Stefan Mikes
Gravel e-biker
- Region
- Europe
- City
- Mazovia, PL
The brake modulation is the only way. The rotors need time to cool down a little. Riding the brakes is wrong.
I hear a lot of paranoia about that, but seriously if the steel used is that sensitive to heat expansion that it won't return to true, just how the devil is it ever able to survive normal everyday use. It's setting off my bullshit alarm since if you're hitting the 800 degrees+ needed to compromise what should be a tool grade steel, there's something WRONG.Thats actually a bad thing to do. It will induce a rotor warp. The rotors will cool unevenly as the area the hot pads are sitting over will stay hot.
Which does you not one blasted lick of good when you're halfway down a one mile 12 or steeper grade... since then how do you accomplish that in the first place.The thing to do is to slowly, gently ride without touching the brakes and let the air cool the rotors.
That thinness -- and smaller overall size -- is likely WHY they don't crack. The thicker it is the more prone heat expansion is to not return to true or find an imperfection to exploit. The larger mass cannot expand and contract as much because it's more prone to uneven heating.The only thing I have never seen transfer over is crazing (cracking), which is a good thing given how thin bike rotors are.
See, THEN I'd be worried about permanent damage from heating. The thicker the steel the more likely you are to have problems like that.Cheap at $25 and maybe the heaviest duty rotors on the market. But they are so thick only a few brakesets on the market can fit them.
Generally approved by whom? This has no basis in science or actual field testing.There's a generally approved way to get down a hill without overheating your brakes. When speed becomes excessive, you get on your brakes HARD (BOTH of them) to haul the bike down to a reasonable speed as quickly as possible, then you get off of them (completely) to allow them to cool. The bike's motion and the design of the disk both allow that to happen pretty quickly. If speed gets out of hand again, get on the brakes again, hard! Then get off them and allow them to cool. Repeat as necessary. This is no different than handling a really steep hill in a motor vehicle.
On the bold, that's total BS you've pulled from your ..... Suggest you educate yourself a bit before making a.... Oh, never mind....Generally approved by whom? This has no basis in science or actual field testing.
Much better to not get an excessive speed to begin with. And, what do you do when you release the brakes to cool? Hold on for dear life?
Seems like we've gone the full circle...
my tandem group has talked about this method as the best as it gives the brakes plenty of time to cool plus they are not used long enough to over heat. but I dont like going above 30 on the road so this does not always work to keep the speed down.Generally approved by whom? This has no basis in science or actual field testing.
Much better to not get an excessive speed to begin with. And, what do you do when you release the brakes to cool? Hold on for dear life?
Seems like we've gone the full circle...
With steady, unrelenting braking the pads just get hotter and hotter with no opportunity for them to cool down. This should be avoided. The method I use is to use the front and rear brakes alternately. Use the front brake while the rear one cools off, and vice versa.Second, it should not matter on a bike whether one steadily brakes on a long decline or brakes hard then releases for a time. The energy that the brakes must dissipate is the same in either case (ignoring very minor contributions by wind resistance etc, that are speed related).
Gently, with a modicum of common sense. Ain't no biggie. No BS.But then I also wonder how one uses the front brake without the rear going downhill without going over the bars. That too sets off my bullshit alarm.
You should be able to figure out just by using your brain. If you have a rotor in open air, it cools one way. If you surround it with something that is highly insulating that is also almost touching it... then duh of course the air will not cool it as evenly. No need to google that to see if its true. I hope. This is standard training for high performance (i.e. race track) driving and the problem is worse, not better, on a bicycle because the rotors are soooo thin the heat sink that is a brake rotor has far less material to work with.I hear a lot of paranoia about that, but seriously if the steel used is that sensitive to heat expansion that it won't return to true, just how the devil is it ever able to survive normal everyday use. It's setting off my bullshit alarm since if you're hitting the 800 degrees+ needed to compromise what should be a tool grade steel, there's something WRONG.
oh hell yes. I've got a front rotor right now I can't fix because of it. I try not to run my mouth on the internet unless its something I have actually done or directly experienced. Which pisses people off but too bad. Get out there and ride or drive or whatever and then talk.Has anyone ever actually seen rotors warped from that, or is this another myth that people just blindly parrot?
