Not worried about quicker speed but slowerWd40…..made me so much quicker on the trails more than I was expecting tbh
Is it recommended to bed in the breaks again after cleaning rotors?You will get slower because you will not want to brake and generate the sound of a car horn every time you touch the levers.
Wire woolIs rotor degreaser/cleaner worth the money or is a cassette degreaser just as good?
I have never done that, if all I did was to clean the rotors with IPA, brake cleaner, whatever.Is it recommended to bed in the breaks again after cleaning rotors?
Sounds reasonable but If you don't bed in pads will they get bedded in by normal use after a while?Brake pads work most effectively when the pad has deposited a small amount of material onto the rotor. That is essentially what the bedding in process achieves..as well as removing small imperfections on the pad surface. So if you need to clean a rotor or pad due to contanimation, whether by IPA/brake cleaner or wet and dry/wire wool, it is best to bed the pads in again. This should be a much quicker process than the initial bedding in of new pads.
It also stands to reason that if you change the pads it is best to clean the rotor before doing the bedding in process.
I have always found the quickest and most effective way to condition/bed in new pads is to ride on tarmac and pull the brakes relatively hard for a short period of time ( a few seconds)....avoiding locking up. Keep riding for a minute or so and repeat the brake pull.............about 10 repeats is usually enough ( less if not sintered pads) but it becomes easy to tell when the brake is most effective.
Key part of bedding in is the heat generated to better transfer some pad material onto rotors. Just “riding along” will not work as well as the short interval, harder braking used in pad bedding process (as opposed to bedding your wife, girlfriend)!Sounds reasonable but If you don't bed in pads will they get bedded in by normal use after a while?
agreed.............the process I described is best done and then the bike left for enough time for the pads and rotors to cool down and the deposited pad material to become properly established/stabilised.Key part of bedding in is the heat generated to better transfer some pad material onto rotors. Just “riding along” will not work as well as the short interval, harder braking used in pad bedding process (as opposed to bedding your wife, girlfriend)!
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.