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Bicycle Mechanics and Repair Decal Mechanical Engineering 98/198 Spring 14 Lecture 3 – staaaahp it. Lever. Components. Cables. Caliper. Caliper. Main Brake Types - Side Pull Brakes. Dual Pivot. Single Pivot. Main Brake Types - Center Pull Brakes. Cantilever. U Brake.
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Bicycle Mechanics and Repair DecalMechanical Engineering 98/198Spring 14Lecture 3 – staaaahp it
Lever Components Cables Caliper Caliper
Main Brake Types - Side Pull Brakes Dual Pivot Single Pivot
Main Brake Types - Center Pull Brakes Cantilever U Brake
Brake Cable Function Connects brake lever to brake Cable Inner Sleeve Steel Structure Plastic Coating
Replacing Brake Cables Replacement Cable Should have the same “Nipple” Pear – Road Bikes Standard – Mountain Bikes
Before Adjusting Your Brakes Wheel must be centered in the fork. Wheel must be true (no wobble side to side when rotated)
Aligning Brake Pads Make sure the pad is centered in relation to the rim.
Brake Toe-In Use a dime or a credit card to help set the gap. To prevent brake squeal and ensure even contact, angle the pads towards the direction of rotation of the wheel(front of bike).
When to Replace Pads Step worn into pad Metal shards embedded in pad rubber
When To Replace Brake Pads Check the grooves to see when brakes should be replaced. Worn. Needs to be Replaced! New!! Safe!! Awesome!!!
Maintaining Brake Pads • Keep both the rims and brake pads clean • Remove and large particles • Sand brake pads • Clean Rims with degreaser Don’t use oil or grease!!
Disc Brakes! Mechanical Hydraulic Cable activated Fluid Activated
Features of Disc Brakes • Hub mounted disc • Frame or fork mounted caliper • Pads squeeze the hub mounted disc through mechanical pull or fluid pressure • Kinetic energy gets turned to thermal energy through friction! • More power than rim brakes • Work in all weather conditions • Also heavier than rim brakes • Gives you mad power at the lever!!! MOAR POWER!
Tips Front Brake: 95% of braking power Rear Brake: Use on slippery surfaces and when turning Cornering: Use both brakes Emergency Braking Mostly front brake! Lean back!