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Not used Avid before but the Avids on my son's MTB have needed a lot of 'fettling' to keep running without rubbing. Given the choice I'd go for Hope.
Apart from having to re center the caliper now and then, I've never had to do anything else to the Maguras. Put new pads in before our lejog and they are still ok.
I upgraded to the stainless steel hoses to get a better feel,
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Interesting, the Magura rim brakes on ours have never needed bleeding since purchase. Only maintenance has been to replace pads and re-align when replacing wheels. As you may have seen in previous posts rim overheating has been a problem however.
I'm also wondering about finding a rear disk brake designed to work as a drag brake as they seem to exist. Anybody know anything about that? Presumably they are designed for cooling?
I would very much like to have a hub or disc brake on the front in addition to the Magura rim brakes. In my humble opinion the short wheel base on the Pino would not benefit having extra braking on the rear. As the front is so heavily loaded particularly downhill I have a 48 spoke wheel 'made from girders'. Experts will say this is overkill but it gives me some reassurance after a couple of hairy blow outs and a few broken spokes. Haven't found a disc or hub braked front in a 48 yet but will upgrade when I do.
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Think a 'v' brake would be a simpler fitment?
Think a 'v' brake would be a simpler fitment?
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Larry, you're Bonkers <360.gif> but just love it that you tried.
Chris
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You may need to change your rim - I've considered the same sort of thing on my Pino as the fork has v-brake bosses, but the rim doesn't have a braking surface. If it's a disc specific rim (and I suspect so if it's got a coating), then it may not work very well as a braking surface even when the coating has been worn away.
, <philip.j...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> if you are considering an e-bike some day, you could consider one with regenerative braking. Sue and I had a go on the Bionix Pino at Eurobike 2012. When the regenerative braking was switched on it created quite a noticeable drag.
I had wondered about that and although a motor plus a smallish battery will weigh more than a hub brake it's potentially an elegant solution to the drag brake problem. We met one serious uphill in India where the assistance would have been extremely welcome. (main roads were very well engineered with steady inclines but secondary roads were not so friendly)
Thanks Phil
Chris
Phil said
> We did get an electric hub for our Pino, but in the end got the Protanium as we have a Rohloff at the rear. We did want the new Heinzmann that was on display at Eurobike which had good torque control and regenerative braking, but they do not supply Hase. As yet. They were in discussion so it may come about at some point.<
I guess that's not an issue for someone retrofitting. My brother had a Protanium front hub when his health prevented him from cycling and he was very happy with it. The main factor was that it was the system supported by his excellent local bike shop.
Chris
I'm not worried
about the paint so much as we seem to be doing a good job of removing
paint without the aid of chemicals. Chucking the Pino in the back of an
Indian Jeep taxi is a good way to create a stylish "distressed" finish.
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"Robert Gormley" <r.go...@ed.ac.uk> wrote:
> That's odd, as Magura did recommend some of their disks for tandems at one
> point (Louise and latterly Gustav M). I wonder why they stopped doing so -
> too small a market?
Sorry Robert, I was generalising on the basis of a barrage of information which led me to conclude that nobody was prepared to get behind their products for tandems. In fact the Magura MT2 is recommended for tandems. So there is a 90 quid hydraulic brake recommended for tandems and it allows you to change pads on the road.
My only excuse is that a search for Tandem on magura's website gets no response. Clearly they are extremely coy about the matter.
Chris
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Black is safest for ANY travel or well used machine
I think Hase are changing away from white as they asked me what colour our customers might like instead.
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Hey Larry,
I thought the wonderful thing about the cosmetics from a retailer's point of view was that you could then sell junk if it was pretty. <360.gif>
Like your style though <347.gif>
How much are you looking at your bike whilst riding??How much of it can you see?
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Ours used to be black and rather scruffy. Now it's orange and slightly less scruffy. Do we get more pleasure from riding it now? Yeah, I think we do. But we still bought it when it was black because the right bike was more important than its colour.
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