Page 2 of 3

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 3:00 am
by HammerTime2
HammerTime2 wrote:I don't have regret over using inadequately performing WW components, but I do not regret having DA brakes when I narrowly averted a deer which ran across the road from nearby woods when I was descending a 6% grade the other day. With WW brakes, don't know if I would be able to make this posting now.

One again, today I was glad I had the DA brakes. This tiime I was descending the other side of the same mountain, just a few km away from the deer incident, and I got the closest I've ever been to a bear (a cub, actually) who had a somewhat unpredictable walk/trot across the road - fortunately it decided to get moving just in time - perhaps less than 20 cm separated us. The good news is that it was smaller than the deer, the bad news had I hit it would have been that it was still a lot bigger than the LW dog, and I suppose the mother bear was just out of sight in the brush and would have finished me off if I hit her cub and crashed.

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 11:53 am
by rustychain
Replacing steel bolts with ti on my stem was not my best move. The good news was I broke one after I finished a fast decent resulting in my bars slipping forward. I'm a big guy and the grams saved were small. Me bad.

Another bad buy for me was some 2006 Zipp 303's with 24 spokes r and 20 f. Lasted 3000 miles. I hate walking home in road shoes. My new Edge rims are sooooo much better thank you

As to brakes, M5's are light and powerfull. Plenty of stopping power even on carbon rims and my large size, its the only WW brake I would feel safe recomending for those over 90 kilo

Had some handling issues with some wimpy forks. Some of the WW stuff I got in the late 80's and 90's were breaking all the time.

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 11:53 am
by Weenie

Visit starbike.com Online Retailer for HighEnd cycling components
Great Prices ✓    Broad Selection ✓    Worldwide Delivery ✓

www.starbike.com



brakes

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 12:04 pm
by Leloby
I've always suffered from a ww mental-block when it comes to brakes. I just don't want to lose weight there at any expense to performance. Luckily Record Skeletons are light, have plenty power and if you get the pad/rim combo spot on and the setup right, you will stop very, very well.
This is not the case for uber-light brakes - as you can easily work out by the amount of ZG's on ebay etc. And who can afford to 'try' AX brakes only to find they are crap too. Not saying they are mind, but....

Incidentally, for all my other bikes I use dual-pivot Records from before 2004 or 2003 or whatever. They are slightly more dynamic on the rear.

Its like someone said earlier about performance car upgrading. You often see turbo-nutter-madness cars round here with limp drum brakes on the rear. Hedge-magnets. At worst, death-machines.

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 1:19 pm
by theremery
hedge magnet :lol:
genius! :lol:

Re: any bike grief/injuries over a poor choice of WW compone

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 3:09 pm
by BenCousins
mythical wrote:I hit a 50 year old lady 3 weeks ago, who crossed the cycling path right in front of me despite having seen me.

Her fault. Poor judgment on her part.

Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 5:04 pm
by mythical
@HammerTime2: I'm glad to hear both you and cub are safe, and you live to enjoy to ride another day. :)

rruf wrote:Are KCNCs really that whimpy?
Compare a bike to a Ferrari with Dura-Ace/Record/Red as silicon-ceramic disc brakes or KCNC as drum brakes. Which will stop faster? ;)

Leloby wrote:I just don't want to lose weight there at any expense to performance.
So right you are, losing grams should come with a gain in performance, both for bike and rider! Though, far too often than not, lighter is stupid. :roll:

EURO wrote:Her fault. Poor judgment on her part."
It was her fault indeed, for crossing while misjudging my speed. Had I not put KCNC brakes on the bike I could've stopped in time, I'm used to always having full control over my bike. A faster bike also decelerates faster.

