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29-01-2019, 10:35 PM | #46 | ||
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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Quote:
70’s Yams and Hondas looked pretty with skinny Rickman style fibreglass front mudguards, but without a forkbrace, or the original mudguard bracket they’d twist when braking hard. A little wear in the bushes helped exaggerate this. Little trailies with high level mudguard also twisted all over the place. Quote:
The geometry for standard front forks relies on a castor effect to be stable when moving forwards. The contact patch of the tyre on the ground is behind the steering axis, so self centres when going forwards. Going backwards it is unstable and wants to be on full lock instead. There are harmonic frequencies when castor effect wants to wobble. Generally around 35 mph and again at around 120 mph. The slower one used to be fun: no hands on a Honda G5 at 40 with no throttle would allow a full lock tank slapper to develop, but fade away as speed dropped to 30ish with no real worries. Never felt confident enough to play with a tank slapper at high speed though! Handling improvements try to shift the wobbles above the top speed of the bike so it didn't happen, or occurs at lower speeds where it’s less dramatic. To come back to calliper positions, the caster effect of the front end is affected by suspension geometry, but also by mass. Spinning mass which gives gyroscopic stability, and inertia about the steering axis. The inertia is the mass of the components multiplied by their radial distance from the steering axis. Larger inertias take more force to damp out the caster wobble, so if a wobble occurs it is more violent. At this point help would be welcome from anyone who’s recently read up on chassis theory? Large handlebar mounted fairings change the handling adversely, whereas bigger frame mounted fairings don’t have quite the same effect.
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Original and Best since 1993 Last edited by Darkness; 29-01-2019 at 10:38 PM.. |
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29-01-2019, 10:54 PM | #47 |
Lord of the Rings
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Norwich
Bike: M900sie
Posts: 5,983
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Yes the Ajay did still have the deep steel mudguard with a lower stay to the fork bottoms, so I guess that would have been a pretty good brace come to think of it.
I understand what you mean about where weight is on the front end effecting the handling now... I thought you might have been winding me up a bit with some nonsense science! My apologies I still don't believe that the calliper position can effect the braking characteristics though.
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29-01-2019, 11:37 PM | #48 | |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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Quote:
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30-01-2019, 10:32 AM | #49 |
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Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: Clevedon
Bike: M1200s
Posts: 565
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I was told by a mechanic many years ago that the reason most manufacturers changed to rear callipers from forward callipers was because they are less prone to seizing when behind, as the fork leg offers some protection from the weather. I know my Honda CB550 was in need of a brake strip down and clean every six months to prevent it from seizing.
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30-01-2019, 11:22 AM | #50 |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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But Honda did use a cheap single piston Caliper with swivel mount comprising a steel pin in alloy mounts with just a couple of o rings to try and keep the salt water out.
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30-01-2019, 11:51 AM | #51 |
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Yep, that's the one, crap, even on a good day.
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Keep the rubber side down. Mick |
30-01-2019, 08:43 PM | #52 |
Transmaniacon MOC
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Sutton In Ashfield
Bike: Multiple Monsters
Posts: 6,095
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Sorry for the threadjack but its been an interesting discussion on something that has bugged me for a while and I was curious what opinions were. So it seems that the caliper position may give better protection on the rear of the fork or maybe just down to fashion?
From the fork flexing prospective regarding mudguard stay mid pipe twanging it may be preferable to have the calipers on the rear so if there is flex then the forks flex outwards?
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31-01-2019, 12:41 AM | #53 |
You Are What You Is
Join Date: May 2005
Location: A Foward Location
Bike: S4r
Posts: 1,948
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I recollect the advent of disc brakes, there was discussion then wether the mount should be fore or aft. Aft won out due to we were told effects on the steering
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31-01-2019, 06:24 AM | #54 |
Too much time on my hands member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Shipbourne
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,422
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I agree with Capo - when they were first fitted the disc calipers were heavy and being in front of the fork legs they were effectively outside the wheelbase and made tank slappers (more common in those days with spindly fork stanchions) more pronounced and less likely to be recovered
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31-01-2019, 07:26 AM | #55 | |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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Quote:
There are two types of flexing from the braking. If the brakes are mounted on both fork legs the braking force tries to bend the bottom of the forks back towards the engine, but the Caliper/drum tries to pull them forwards, a balanced couple that gives a bending moment: how big a bending moment, and how big the deflection depending on how good the brakes are versus how stiff the forks are. With single sided disk or drum where all of the braking force is put into one fork leg, only that fork leg tries to move back towards the engine. So far as the front wheel is concerned, it doesn’t know the handlebars haven’t turned but only that the fork bottoms have. Same effect as a sharp pull back on the left handlebar to turn right! How dramatic this is in the real world depends hugely on how stiff the forks are, plus how rigid the front axle and its mounts are, plus how well the front mudguard and fork brace keep the fork legs parallel. Experience of small 70s trailies with spindly fork legs and the low factory mudguard and its bracing completely absent is not easily forgotten!
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Original and Best since 1993 |
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31-01-2019, 03:03 PM | #56 | |
No turn left unstoned
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: leicester
Bike: M750
Posts: 4,561
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Quote:
Front mounted calipers increase the polar inertia about the steering axis, like Darkness describes. At something of a tangent (pun), I'm also thinking that front mounted calipers might lead to slightly less fork dive induced by the brake reaction .. but also that the effect would be tiny compared to the effect of weight transfer under braking. This may have less practical relevance than other previously mentioned factors though. No doubt the design of "upside down" forks greatly reduces leg flex, due not only to their bigger diameter these days but also to the greater proximity of the fork bushes to the wheel spindle .. and hence bracing across the mudguard mounts is less necessary. On my old 1976 Honda TL trials bike, the mudguard mount brace was made out of spindly steel plate, only about 1mm thick. On my 1996 Dommie trailie (also wth "old-style" forks), the brace is more like 3mm thick and much deeper too. It is massively more rigid. When I first bought the Commando, it's fibreglass front mudguard was attached with jubilee clips to each fork leg (if I remember correctly). Not much bracing there then !! I guess there may even be a case for saying that rear mounted calipers make front wheel removal easier .. a tiny point but one which I'm sure bike manufacturers will consider nevertheless. "It's all linked though, innit ?" |
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31-01-2019, 03:37 PM | #57 | |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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Quote:
Unfortunately you can’t make use of the axial components of the force as it is exactly countered by the reaction through the wheel axle. The brakes don’t actually produce a force, they produce a rotational couple or moment. At the contact patch, the moment from the braking force is countered by that from weight transfer onto the front wheel. If we can find a way to isolate forces from their reactions we can be rich as perpetual motion is the dream!
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31-01-2019, 03:40 PM | #58 |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Stockbridge
Bike: M900
Posts: 1,984
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I must dig out my old copy of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance for a refresh as I’m sure that was the source of lessening of my general Ignorance!
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25-02-2019, 11:54 AM | #59 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Hamilton
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25-02-2019, 05:40 PM | #60 | ||
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