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James Annan wrote:
jim beam wrote: James Annan wrote: snip "The conclusion is that the braking action of disc brakes is not causing the quick release mechanism to unscrew. This test is unable to cause loosening. At this time there are no reasons to believe that anything is missing or over constrained in this test." james, did you check out the pics i posted of my own disk brakes? Yes, but if you thought I'd be interested in a single case of "my wheel didn't slip" then you have missed the point very very badly indeed. polite as always. james, the point is not my "single case" but the lack of cases that you present to the contrary. post some pics of forks evidencing slippage if you please. dismissal of evidence that contradicts your accusations does not add credibility to your case. bottom line is this; put yourself in the position of a manufacturer. are you going to pay attention to a guy on the net who, with respect, misses a vital part of their analysis, then descends to personal attack when challenged, or are you going to rely on your distributor network's return data? trust me, i have been carefully on the lookout for potential ejection problems among all the people i've ridden mountain with since you raised this issue, and you may be interested to learn that i have actually seen one case of slip! but problem is, there was no ejection and it was clearly attributable to an open cam skewer, badly crudded up, that the rider couldn't be bothered to close properly. so, like a broken chain that's attributable to it not being fitted correctly or an under-clamped brake cable slipping and causing brake failure, the only disk wheel slippage i've seen was due to incorrect skewer deployment. and even then, if i hadn't been specifically looking for the slippage, the rider would never have known because he hadn't, nor had he /ever/ had, any problems! certainly not anything as serious as ejection. now, to address your cannondale point, it is clearly a carefully guarded response, but i fail to see how you'd expect anything else in the face of a serious liability threat that's not supported by any statistical evidence. mtb brakes changed from cantilever to linear p.d.q. once it was established that incorrect usage combined with fouling could send a rider over the bar. i don't know the numbers, but i'll wager there were not many o.t.b's before manufacturers made the switch, however statistically unlikely. unless disk brake ejection is actually evidenced, then who is going to fix a problem that doesn't exist? Now, have you any "reasons to believe that anything is missing or over constrained in this test"? Inquiring minds want to know... James |
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