Tyre and rim brake technology already far exceed the capabilities of existing frames.
don't make up contradictory statements which can endanger people. It does matter how powerful brakes are and denying frames have been redesigned to allow for the additional force from disc brakes is untrue.
@Dirk Thrust - Didn't you mean: the capabilities of existing frames can more than manage any stresses tyre and rim brake technology can throw at them. Think that your sentence is what Kaj thinks is contradictory, though "endanger people" - hmmmmmm?
Provided brakes are 'powerful enough' - and Dirk has suggested rim brakes are, it doesn't matter how much more powerful they are - rubber on the road becomes the limiting factor, combined with the rider's skill.
Frame redesign. Remember the issue is modifying a bike by fitting a front disc brake only, so redesign of the chainstay for a rear disc brake is not relevant, in this context.
You linked to
Sheldon (btw think the article is rather dated): "But be aware: disc brakes can't be retrofitted without frame modification. A front disc brake stresses the fork heavily and can tear the front wheel out of the dropouts unless special measures are taken." There is no further reference to
frame modification. So I'm still in denial. Please shake me out of that by answering the question I posed earlier.
@Kajjal you advised and asserted: "Be careful fitting a front disc brake if the frame is not designed to take the extra force disk brakes have" and "Unless already capable most disc brake frames were strengthened at key points" and I asked "Which 'key points' on the
frame would those be, please?"
what's likely to happen if I run a front disc with a rear cantilever?
Get the geometry of the new fork reasonably close (offset) to the existing fork.