decent 203mm front and rear is all you need
decent 203mm front and rear is all you need
i can just hit over 30mph on the flat
Did your Reign e+1 not come with 220 front rotors? My e+2 came with 220 f and 200 rear.
based on.....? I live in steep country; it's up or down. All the ups and downs are around 1km. Grab a brake, let go; when you let go you instantly fly, and it's rowdy. Bigger rotors weigh bugger all. They're more effective, which means less time on the brake - less heat generated. They also have a larger surface area which means they don't get as hot (more mass to distribute heat) and cool down quicker (greater surface area to dissipate heat). 180mm rotors on my analogue bike were more than enough, as were 2.3" tyres - not on this bike. I've upgraded the rear from 180 to 203 to match the front. If I could I'd have 223 both ends - the rear in particular still gets pretty hot. When I can get 223 (adapter and rotor) here I'll put one on the rear. I don't think I want to push the budget rockshox gold 35rl forks much harder, so I'll leave them alonedecent 203mm front and rear is all you need
It's always hard to ascertain the condition of parts just by looking at pictures on the interwebs, but in the picture from six years ago, it appears that the wrong adapter was being used. The brake pad track looks way too high, so only half of the pad surface was touching the rotor. Odd...
I would check before putting a 220 on the rear the frame might not cover warranty! I used to do warranty for Transition frames few years ago people were running larger than quoted rear rotors & were snapping chain stays & we weren’t covering warranty! You would get crash replacement but not free rear triangle as running bigger rotors than covered for!
I can't believe a manufacturer would design an enduro MTB with such tight fatigue tolerance on the frame that it would snap from increased braking performance.
That would be a major design flaw honestly.
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Yeah I can't believe that I'm afraid. I've just changed from 203 to 220 & the only difference really is it locks up quicker - there's no discernable feeling of increased braking. On the front, yes I can feel there is more stopping power but on the rear it is purely heat dissapation & less wooden feeling braking.I would check before putting a 220 on the rear the frame might not cover warranty! I used to do warranty for Transition frames few years ago people were running larger than quoted rear rotors & were snapping chain stays & we weren’t covering warranty! You would get crash replacement but not free rear triangle as running bigger rotors than covered for!
Throwing you into a locked up back wheel uncontrollable skid to certain doom ?.i want immediate on demand twitch of a finger response at the tires. brake hard, brake early,
Strange that. My E+2 came with 220mm front as standard.Nope, they come with 203's as standard: Reign E+ 1 Electric Mountain Bike | Giant Bicycles UK
Bigger rotors are never wrongI wanna upgrade the discs on my E+1, will it take 220mm without additional mounts?
if not do you know what brake mounts I’d need?
thanks in advanced
I think there is a limit to things, eg bar length getting bigger for everyone, and crank length getting smaller for everyone, and reach / wheelbase getting longer. Some of these things seem to be just a sales grab for the mindless. Kind of like the past pixel wars with cameras - actual image quality degraded. I'm all for 223's; I'm not sure I'd whack one on my budget fork though. The other potential issue is more chance of bending the rotor in an off. Rotor size should also be relative to wheel size and weight of rider / bike combo to a degree too. Eg; a bike with 27.5" wheels and 203 rotors is probably equivalent to a bike with 29" wheels and 223 rotors. Smaller wheels with bigger rotors are more likely to have damaged rotors in an off too.Bigger rotors are never wrong
the whole 'grabby' issue is over hyped anyways. when careening down a steep hill, do you really want gradual braking power? i want immediate on demand twitch of a finger response at the tires. brake hard, brake early, then get off the brakes and perform. that's how a mtb works best. ample modulation with XT and 223 rotors.
I've been running resin pads on the front, metal on the rear. I was running organic on the rear, but it just gets too hot. It's been about a month now and I still lock the rear at times - something I never used to. Still it seems to be the best mix for me and I'm still hoping to adjust.I want to be able to bring that front tire right to the limit of traction without locking it up
the whole 'grabby' issue is over hyped anyways. when careening down a steep hill, do you really want gradual braking power? i want immediate on demand twitch of a finger response at the tires. brake hard, brake early, then get off the brakes and perform. that's how a mtb works best. ample modulation with XT and 223 rotors.
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