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Improving Brakes


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Well I put water on my rim then ride around with brakes on and off then clean the rim. (amazed me at first how much dirt came on (Y))Also if you don't want to grind your rim use a sharp knife (I use a stanely knife) and put a line down your rim. (I usually do it every centimeter or so). Hope this helps.

~Matty :)

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Well I put water on my rim then ride around with brakes on and off then clean the rim. (amazed me at first how much dirt came on (Y))Also if you don't want to grind your rim use a sharp knife (I use a stanely knife) and put a line down your rim. (I usually do it every centimeter or so). Hope this helps.

~Matty :)

yer i will try that. any other suggestions?

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Tar. My bro is using it and it improves braking a lot. It's still shit compared to getting a decent set of pads and a grind, but it improves it a lot.

What Rim/Brake/Bike combo are you running?

Well i got a onza t-vee and all i have done is added CNCed Heatsink Vee Pads and backings on the rear wheel. its not a problem on the back its just the front ad it keeps on slipping but i dont really want to buy new pads on the front

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You can wash your rim with petrol(works outstanding) then put some tar on it. If it doesn't work good with tar than just make a grind it is just the best thing to do.

You can also try to readjust the pads so that they are adjusted perfectly you can improve it a lot this way.

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I assume (read hope) you told your mate to thoroughly clean the rotor first with disc cleaner?

As for improving the original guys front break, Some new pads would probably do the trick, don't need to be fancy trials specific ones in the front, just some koolstops or fibrax or something.

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Anyone who says wd-40 is a bad thing for cleaning rims is lying. It turns the tar to a black runny liquid which just wipes off. Remember to clean all the wd-40 off your rim though or you'll be on your arse and use it sparingly

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if you don't want to grind your rim use a sharp knife (I use a stanely knife) and put a line down your rim. (I usually do it every centimeter or so). Hope this helps.

~Matty :)

Don't do that - it won't help at all. There are three things i would suggest:

1. Clean the rim really well. There are a few good ideas in this thread on how to do it, but what i would say it put clean water on the rim and ride around dragging the brake, so that pads are rubbing on the rim. Then wipe off all the excess crap that comes off. After doing that get some meths and use it as a cleaning agent, on a clean rag really scrubbing all around the rim with it. The do the same with clean water just to get rid of the residue.

2. Set the brake up. 90% of bikes that come built from the shop have a poor brake set up. What you need to do is make sure the pads hit the rim exactly parallel so that the maximum amount of compound is toucing at once (loosen the pad off slightly, pull the brake quite hard, and look at the pads - they should naturally hit the rim square on, then tighten them up in this position). The other thing i would say is either get a new brake cable, or as you have asken not to spend money, just clean and grease the cable you have. You should take the whole cable out of the cable outer and grease it. Grease the brake mounts, which is where the pivoting takes place.

At this stage i would try the brake out, you might just find that doing that has helped enough, if not then move onto step 3:

3. Grind the rim. Take the wheel and tyre off and use an ange grinder to roughen the side walls of the rim. If you are new to the sport this may not sound like an attractive option, but done well it is amazing! Have a search for rim grinding or something and there is plenty of information on how to do it.

(Y)

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If it's a disk, face the mount properly. Everyone should do this.

You reckon you could give us a little guide to doing it properly? Maybe even write it in here: http://www.trials-forum.co.uk/wiki/Brake_overview

I tend to undo the bolts on the mount so the caliper can move freely, pull the brake lever so the pads touch the disc evenly both sides and the caliper re-alligns itself then I just do the bolts up.

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