Axial vs Radial Motorcycle Brakes | What's The Difference?
Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары
Which is better? Axial or radial motorcycle brake calipers and master cylinders? Here are the differences.
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📖 CHAPTERS
0:00 Todays Plan
0:25 Caliper Differences
1:17 Monimoto AD
2:10 Why Radial Callipers Are Better
3:11 Master Cylinder Differences
3:32 Why Radial Master Cylinders Are Better
4:08 The Truth
Пікірлер: 247
Thanks to MONIMOTO for sponsoring today's video! Visit monimoto.com to learn more and use code "CHAOSCAUSES" to get 10% OFF (for the next month only).
@felixkroeber1769
Жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm looking into buying an R1 preferably 2012 year till 2014, basically the same as yours😂 Any tips on where to find a good one for under R110k?
@cripticdestiny
Жыл бұрын
you forgot the main benefits of radial calipers. there are usually four pistons in each calipers on both sides of the disc. resulting in even pressure on the disc from both sides, even wear on both brake pads and self adjusting of the caliper in relation to the disc. without making the caliper slide side to side. resulting a sharp brake feel. while axial calipers usually has only two/three pistons on one side. poorer brake feel, sometimes uneven wear of the pads if the slider jams due to corrosion, and it hangs kinda loose on its mounts because it has to slide itself to the piston side as the brake pads wear down.
@spaceguy16
Жыл бұрын
what should you do or can you do if your links in your chain no longer go smoothly?
me watching this with a motorcycle life full of drum brakes🤣
@ChaosCauses
Жыл бұрын
They're better than nothing!
@andrewboschmann9880
Жыл бұрын
Which are obvoisly cabel operated. Yep.
@SuzukiRiderlv426
Жыл бұрын
at least those dont need abs, no risk of locking
@poorvikk.s9214
Жыл бұрын
@@andrewboschmann9880 yep
@poorvikk.s9214
Жыл бұрын
@@SuzukiRiderlv426 the way i use them they do lock up quite a lot
One of the biggest advantage of radial calipers for racing is to enable easy swapping of disk sizes to switch between a wet and a dry setup, just using a spacer between the caliper and its mount. Radial master cylinders main advantage is probably just the dramatically different sizes of master cylinder bore and lever ratio
@matter9
Ай бұрын
I think your explanation would have made a better video.
@wingsinglam8183
Ай бұрын
The four pot axial calipers always have two size of piston in one caliper e.g 30/34 ,32/34 . If you are sensitive enough, the axial four pot would be more “linear “But for radial calipers the four pistons are the same bcoz the way they are mounted doesn’t create the instability that the axial does so they don’t need that. The axial four pot could be thinner and lighter than a radial and makes difference putting on small bikes. For the master cylinder, draw the free body diagram and you will find the axial type would have a part of the force applied on the lever wasted around the pin. It means the piston of the radial type would take more force than the axial do given the length of the lever and force applied are the same. Not just the size. Also the feedback would be unclear for the axial type due to a big part of it goes to the pin.
@replynotificationsdisabled
18 күн бұрын
@@matter9ehh. It's just 5 minutes long. And without too much useless shit you usually see. So I disagree. Without this video, his explanation wouldn't have been present here
@alfabethev2.074
13 күн бұрын
@@wingsinglam8183Ehhmm.. So mr. knowitall. Thats news to me! Because iv'e got a brake setup with 34-34mm. piston calipers on my bike (just to deflate your ego..)!
Very great video, the bike community is lacking of this kind of straight forward type of content
@duroxkilo
11 ай бұрын
i second this. also, i can't wait for the time when the video thumbnails w/ the 'super surprised face' is over :)
You know I never knew the difference, so thank you for a crystal clear presentation of the difference between them 😊
Great video! About stiffness on axial calipers, the one you have on your dirtbike is a sliding pin caliper. The pistons are on one side, and the entire caliper moves to bite on the disc evenly (ish, pad wear is biased to one side) and there are two pins that it slides on. Opposed piston axial calipers are on older high performance bikes. Those are solidly bolted on. Alignment variations are far more difficult to deal with. Saying which is better between axial or radial, you made a good point about better materials, design and manufacturing. I would take a radial master all day, if they didn't stick out and hit the dash on older sportbikes. Semi-radial cylinders do exist for a compromise. (hope the next part is not too long!) Design example: Opposed piston calipers in the 80's were split, meaning each caliper piston side can be separated.Those have problems with bleeding, then you end up with a bit of a sponge because of all the passages the fluid has to go, a bleed block (push the pistons in almost all the way and chock them) is almost always needed. There's also some O-rings between the two halves, they rarely weep or leak but if they do hope there's a part for it. For a motorcycle example, take the FZR1000 and the 80's "Bike Of The Decade" FZR100R EXUP. Later in the 90's you start seeing "blue dot" calipers - those are monoblock as with all modern high performance calipers, but have a pipe running across the two sides at the bottom. Still not ideal, but better! Example would be the YZF1000R Thunderace. Real single piece axial calipers came later, as seen on the original YZF-R1 and R6. From there, the internal passages are similar to the radial calipers. Some (usually denoted with "gold dots", for reference your MT has "blue dots") has pistons that aren't steel or iron (presumed as aluminum, maybe titanium) and provide even better response with the weight reduction, plus no rust anymore! There's also this example. The first iteration FZR400 used two-pot front calipers, and needed great maintenance to stay biting sharp. The next iteration onwards came with four-pot units similar to the FZR750 and 1000 of the time, and those woes are not as prevalent. Same master cylinder. Radial master cylinders are an astounding upgrade for old axial calipers. A good investment, the improved feel pushes that confidence up in any situation. Beware of the fakes!
