applied. If you release the brakes, the only thing slowing you is rolling and wind resistance, which is there whether you've got the brakes applied or not.
Cheers,
Graeme
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Re: A newb question
Postby damhooligan » Sat Oct 31, 2009 8:39 pm
Agreed, went downhill today and reached 60km/h, only to dicover that the lights at the bottom wher going to be red....DanielS wrote:Clean rims + Koolstop salmon pads + decent calipers = pretty damn good brakes actually!
Slowed down very quikly, no worries.
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