If you have to stop on a steep downgrade (like at a stoplight), you reach your 'stop' point a few cars back. Then you slowly let the bike roll forward during the red light until you get to the crosswalk. Do it right and you are still a car or two back when it goes green. Works just as well on flat ground. Probably not necessary unless the circumstances are extreme. Riding cargo bikes, I'm more used to those extremes being the norm.Which does you not one blasted lick of good when you're halfway down a one mile 12 or steeper grade... since then how do you accomplish that in the first place.
Thats because you are all worked up and not reading carefully. I said such a technique was used when bedding the rotors. Anyone with any brains is bedding their brakes on a sleepy neighborhood road thats not an alpine descent.But then I also wonder how one uses the front brake without the rear going downhill without going over the bars. That too sets off my bullshit alarm.
The bicycle industry disagrees with you. Downhill rotors are a thing whether you like it or not. And the reason is straightforward: Brake rotors are heat sinks. More material in the rotors means more heat can be sunk into them. Ergo they are more effective under extreme conditions. This is why sports cars and race cars have huge brake rotors. Its also why things like alloy hats on 2-piece rotors decrease the severe-duty effectiveness of a brake rotor because they reduce the mass that can absorb heat (their benefit is reducing rotating mass).See, THEN I'd be worried about permanent damage from heating. The thicker the steel the more likely you are to have problems like that.
Bicycle rotors will rust. I keep some bikes at the coast and the progression is slow but its there.Given how they seem to stay relatively shiny even places where there isn't wear, I'm wondering if austenitic steels are in use for bike rotors. Or maybe a duplex blend for strength and "the pretty?"
Urban legend...as I said before, the energy the rotors must dissipate is the same either way. Your way means the rotors will get even hotter when you intermittently use them.With steady, unrelenting braking the pads just get hotter and hotter with no opportunity for them to cool down. This should be avoided. The method I use is to use the front and rear brakes alternately. Use the front brake while the rear one cools off, and vice versa.
TT
O really? Did you ever take a physics course? The total energy to be dissipated on a downhill run is independent of how you brake, so the heat created is the same. In one case, you have steady state heat generation. In the other case, you alternate between higher temperatures and lower temps.Regardless of the warping question, the pads are subject to damage or fast wear from overheating. Since continual braking is known to generate more heat than sporadic, hard braking, the latter is the preferred method.
Urban Legend? Get your head out of your A$$!Urban legend...as I said before, the energy the rotors must dissipate is the same either way. Your way means the rotors will get even hotter when you intermittently use them.
There's not a lot of decent, non-anecdotal studies done on bike rotor warping, but the consensus seems to be that uneven cooling on stopping may be the main cause, so intermittent braking is probably more likely to cause warping, since when you finally stop (if you do, such as at a stop light at the bottom of a steep hill) your brakes will be hotter.
It's interesting how the same BS keeps getting tossed around the internet and boards like this, with no basis in fact. I'd love it, for example, if someone would link to a rationally designed study that compares these two approaches, but I doubt that one exists...
though I have not seen the issue on any of my e bikes. though our tandem the front rotor would warp a bit on hard stops then straighten out. cable actuated brakes can cause it because of uneven pressure. I used to get warpage on my recumbent it was a pain.oh hell yes. I've got a front rotor right now I can't fix because of it. I try not to run my mouth on the internet unless its something I have actually done or directly experienced. Which pisses people off but too bad. Get out there and ride or drive or whatever and then talk.
I've had that happen too (warp, then straighten as it cools). A reminder to do it right.... -Although I have not seen the issue on any of my e bikes. though our tandem the front rotor would warp a bit on hard stops then straighten out. cable actuated brakes can cause it because of uneven pressure. I used to get warpage on my recumbent it was a pain.
Sorry, I would need to differ. There are several hills locally that have me paying attention. One is only maybe a couple hundred yards long, ending at a stop sign....Back to the original question, you almost certainly are not going to get in trouble with your brakes on a 3/4 mile descent no matter what. Overheating issues are only likely to kick in on something like a long alpine descent. There you might want larger rotors with higher tech heat dissipation and maybe other mods.
If you're worried about hot brakes the best thing to do is to stop for a while and let them cool off.
TT
Well, you're an exceptionally large person on a bike. You're right though, taking that into consideration.Sorry, I would need to differ. There are several hills locally that have me paying attention. One is only maybe a couple hundred yards long, ending at a stop sign....
My wife was using rear brake most of time as I discovered hard way. She said had poor braking, rear pads were totally gone (metal on metal) while front had hardly been used. I've asked her to use both brakes together, think she is now based on wear.To add a level of discussion I just thought of, there's also the potential for said wife to be using rear brake only.....