@t0k4m4k7
11 ай бұрын
You seem to know a lot, why do you think they still make axial calipers? they seem to be more expensive as there are more parts involved and the design looks more complicated in general. Am i missing something?
@ruikazane5123
11 ай бұрын
@@t0k4m4k7 It is cheaper to make sliding pin calipers, you need fewer machining operations than opposed-piston ones that is solidly mount - and definitely easier to manufacture than radial calipers. Tolerances are way less crucial. It is well known and engineered. The other reason can be exclusivity, lower end bikes don't get the radial stuff but the higher ups do...
@mangkoes
11 ай бұрын
Well said, exactly what i thought 🎉
@ruquik
11 ай бұрын
@@t0k4m4k7 go look at any car. 90% are floating caliper. only a handful (and most toyotas) are fixed caliper, 4* piston units.
Thanks for finally saying out loud what most people don't understand right. Radial mastercylinders don't make breaking "stronger"! The Breaking force is determend by the breaking fluid pressure. Pressure is force/surface. Anyone who understands this will notice that the direction doesn't change anything here. Only the surface of the cylinder matters and the force that is applied to it. The force can be changed by the lever length. => it does absolutly not make sense to go for an upgrade radial master zylinder and than limiting it's effect by using a shorty lever, with decrease the amount of pressure you can put on the masterzylinder with your hand. higher quality components are usually nicer for the feeling tho
@russcattell955i
11 ай бұрын
Good fluid, properly bled in good (braided) hoses & good pads is the easiest most effective upgrade.
@stevepickford3894
13 күн бұрын
Longer lever provides more leverage. More important is the relationship/ratio between the surface area of the master cylinder piston and the combined surface areas of the pistons in the caliper(s). Friends CRF230 had the standard Honda parts bin ½" bore master cylinder, it provided no travel at the lever, minimal braking, was like squeezing a lump of wood. Replaced it with a 10mm bore Brembo master cylinder off a KTM, more travel at the lever, far more brake force & feeling. Could brake harder using two fingers on this set up than four fingers on the standard master cylinder.
From the geometrical point of view, axial and radial master cylinders are perfectly the same (only different points of alignment, but same relative-to-center-point movement, with the difference being that the radial shown in the video has a different type of adjust. If I'm wrong, please explain what really changes?
@C64SX
11 ай бұрын
This is what I was hoping for when clicking the link. Been pondering that question myself for a while. No answer here though ☺
@ironeinar
21 күн бұрын
In MTB it's the same thing, and every manufacturer has its own setup for the master cylinder, as that doesn't have to do anything with how the rest of the brake is set up. And doesn't have any advantages or disadvantages from what I know. I mean why should it, you only change the angle the actuator or whatever it's called sits to the lever. In the end you're rotating around a pin in a circle like motion, so there shouldn't be any difference?
@Gaobudong
21 күн бұрын
@@ironeinar my guess is that due to the difference in geometry, the direction of travel for the radial master cylinder better aligns with the direction you're applying the gripping force, thus providing a more 1:1 linear kind of feeling, allowing for more finesse in control
@mickromer6199
19 күн бұрын
Nothing really changes, it's a marketing gimmick because brakes aren't getting any better, they've reached there peak without going electronic assisted.. Going back to levers and fulcrums the distance between the pivot point and the master piston has not changed, therefore no greater leverage, no greater advantage, by not brakes manufacturers would have already found what the optimal distance is, just because is radially or axially mounted, changes nothing
@Gaobudong
19 күн бұрын
@@mickromer6199 the difference is more on the mapping rather than max braking power. Yes for most cases all the brake systems are more than enough and the bottle neck is more on the tires. But in theory radial master cylinder should have a more linear feeling (how hard you squeeze and how much brake power you get) due to the geometry
How does “axial” vs “radial” master cylinders change the feel? From a physics perspective this makes no sense.
@pdpcycling248
11 ай бұрын
Yes, EXACTLY! To have more or less force push on the master cylinder piston, it is about the leverage ratio of the lever. About brake lever pull feeling...this is about the leverage ratio characteristic curve. Orientation of the master cylinder piston is this case is irrelevant from the perspective of automobile engineering.
@eliinthewolverinestate6729
16 күн бұрын
I agree rotor position makes the difference. Same caliper a rotor closer to axle takes more force to stop than a rotor farther from axle. The math says so too.
