Rise H30 brake upgrade?

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
Hey all.
I've recently got myself an h30 but after a few cycles I'm finding the brakes are lacking. I ride natural trails and am having to use two fingers to get any sort of power that will slow me down and leaving me with less grip to hold onto the handle bars down the bumpy trails.
Would it be beneficial to fit lager rotors or just go with a better brake setup?

Tia
 
Last edited:

MadTurnip

Member
Jan 14, 2021
57
25
Dublin, Ireland
What bike have you got there is several models of H30, Occam, Rise etc.
If its the rise and its using SHIMANO BR-MT410 they can be a bit less powerful but my older trail bike had them with 180mm rotors and they were adequate single finger braking.
If you haven't already, give your rotors a good clean with some isopropyl alcohol or some kind of substitute. Do you use any kind of bike cleaner on your rotors?
 

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
My bad it's the rise h30.
I haven't cleaned them I've just washed the bike with whater and citrus wash.
I thought they would have just needed bed in but after 30 odd miles they just don't feel great or as good as I'm used to.
I will buy a tin of brake cleaner from my motor factors on Monday and see if that helps.
 

b33k34

Member
Apr 15, 2021
270
99
UK
So they're the bottom end, non series, 2 pot shimano. They don't have the 'servo wave' levers that come on, I think Deore upwards. they're the first thing I'd upgrade on that bike.

Also, Orbea fit 180 rotors front and rear. Upgrading those to 200mm (particularly at the front) will give a noticeable increase in power at very low cost - £15 for a shimano plus 20 adaptor on the fork and you can pick up 200mm rotors on Ebay for about £20 (SRAM/AVid stuff always seems very cheap if you're not worried about having the latest pattern (and you shouldn't be). if they're cetnrelock rotors on there now maybe add another £15 for an adaptor
 

Mar 29, 2021
12
9
UK
Try a set of magura m5 e-stop brakes? You can but a pair for £150. You don’t need to swap over the brake lines as they fit the Shimano ones. Get a pair of magura MDR- P rotors and you’ll never need anything else.
 

benzy

New Member
Dec 1, 2021
60
23
California
Would it be beneficial to fit lager rotors or just go with a better brake setup?

I swapped out the M6100s that came on the bike with M6120 (4 pistons) and 203 rotors and the improvement was minimal. Brakes still didnt have enough power on steep descents. So I'd save your money and time there. I cant believe the XTs would be that great of an improvement over the M6120s but others swear by them. And have to believe with the right pads they're good. But I'm giving the Magura MT5s a go, which by most accounts have some of the best stopping power out there for the price.
 

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
I swapped out the M6100s that came on the bike with M6120 (4 pistons) and 203 rotors and the improvement was minimal. Brakes still didnt have enough power on steep descents. So I'd save your money and time there. I cant believe the XTs would be that great of an improvement over the M6120s but others swear by them. And have to believe with the right pads they're good. But I'm giving the Magura MT5s a go, which by most accounts have some of the best stopping power out there for the price.

I've just received my mt5 estop and they have a banjo fitting not the same fitting as the brakes on the bike 🤦‍♂️😂 but I'll make them fit some how lol.

The rest of the bike I can't fault tbh I did pump the rear shock up to 200psi and it feels much better and I'm using 95% of the travel.
My friend just bought a levo and we done 20miles of trail riding on Sunday I used 52% battery and he used 80% he's a few stone heavier though.
 

benzy

New Member
Dec 1, 2021
60
23
California
I've just received my mt5 estop and they have a banjo fitting not the same fitting as the brakes on the bike 🤦‍♂️😂 but I'll make them fit some how lol.

The rest of the bike I can't fault tbh I did pump the rear shock up to 200psi and it feels much better and I'm using 95% of the travel.
My friend just bought a levo and we done 20miles of trail riding on Sunday I used 52% battery and he used 80% he's a few stone heavier though.

Let me know how it goes. Is there much of a difference with the eStops? Is it pads and levers?
 
Mar 29, 2021
12
9
UK
I swapped out the M6100s that came on the bike with M6120 (4 pistons) and 203 rotors and the improvement was minimal. Brakes still didnt have enough power on steep descents. So I'd save your money and time there. I cant believe the XTs would be that great of an improvement over the M6120s but others swear by them. And have to believe with the right pads they're good. But I'm giving the Magura MT5s a go, which by most accounts have some of the best stopping power out there for the price.
Try them with a 2mm rotors?
I've just received my mt5 estop and they have a banjo fitting not the same fitting as the brakes on the bike 🤦‍♂️😂 but I'll make them fit some how lol.

