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• #5802
Nah, hydro it up, if she's not keen on doing her own mechanics then hydros are no maintenance until you get someone to fix them whilst spyres are some maintenance until you get someone to fix them. Changing pads is essentially the same procedure for both apart from reseting the pistons by pushing instead of 3mm Allen key.
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• #5803
Hydro, just go hydro.
R405 is pretty much the same as R505, just one less click.
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• #5804
Cheers both for the advice.
If I go that route I'll have to peruse this thread fully for all the tips and tricks (like not putting the bike upside down etc etc).
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• #5805
Yeah I mean with the hydraulic stuff you need to know what you are doing and with the cable actuated stuff generally you can be pretty shoddy, especially when packing and travelling with the bike; most of the issues you would face are recoverable without specialist knowledge / equipment.
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• #5806
Luckily it seems the sale has ended on the one with hydraulic brakes, so might have to default to the mechanical and not make a decision.
I wanted the hydraulics on the basis they're better, but they definitely smelt like I might be getting a mid-afternoon phone call from a frustrated lady in the middle of France: "I've done something and now I'm covered in brake oil, what do I do?".
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• #5807
"I've done something and now I'm covered in brake oil, what do I do?".
The likeihood of such thing happening is pretty small.
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• #5808
Yeah, it'll go all over the bike.
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• #5809
I have TRP Spyres, get a slight squeal when I lightly apply front brake, but if I brake harder I dont. Any ideas?
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• #5810
Apply harder.
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• #5811
Misaligned piston or caliper I'll say.
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• #5812
Had to fit a new hose to Oli's bike at the court last night when a crease near the lever finally gave way. M8000 brake.
Got it joined up, pad spacer in, cup screwed in the top, left Oli squeezing the lever while we started another game to get fluid in and air out since I'd forgotten the syringe.
Didn't spot the packet of o-rings nestled within plastic bag within plastic bag etc. Pads and rotor were old, but ended up contaminated. SQUEEEEEK.
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• #5813
Just had some new pads semi-metallic pads arrive. No spring included and the original spring (sintered pads) has nowhere to fit. Do I need the spring? I've fitted them without, and it rubs a lot, but they are cheap brakes.
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• #5814
Are you sure they're the right pads?
I've only used 2 designs where there is no spring: Magura MT8 and Hayes CX mechanical brakes as found on GF's PXLR (not sure if stock). In both cases, the piston is magnetic, so they pull the pad away from the rotor.
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• #5816
Magura MT8
Boast post
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• #5817
Similar pads but different, the main difference being no place for the spring.
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• #5818
That's what I don't understand. The pads claim to be compatible, but this seems like a design flaw.
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• #5819
Ebay. Worked well on my polo bike for a while until the rod between the lever blade and piston broke. Still haven't fixed it, only ever see the lever and rod sold together as a unit.
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• #5821
Ooo looks fancy
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• #5822
They fail to explain how the rear brake hose is routed through the steerer. Do you need to drill it twice? Also handlebar roll, levers rotating in a crash etc all need explaining!
I like the concept and the look though and I hope those quick connects are compatible with other brands. -
• #5823
They fail to explain how the rear brake hose is routed through the steerer.
Looks like it comes out of the bottom of the steerer then in to the frame with a port on the down tube. Look at 1:03, you can see the hose doubling back in to the frame.
I don't think they've drilled anything, I think the stem is specific in some way.
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• #5824
Eugh, I'm going to have to work on these, aren't I?
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• #5825
Also, the music got me unreasonably excited.
Cheers, that helps - I think I'm heading down that line of thinking.