I did both front and rear, these brakes are much better. There much more progressive, they are easy to install they bolted on with no problems, there Worth the $$Did you just do the front or the rear also? How do your rate them compared to the old brakes? Thinking about doing the same thing to my Radrover.
I know not the questin you asked, BUT: You can get the Spyke fairly inexpensively, and the thing just rocks. I also have conventional hydraulic to compare with, and these are very comparable, and will never leak.Hey Zedx...
Any updates, rants, and raves about your TRP brake update after riding with them for a few months? I'm still interested in doing this upgrade and wanted to know how they are holding up.
Do the HY/RD's only work on rotors up to 160mm or will they work on 180mm? I have 180mm on the front and 160mm on the back of my Izip E3 Dash.
The rotor size is independent of the brake itself. You just need to mount the caliper to the appropriate bracket, which is already on your bike (usually a black aluminum bracket between the caliper and fork, and in the rear between the caliper and the left chain stay.
The rotor size is independent of the brake itself. You just need to mount the caliper to the appropriate bracket, which is already on your bike (usually a black aluminum bracket between the caliper and fork, and in the rear between the caliper and the left chain stay.
THANKS for your response. As you know TRP indicates their hydraulic brake caliper is used with their 160mm rotor. Further the Radwagon comes with 180mm rotors. So, I was concerned about compatibility. Based on your comments, it appears there is no issue as long as they are mounted properly. Thanks.The rotor size is independent of the brake itself. You just need to mount the caliper to the appropriate bracket, which is already on your bike (usually a black aluminum bracket between the caliper and fork, and in the rear between the caliper and the left chain stay.