Easily done I suppose.....sort ofUm, both pads on one side of disc....
Easily done I suppose.....sort ofUm, both pads on one side of disc....
Bah! Loving your content so far. We're just busting your bits a little... Firing Squad at Dawn..
I didn't actually question his passion, what I actually said was :I seen someone question your passion and maybe trying to find an excuse to get out !! ? That made me laugh as just in the few weeks ive been here in the forums i can see how much you love shredding, your very last comments in your video emphasized this too.
or that maybe you're just not really into this and you're looking for excuses not to do it ? I'm not saying that's the case - but that's how it reads.
Gotta love the internet. You’re never more than a click away from a complete bell end.Could somebody who doesn't mind sitting through 9minutes of shite, summarise what the issue was in less than 30 words for those of us with short attention spans?
Looking at the vid you've totally worn the pad material away, so the rotor was in the right place and not pushing against the pad backing plate.
I too was confused about this. If both pads were to one side of the disc, the back of one of the pads would be worn, not the front. The only way it could happen would be if not only were both pads to one side, but one pad was also installed the wrong way round...?!
This almost feels personal now, I'm defeatest, I'm not passionate, I want out? Bringing up old videos about brakes, and other topics, what's your real issue here? Jump on pm if you want a chat.I didn't actually question his passion, what I actually said was :
For an example :
View attachment 57960
Boots has a problem. @Sidepod pointed out that it's no biggie, but you see Boots reply.
For me, if you're passionate about something - you will do ANYTHING to make it work and make it happen. You accept it's imperfections and faults and you try to make those things better. In this case, you improve/upgrade/modify the bike based on your experiences and your requirements.
Boots approach is defeatist. He's had a problem and he extrapolates that problem to it's worse possible scenario even though he might never have a hub fail ever again in his life. Hub's can fail, anything can fail. Sometimes it's our own lack of experience/knowledge. Sometimes it's just unlucky.
If he was truly passionate about it, even from the helpful replies he's had here, wouldn't you be saying "OK guys, how do we fix this and make it better" ... and make a video about that. You might get click bait and all the haters and small minded bigots loving video's about x/y/z is sh1t , but longer term they're boring. It's his positive video's which make the channel worth watching. It's experiences like this which give him the OPPORTUNITY to make interesting video's about how to fumble through diagnosing issues, fix them and improve things.
Boots is obviously a likeable and charismatic character, but I don't think he does himself any favours sometimes with his knee jerk approach, which in turn doesn't do any favours to EMTB. People with no experience seeing video's like this just walk away scared. They don't head off and buy a Merida or an Orbea instead, they just don't buy an EMTB. These people could be future friends you could have shared great experiences with .. but now won't be.
Thanks mate, its an old video now, and iv learned since then how to bleed and realign the pads somebody brought it up again. /m\True, I'm pretty sure the rotor and pads were in the right place/orientation, I don't think it would be possible to fit the rotor between 2 pads and the pistons, especially with the retaining spring fitted. Happy to be proven wrong though!
Boots I know you have a new caliper now, but something you should check every now and again is whether the pistons all come out equally when you pull the brake lever. Take your wheel out and give the lever a squeeze while looking into the caliper (not too much to push the pistons fully out). Since you have one pad fully worn and the other looks nearly new I'm assuming one side has sticky pistons and weren't moving much. It could just be built up grime on the pistons which you can clean off, or the piston seals could be on their way out. I think GMBN had a decent video on how to clean and regrease them.
Ufff bit harsh ya cut me deepGotta love the internet. You’re never more than a click away from a complete bell end.
I was going too, spoke to bike shop where I bought it darn sarf and said fine for me vlog the day, bike will be checked for the cracking paint around joints others are facing, basic service and motor check. So it needs to go in anyway I do feel it's rear hub related. Taking that video down today.Boots stay positive mate and keep making your vids. It’s obviously a good outlet for you and I enjoy seeing the rides and positive vibes ??
Just accept that no matter how expensive your eeb is, it will brand need maintenance.
And when it does, don’t be too quick to jump on the ‘my bikes unreliable’ bandwagon that is seen on the forum!
spin the vids from complaining to how to fix it (even if it’s by someone else) so we can all learn from your expensive mistakes ???
