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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Fredericton NB Canada
Age: 50
Posts: 508
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Brakes
Do you have brakes on your unicycle?
If your answer is yes do you find them helpful? Under what conditions or riding locations do your find brakes help? Example: Prolonged downhill riding, or long distance commuting |
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#2 |
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USMC
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Peoria, Illinois
Age: 21
Posts: 1,095
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Answer: Yes
I love my brake on my KH24, I find I can ride twice as long, as all the trails around me are extremelly hilly and take a certain brake finesse. Getting used to it was easy and now I think it's the 2nd best tool for increasing my riding distance, second only to my camelbak.
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Unicycle for Ra |
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#3 | |||
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I like cheese!
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: North Bend, Oregon
Age: 19
Posts: 637
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Quote:
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#4 |
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USMC
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Peoria, Illinois
Age: 21
Posts: 1,095
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Seach ebay and you can get whole setups pretty cheaply, mine cost $30 and are unscratched.
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Unicycle for Ra |
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#5 | |
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Not "2" Tired
Join Date: Aug 2006
Age: 57
Posts: 13,541
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Quote:
Case in point: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAIENdvXoko |
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#6 |
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likes to debate things :D
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I'd be interested in adding a brake to my '06 KH24. It's got all the magura mounts...but suppose I wanted to get one of the cheaper $30 brakes on eBay referenced above? Would they fit, too? Is everything standardized?
$179 seems like an awful lot for a magura from UDC at this point in my financial situation. Any way I could get off for a lot less and still have a decent brake?
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Nimbus 29 with Pi bar Nimbus 36 with T7 Koxx-One Domina II Live with intention. Walk to the edge. |
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#7 |
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USMC
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Peoria, Illinois
Age: 21
Posts: 1,095
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I paid $30 for the same brake listed on UDC, seach ebay for "Magura HS-33" and you can usually pick 'em up pretty cheap, sometimes you still have to get the brake mounts, but they're only like 15 bucks.
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Unicycle for Ra |
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#8 | |
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RTL #1 - Team Goonies
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 1,381
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Quote:
Do I find them helpful? Yes. Very much. I don't use brakes on my daily commute as there's not a lot of hills, so they're not normally fitted to my uni. For things like the 24 hour muni race this summer, or the tour I did through Wales[1], they were fitted and pretty much essential. STM [1] Wales is an annagram for 'king hilly place |
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#9 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Cambridge, UK
Age: 30
Posts: 878
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Quote:
My first experiences bigwheeling down paved hills were on a 29er; since then I've also been down some much steeper stuff offroad. In the past few months I've fitted a cheap calliper brake, which I have been experimenting with occasionally. I find now that a brake can improve control on those very steep hills, particularly if I'm running shorter cranks. For touring a brake can also be useful to take some pressure off your leg during long, steep onroad descents (for this, it may be appropriate to set up a drag brake rather than a normal lever). There's nothing that I ride where I really need this though; it's ridiculously flat here ![]() You can fit a calliper brake by drilling a single hole through the crown of the fork. I got my LBS to do it; they also added some reinforcement to the crown, although I'm not really sure it was necessary. Calliper brakes can be configured as normal grab brakes, or as drag brakes. I've heard that folks have had success with using a unindexed gear shifter to control the brake to create an adjustable drag brake (but a gear shifter won't be able to take such high forces as a brake lever, so possibly you shouldn't try to brake really hard with one!). Calliper brakes are dead cheap and just use a normal brake cable. Lots of folks also use maguras, particularly muni-ers. Maguras are hydraulic brakes. The Nimbus 36 has mounts available for maguras - that said, Roger at unicycle.com (who designed the N36 frame) has said that he still thinks a calliper brake is better on a 36". Hope that helps!
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Dave: Just a question. What use is a unicyle with no seat? And no pedals! Mark: To answer a question with a question: What use is a skateboard? Dave: Skateboards have wheels. Mark: My wheel has a wheel! |
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#10 |
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2 Wheel Traitor
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You could buy brake adapters, 4 Bolt Magura to V-Brake conversion.
![]() Those happen to be expensive ones at $45... but you can find cheaper ones I believe as low as $10-$15. |
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#11 | |
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magic
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Quote:
yes I love them, but they are only nice for smooth steep long downhills, because you can't really use them on rocky bumpy stuff. so my opinion is that on a coker they are practically mandatory for long rides, and on a muni they are nice. you can probably get a set of two off ebay for around $80, and then your set for both unis. |
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#12 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: East Bay, California
Age: 37
Posts: 2,505
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Quote:
I have one of my KH29 MUni and one on my N36. Sometimes I'd like one on my KH24, but I usually don't ride it far enough to reap the "saving the knees" benefit on downhills. A brake can be quite difficult to use on rough downhills, but there are times when it can really help, especially for larger wheel MUni. The more I ride my N36, the less I feel a need for a brake on the road. Except for the steepest of roads, I find that I often feather the brake as a precautionary measure more than out of necessity. Smooth pedaling technique can go a long way. |
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#13 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Fredericton NB Canada
Age: 50
Posts: 508
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My frame has no mounting for brakes
Since my frame has no mounting brackets for brakes how do I attach them.
Kinda leary about drilling holes into frame. Any links to how to do this. |
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#14 | |
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Registered User
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Quote:
and to answer your previous questions, I have brakes on my KH24 and N36, on the KH they save leg wear and make rough downhill much more easy, as you can rely on the brakes to keep your speed down, so be light on the pedals for the fine control needed to ride rough terrain. With no brakes you have to be very heavy on the back pedal and lose that fine control. Less important on the N36, but nice to have for the odd serious hill i run in to.
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Dave - what a thoroughly post-modern subversion of the cycling genre - |
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#15 | |
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RTL #1 - Team Goonies
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Nottingham, UK
Posts: 1,381
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Quote:
If it's for your 29" just to make steep hills a bit shallower, then a caliper brake would be fine. You will need to drill a hole in the crown though, but that isn't really too complicated. There was a detailed write up on how to do this in the first edition of Uni magazine, and there's some photos to look at here too; http://www.unicyclist.com/index.php?...2_itemId=80680 STM |
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