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Is it the most stupid construction of brakes ever?


Clerictgm mk2

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is that a hydraulic disc brake that's operated by a cable?

It is, Rockshox sold something similar back in the 90's. I think they're being marketed as a cheaper/easier way for people who ride cyclocross and road to fit discs as it only requires calipers and rotors; also enables them to retain the brake shifter combo levers that drop bars use. Currently full hydraulic drop bar setups are pretty damn expensive.

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It is, Rockshox sold something similar back in the 90's. I think they're being marketed as a cheaper/easier way for people who ride cyclocross and road to fit discs as it only requires calipers and rotors; also enables them to retain the brake shifter combo levers that drop bars use. Currently full hydraulic drop bar setups are pretty damn expensive.

Therefore it's not the most stupid ever, it's actually pretty clever.

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It is, Rockshox sold something similar back in the 90's. I think they're being marketed as a cheaper/easier way for people who ride cyclocross and road to fit discs as it only requires calipers and rotors; also enables them to retain the brake shifter combo levers that drop bars use. Currently full hydraulic drop bar setups are pretty damn expensive.

i guess that's a good idea if it's for road bikes and cyclocross, otherwise its sort of pointless for everything else

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It is actually a pretty good and widely used construction amongst Cyclocross riders. You can use your Shimano/Sram/Campy shift-/brake levers and still have the automatic pad wear adjustment of a hydraulic brake.

When riding Cyclocross tournaments I sometimes had the problem that the BB7 pads wore down that quickly (remember that cyclocross season just begins) that I had to get off the bike to dial the knobs in, loosing a lot of time I now gain using the Hyrd.

Edited by niconj
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Wonder what they'd be like for trials

Well, they are certainly better than the Avid BB7 Road brakes in combination with shift-/brake levers. On the other hand, the BB7 MTN with Speed Dial levers on my MTB has tons more power. It's even more powerful than the 785 XT brakes I compared them with.

On a trials bike there's no need of such a hybrid brake as you can use fully hydraulic brakes (or BB7 with MTB levers). So you have plenty more options that are more powerful than the Hyrd.

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