Now it just sounds like you're being irrational and emotional - which is what we're talking about being the issue ? . If you read both my posts in the way they're intended - which I think read pretty clearly .. they don't say that .This almost feels personal now, I'm defeatest, I'm not passionate, I want out? Bringing up old videos about brakes, and other topics, what's your real issue here? Jump on pm if you want a chat.
At no point did I say it was fact or if the issue was Confirmed.
I was going too, spoke to bike shop where I bought it darn sarf and said fine for me vlog the day, bike will be checked for the cracking paint around joints others are facing, basic service and motor check. So it needs to go in anyway I do feel it's rear hub related. Taking that video down today.
It is a bit embarrassing to hear Boots talk about pistons rubbing against the "rim". Maybe we should get him a Magura HS for next Christmas.
Anyhow, I appreciate his humility and owning up to the mistake.
I wasn’t referring to you Boots but the guy who dissed your vid. Jeez, this is all getting a bit heavy.Ufff bit harsh ya cut me deep
I didn't actually question his passion, what I actually said was :
For an example :
View attachment 57960
Boots has a problem. @Sidepod pointed out that it's no biggie, but you see Boots reply.
For me, if you're passionate about something - you will do ANYTHING to make it work and make it happen. You accept it's imperfections and faults and you try to make those things better. In this case, you improve/upgrade/modify the bike based on your experiences and your requirements.
Boots approach is defeatist. He's had a problem and he extrapolates that problem to it's worse possible scenario even though he might never have a hub fail ever again in his life. Hub's can fail, anything can fail. Sometimes it's our own lack of experience/knowledge. Sometimes it's just unlucky.
If he was truly passionate about it, even from the helpful replies he's had here, wouldn't you be saying "OK guys, how do we fix this and make it better" ... and make a video about that. You might get click bait and all the haters and small minded bigots loving video's about x/y/z is sh1t , but longer term they're boring. It's his positive video's which make the channel worth watching. It's experiences like this which give him the OPPORTUNITY to make interesting video's about how to fumble through diagnosing issues, fix them and improve things.
Boots is obviously a likeable and charismatic character, but I don't think he does himself any favours sometimes with his knee jerk approach, which in turn doesn't do any favours to EMTB. People with no experience seeing video's like this just walk away scared. They don't head off and buy a Merida or an Orbea instead, they just don't buy an EMTB. These people could be future friends you could have shared great experiences with .. but now won't be.
Dude ,,, he comes from Yorkshire .
They do things a lil different to the provences . LOL .
This geezer the Yorkshire Bike Mechanic is a good teacher .
No kidding, the struggle is real. It looks like I have a slightly slow piston or two in my brand new front brake that I just installed over the weekend - well before it was ever exposed to any dirt. From now on I'm going to make it part of my normal routine to inspect piston movement with the pads out on whenever I do installation, maintenance, or troubleshooting. I don't know how conditions in the UK affect this, but our dust in SoCal is so fine that it can stick to anything with the faintest whiff of static charge.Boots I know you have a new caliper now, but something you should check every now and again is whether the pistons all come out equally when you pull the brake lever.
Convinced its the rear hub and not the motor. Told if it is the motor will be the first return they have had. Try and avoid pedal strikes was one piece of advice iv had. If its the rear hub it's covered. If its rear free wheel hub it's not and I'll have to pay. If its motor will take less than 1 hours before back riding again.
My question is... Should the hub break after riding 38 times.? With some rides being on the canal? Going to cost a fortune if things break after 5 months...
How does blewn torque sensor look like? Why do you think it happened?
A friend who goes for long ride outs on his motorbike has been joined by his wife during lockdown, she's lovely but very chatty. Apparently his Bluetooth headset 'develops a fault' after a mile or so.When the wife is around I disable my talk sensor by putting cotton wool in my ears
A friend who goes for long ride outs on his motorbike has been joined by his wife during lockdown, she's lovely but very chatty. Apparently his Bluetooth headset 'develops a fault' after a mile or so.
How does blewn torque sensor look like? Why do you think it happened?
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