Nevertheless, I went to visit this lady last week at her shop (she's an artist who works with glass) and we had a good chat with a delicious cup of tea and she told me she was happy to have me "bumped" into her, be it under somewhat less than ideal circumstances. She makes such nice stuff, I may even consider buying one of her creations... :)

Re: any bike grief/injuries over a poor choice of WW compone

Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 5:44 pm
by robnfl
rruff wrote:
mythical wrote:I went quite fast and my KCNC brakes I installed 2 days earlier couldn't stop me in time to avoid a collision and she got knocked to the ground.


This sort of thing surprises me. I've had various models of crappy single-pivot brakes (back in the day) and they never failed to stop me. In fact, if I really grabbed a handful of front brake (twice in panic situations) they never failed to flip me over! Are KCNCs really that whimpy?

Glad to hear that some societies are relatively sane about the lawsuit thing...


Sorry to hear that you had an accident.

But, I am a little surprised also. I've been using a set of those "crappy single-pivot brakes" for about 6 years, up until about a month ago. They definitely took more force at the levers than the Ultegra's I'm running now, but in a emergency situations I have still always been able to stop fast enough that I would've endoed if I didn't shift my weight way back.

I hope the KCNC brakes are better than the old single-pivot brakes....cuz I just bought a set of the KCNC.

Rob

Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 6:49 pm
by los318
i'd rather weight weenie my body first then the bike! Its cheaper!

on the real though. I cut weight off by frameset choice and seat. the parts of the bike i never thought about WW'ing were my brakes, handlebar/stem and crankset. Even thought i know any part can fail i just feel more secure with DA crankset/brakes and thomson stem/seatpost and Deda Newton handlebars. thats my .02...

Carlos

Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 7:10 pm
by Gold Knight
man--you guys might think of another place to talk about non--WW items :lol:

but again--as insane as i am (using AX calipers and unraveled 1/2 of the cable strands for lighter weight)-i might belong in a mental institute :D

I have actually been thinking of drilling out the Orions calipers as there is a lot you can do here!

Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 7:47 pm
by CoachPotatoBilly
Gold Knight wrote:man--you guys might think of another place to talk about non--WW items :lol:

but again--as insane as i am (using AX calipers and unraveled 1/2 of the cable strands for lighter weight)-i might belong in a mental institute :D

I have actually been thinking of drilling out the Orions calipers as there is a lot you can do here!



*****Wow, drilling out Orions and unravelling cables! THAT'S dedication to the cause!!!! :lol:

Please tell me you don't weight 100kg and like descending alpine passes with brakes like that!


Billy

Posted: Tue Jul 29, 2008 7:51 pm
by Gold Knight
LOL--no i am at 165 pounds and no alpine passes!!!!!

Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 2:07 am
by HammerTime2
Gold Knight wrote:as insane as i am (using AX calipers and unraveled 1/2 of the cable strands for lighter weight)

And this year's Darwin award goes to ...

Maybe you can combine efforts with HanSolo http://weightweenies.starbike.com/forum ... hp?t=35880 by putting your brakes/cable on his bike with (to be?) drilled out seat (and top?) tube.

Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 4:35 am
by shawneebiker
HammerTime2 wrote:
Gold Knight wrote:as insane as i am (using AX calipers and unraveled 1/2 of the cable strands for lighter weight)

And this year's Darwin award goes to ...

Maybe you can combine efforts with HanSolo http://weightweenies.starbike.com/forum ... hp?t=35880 by putting your brakes/cable on his bike with (to be?) drilled out seat (and top?) tube.


+1 Sounds like a real genius! :lol:

Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 5:49 am
by theremery
Don't drill those ax brakes..CF relies on fibre length for strength and drilling will not be as "cost free" as carefully drilling Aluminium..you will get failures, I think. Kinda an expensive way to lose 2 gram....and then there are the hospital bills to consider!

Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 11:10 pm
by kiela
Why dont u start drilling where it counts most?
Maybe start here:

Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2008 11:10 pm
by Weenie

Visit starbike.com Online Retailer for HighEnd cycling components
Great Prices ✓    Broad Selection ✓    Worldwide Delivery ✓

www.starbike.com