Ajax Bay
Guru
- Location
- East Devon
So the deduction is that if you wanted to go 'V'-brake ('cos familiar) you'd need new brake levers.
Where to start...
Firstly, degrees of freedom: height the post is set, height the straddle wire is set, angle of the calipers. Quite small changes in any of these these can make a big difference.
Secondly, none of these are easy to change and at least three hands are required to do them. Changing the blocks requires you to start again...
Thirdly, as the brakes wear, performance changes because the angles change as you tension the wire.
Probably other things too!
So the deduction is that if you wanted to go 'V'-brake ('cos familiar) you'd need new brake levers.
Yes, but this bike isn't going to have mini-Vs. They would cost way more than the bike. In fact if @Dogtrousers had any sense (which he of course has in great abundance) he'd get a right size and other specs bike from the local tip and scrub it up (in week to week free time before the canine pegs it) rather than try to 'get all he needs' and then go and refresh this bike many hours from home.
I tried to do this with a nephew's bike: it didn't end satisfactorily as there was always 'things' I didn't have 'with me'. If at home, all that stuff would be in my 'boxes'. Away. Nope (or take many boxes on visit).
Thanks. May be a dumb question (I know nothing about these brakes) but those pads look to be quite a bit longer than the ones fitted. Does this matter at all?