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I must admit I have had some problems with the LX brakes I put on not lining up correctly on the welded adapter and got around it temporarily by adding a washer between the adapter and the disc mounting bracket but it still rubs the rotor a bit. I need to have a closer look at it as I might be able to adjust the brakes in some way, but to me it looked like the adapter might be off slightly, but this is my first experience with disc brakes so I may be wrong. The swingarm ProflexGB gave to me had never been used but I know he had no problems with the ones on his OZ's, that is until he moved as I have lost touch with him too Your right Simon the weld is lovely I will try and take a picture tonight and post it up
Quote from: mightyDOB on March 26, 2008, 01:41:18 pm I must admit I have had some problems with the LX brakes I put on not lining up correctly on the welded adapter and got around it temporarily by adding a washer between the adapter and the disc mounting bracket but it still rubs the rotor a bit. I need to have a closer look at it as I might be able to adjust the brakes in some way, but to me it looked like the adapter might be off slightly, but this is my first experience with disc brakes so I may be wrong. The swingarm ProflexGB gave to me had never been used but I know he had no problems with the ones on his OZ's, that is until he moved as I have lost touch with him too Your right Simon the weld is lovely I will try and take a picture tonight and post it upFrom the experience I have had, the adapter needs to be exactly flush and parallel to the inside of the dropout. That makes it very easy to fixture also.This whole exercise is interesting, as I figured for sure that the bonding would be deteriorated.Terry
that deserves a hit of karma mike!....I will prolly never get round to it but did you ever do an x56 adapter??
Performance update - Bike is smooth, comfortable, and confidence inspiring. One bad thing - I took the bike down some hilly roads near my house to bed in the brakes. At the end of a small downhill I was looking at the rear disk while braking (I know – dangerous) at about 10 mph I could see what I would consider too much flex. I do not know if it is flexing more because I have a 185mm rotor or not. I think I will be in the market for an aluminum adapter. Just when I thought this beast was ready to go...oh well. I guess it will be that much more fun when it is finally complete
Quote from: asylum_inc on March 26, 2008, 11:26:10 pmPerformance update - Bike is smooth, comfortable, and confidence inspiring. One bad thing - I took the bike down some hilly roads near my house to bed in the brakes. At the end of a small downhill I was looking at the rear disk while braking (I know – dangerous) at about 10 mph I could see what I would consider too much flex. I do not know if it is flexing more because I have a 185mm rotor or not. I think I will be in the market for an aluminum adapter. Just when I thought this beast was ready to go...oh well. I guess it will be that much more fun when it is finally complete Bummer. 185 is kind of big for a rear disc, but that shouldn't be a problem. Could you feel the flex? What direction was it flexing? Seems to me that most of the force on my disc adapter is in-line with the plate, but I also have spacers between the mount and the brake itself that rest flush on the dropout, which probably eliminates most of the twisting torque. You could try that (i.e. use bigger washers or whatever you used).
Try a 145 quick release for tandem bikes. REI carries Bob's brand.http://www.rei.com/product/716799?preferredSku=7167990014&cm_mmc=cse_froogle-_-datafeed-_-product-_-7167990014&mr:trackingCode=2BA6DB8E-0419-DE11-B4E3-0019B9C043EB&mr:referralID=NATerry