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Brake opinions, please...
- Fossil
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Just thinking about and wondering if I'm pushing my luck or taking a big step backwards running a single 310mm floating rotor and a Tokico 6 piston caliper. One disc should save weight, especially unsprung weight and I figure it will still have more stopping power than the stock setup.
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- caffcruiser
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Also, one rotor will give more of an uneven braking. You don't think about it, but when you brake hard there *is* a cerain amount of flexing involved....
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- Fossil
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I disagree, reducing unsprung weight will have more effect on handling than weight reduction in other areas, but I am continuing to pair off weight all over the bike.
Post edited by: Fossil, at: 2006/12/08 22:04
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- caffcruiser
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Also, how many Buells have you ridden? The shop I work at is a Suzuki dealership, and having ridden a Buell Lightning that someone brought in and then riding a Gixxer directly afterward I can tell you for sure that I would say there's a very noticeable difference between a dual and single disc setup.
Anyhow, good luck with the brake conundrum. I'm trying to sort out my own right now too! :lol:
Post edited by: caffcruiser, at: 2006/12/08 22:12
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Post edited by: Fossil, at: 2006/12/08 22:27
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- caffcruiser
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Nope, haven't decided yet, just thinking out loud, why I'm thinking along these lines. I haven't ridden a Buell so I don't have 1st hand experience - the difference you mention is in regard to braking power or flex?
Power is hard to compare... one caliper and one rotor will have to work harder to do to stop a bike at a given speed compared to a bike of similar weight with 2 calipers and 2 rotors, no matter how many pistons.
When you have 2 rotors you are effectively splitting the braking force into two places, making braking easier, decreasing any uneven lateral flex, and rediucing the friction and heat per rotor by 1/2.
(When you brake VERY hard the "glazing" on your rotor also tends to be heated up to the point where it can become gasious and create a slight pillow (for lack of a better term) between the rotor and the pads... which has a outcome called brake fade. By increasing the number of calipers/rotors you are reducing the amount of work (also for lack of a better term) that each has to do, in turn reducing the heat and friction and making braking safer. This is also why most rotors on sportbikes are crossdrilled and/or slotted.)
Post edited by: caffcruiser, at: 2006/12/08 22:31
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Post edited by: caffcruiser, at: 2006/12/08 22:34
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- mark1122
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- Keep twisting it
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76 KZ, frame gusset work,1200CC.Ported by Larry Cavanaugh, 1.5mm.over intakes, Carron Pipe, ZRX12 rear end, and seat,96zx9 front end.
01 CBR600F4i Track bike.
Cobourg, Ont. Can.
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