front disc brake tie bar length and angle, please help :)
- jason frost
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I use a short arm mounted just above paralel. http://scooterotica.org/forum/viewtopic ... 12&t=29814
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getting the wheel in the centre was the easy bit 
got 1 off links cut from solid 12mm steel, had to put the wheel in the lathe and take 1.5mm off the disc mounting surface as the disc touched the fork leg LOL
cool idea about the bracket though, like that, will think about making one with or at least big enough for 2-3 holes, then I can experiment to my hearts content, and as its hidden behind the front suspension, it cant really be seen
perhaps confuse people by saying that I move the pivot point depending on if Im commuting or racing LOL
if you cant blind them with science, baffle them with bullshit

got 1 off links cut from solid 12mm steel, had to put the wheel in the lathe and take 1.5mm off the disc mounting surface as the disc touched the fork leg LOL
cool idea about the bracket though, like that, will think about making one with or at least big enough for 2-3 holes, then I can experiment to my hearts content, and as its hidden behind the front suspension, it cant really be seen
perhaps confuse people by saying that I move the pivot point depending on if Im commuting or racing LOL
if you cant blind them with science, baffle them with bullshit

heavy is good, heavy is reliable, and if it does fail, hit them with it!!!
- coaster
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I have mine set at 90 degrees and really can't see how any other angle can work without the tie rod bending
Has anyone ever tried experimenting with the springs removed? I have a feeling that if the angle is above or below 90 degrees, the tie rod will resist rotation by being forced over centre so will brake eventually....happy for someone to explain it if I have it wrong 


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If both ends of the tie bar are free to rotate around their fixing point and the caliper mounting bracket is free to rotate around the axle (both essential in my opinion for anti-dive), it seems to me that any suspension movement would be accomodated without binding or stress no matter what the angle (within reason).coaster wrote:I have mine set at 90 degrees and really can't see how any other angle can work without the tie rod bendingHas anyone ever tried experimenting with the springs removed? I have a feeling that if the angle is above or below 90 degrees, the tie rod will resist rotation by being forced over centre so will brake eventually....happy for someone to explain it if I have it wrong
The only thing that would change slightly is the amount of antidive (or lift) as you move away from the "ideal" 90 degrees. (might see if I can do some diagrams to check I'm not being an idiot