The rest of the bike I can't fault tbh I did pump the rear shock up to 200psi and it feels much better and I'm using 95% of the travel.
My friend just bought a levo and we done 20miles of trail riding on Sunday I used 52% battery and he used 80% he's a few stone heavier though.
Thats good to know about the battery👍
 

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
Let me know how it goes. Is there much of a difference with the eStops? Is it pads and levers?
They are 4pots, from research they have 90nm of force which is at the top end.
images-3.jpeg
 

benzy

New Member
Dec 1, 2021
60
23
California

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
Looks like thin rotors and resin pads may have been the weak links. Lol, tempted to take off the Maguras and give the XTs a shot.

The regular MT5 is 4 pot too. Looks like the green pads and a slightly different lever.
Sorry thought you meant the the difference in comparison to the stock brakes. I think the estop are just mt5's with a different pad and the discs are what makes the difference in stopping power.
 

Tubby G

❤️‍🔥 Hot Stuff ❤️‍🔥
Dec 15, 2020
2,696
5,421
North Yorkshire
I’m no doubt stating the obvious but have you bedded in the pads properly ? I usually do between 20-30 hard stops on tarmac from sprint speed to bed mine in before hitting the trails
 

Shjay

Well-known member
Apr 30, 2019
835
491
Kent
MT5s are 4 pots with the two pads connected at bottom, MT5 estop are 4 individual pads like the MT7
Bedding in pads correctly is important otherwise can just get a glaze on pads & won’t work well
 

Hippyross

New Member
Feb 12, 2022
9
4
Northern Ireland
I’m no doubt stating the obvious but have you bedded in the pads properly ? I usually do between 20-30 hard stops on tarmac from sprint speed to bed mine in before hitting the trails
No I never done that that's the first I've ever heard of doing that, I just assumed they wouldn't have been as good until I used them for a while but after 30-40 miles they are better but not what I'm used to I need one finger braking for the riding I do.
 

Tubby G

❤️‍🔥 Hot Stuff ❤️‍🔥
Dec 15, 2020
2,696
5,421
North Yorkshire
No I never done that that's the first I've ever heard of doing that, I just assumed they wouldn't have been as good until I used them for a while but after 30-40 miles they are better but not what I'm used to I need one finger braking for the riding I do.

they may have glazed over as Shjay suggested

personally I’d remove the pads, rough the surface up using emery paper, replace and then go outside and start hard braking, endos and some fine 180 skids !
 

Tubby G

❤️‍🔥 Hot Stuff ❤️‍🔥
Dec 15, 2020
2,696
5,421
North Yorkshire
I've heard the mt5 pads are a faff to change, is that right or are the mt5 e's different?

A faff? They are dead easy. Not the best photo, but all you do is undo the screw that’s holding two pads either side of the rotor, pull the pads out, put new ones in and replace the screw. Repeat with the other piston

To align the calliper it’s literally undoing the calliper bolts a few turns until the calliper can move enough so the wheel spins freely and tighten back up again

simple

135CE4C3-FF68-4F57-B9D3-97153DA0C0C0.jpeg
 

Pezzar

Active member
Apr 6, 2022
239
129
Rugeley, England United Kingdom
Agree. Dead simple. Only downside I heard is fast pad wear, but if you’re getting better braking power then that’s the trade off. Bleeding Magura vs shimano is another story.

I have Hope Tech3/e4 brakes on both current un assisted bikes, which have to be the easiest bleed out there, so I'm going to not enjoy the experience no matter what brake I get unless it's Hope.
 

Kamill

Member
Apr 20, 2022
23
14
Massachusetts
Went from the M410's to M6120 4 piston brakes with metallic pads, 203mm ice tech rotors front and back. Huge difference in the brake feel. I did swap out the brake hose as the M410's use the slightly larger diameter hoses. I think you can get away with M420 calipers, 203 rotors and metal pads but I'm not a fan of the larger lever.

I did what a couple members suggested and just threaded the two hoses together with a screw. It helps to thread in a screw to cut the grooves in the brake cable before trying to join them. Used some silicone lubricant on the hose and pulled it through the headtube by grabbing the caliper. At no point did it feel like it was getting caught on anything. I'm probably going to attempt the same thing with the dropper cable. Swapping out the stock lever for a PNW Loam Lever and there isn't enough cable slack. Plan on changing the cable to jagwire as well, we'll see how a screw does grabbing the shielded cable vs the plastic brake hose.

PXL_20220424_201436495.jpg
 

EMTB Forums

Since 2018

The World's largest electric mountain bike community.

556K
Messages
28,102
Members
Join Our Community

Latest articles


Top