@richardcloudbase
14 күн бұрын
It always make me laugh, when these claims are made. A tiny bit of scrutiny shows the claimant has no idea how to back up his/her claim. Just by asking "how" has blown the who thing out of the water :P
The mounting system is really a red herring.. its really fixed vs. floating calipers that makes the difference and there's little difference in material quality if both made of steel or aluminum.. and master cylinders could be the same either way, so there's a tangle of misunderstandings on this topic.
As a mechanic i never heard of that term. We call this float or fixed caliper. The fixed caliper is used in racing because you can transform the heat better from the brakes. That way you have less brake fading...etc This apples for cars and bikes. Making the float caliper bigger will help with that but you add quickly diminishing returns.
@andypughtube
Жыл бұрын
The axial caliper that he showed happened to be a single-sided floating caliper, but that wasn't the point of the video. There are also opposed-piston fixed-mount axial brakes. See for example the R1 prior to 2004 when they went to radial mount.
Cool video! I know how difficult it can be to come up with new a different ideas for videos (as you have mentioned in the past). This was great! 😎👍
Very good timing. I was thinking about changing my brake caliper this afternoon . Well explained . Thanks😊
I’ve been around bikes all my life and often wondered what the difference was, but had never seen a clear explanation. Until now. Thank you.
As always thank you for the great vid and keep up the good work.
The axial calipers have no centering pin because they don't NEED them in a first place. The main benefits are a ligther construction and an easier faster mounting, useful for quick change. As far as master cylinders the radial setup reduce A BIT friction, hence better feeling and "power" but for most of us a little lubricant in the lever mechanism is already a huge improvement. For extreme improvement, small needle bearings and accurate diameter tempered steel shafts are a must. For any road bike a drop of oil is already doing wonders....
@marcbrasse747
11 ай бұрын
Well said!
Once again this channel is so underrated! Superb editing superb content
As always, Love your videos man !❤
i love your videos i may not understand have the stuff but there just intresting to see
Dude, i'm from Brazil, and never EVER heard about these two types of brakes calipers before. My actual bike is a CB500 from 2000's, Brembo axial brake calipers and no ABS , as you mentioned, i've seen no diference beetween those, cause i'm a regular biker. Congrats for your amazing content, ride safe!
Ibrake with my boots, do they cout as radial?😀
@ChaosCauses
Жыл бұрын
Only if they're Alpinestars 😉
@NoGlockTrucker
Жыл бұрын
No, I believe those are flintstones.
@ikkePunky
Жыл бұрын
I gues it's poverty. Nea jk. But don't ware them aut. You might need them to walk home when the bike breaks down
both levers apply force DIRECTLY to a master cylinder. details are only in angles, leverage ratios and quality, and all of it can be adjusted and different in both setups. it's just physics
Thank you, great video. Something i had only wondered about for the first time a few months ago.
A great quick non biased video I wish more KZreadrs would make content like this I learnt a lot quickly without over compalacting it
My previous bike, an FZ6 had both axial master and callipers, and they were plenty for very hard braking on the track, just make sure you hover the foot over the rear brake so the ABS wouldn't go crazy and take away front brake. Then I went to an R6 with radial both and the instant braking was awesome! The biggest difference was confidence because of feel and finesse, not stopping power
Great video with really easy examples that make sense.
Great video as always, short and sweet. I've actually just upgraded my 2021 S1000R from an Axial MC to a Radial unit from the RR, Difference is night and day! Great mod
Thanks ! I'm glad someone explained me the difference at last. 🙂
This couldn't be any clearer. Excellent work.
Some other time I saw a different video about brakes but there was only talking and hand gesturing (not sure if it was Motojitsu?), anyway they didn't get the point across. Now I understand the differences real well! Thanks!
Good post thank you...but you are (mainly) wrong...the reason race bikes adopted radial calipers is that they could change the size of the rotors (discs) fast and with just a spacer in the calipers...easy to experiment during a race weekend.
Clearly explained, thank you
Nice and informative !
Radial Brembo’s on my Rally Pro. They give outstanding feel and will stop *on a dime! Great video! Thanks.
Great information.
You are quickly becoming my favourite channel. It’s interesting and you and all the other experts might be right but from a basic physics view, both types are dealing with forces that are applied across the mounting bolts. Radially the forces are upwards against the top bolt in compression and the bottom mount in tension. Axial brakes have forces acting the same on both mounting bolts but at the other side of the bolt about 180 degrees , with a slight difference re the width apart. So to me it’s certainly not strength of the mount thats different, the big difference is the centrifugal forces, slowed by braking or free spinning are in line with the calliper mounts, negligible to no difference on the road but for Rossi and Marquez, perhaps it feels smoother. I can’t remember who, perhaps Honda , but they introduced floating callipers which self-centering for lateral and radial forces and a better force distribution.. I thought this was very clever.
My bike has an expanding shoe, foot operated brake on the back wheel, and a hand-operated, contracting-band brake on the sprocket shaft. Oh, and hub-centre steering. :-)
As always very interesting information. The sponsor banner progress was suppied or is a self invention? 😄
My bike have a axial braking set up. IMO it is not the set up which make the difference. It is the way I maintain the overall bike. Every year replace the oil,brake fluid,break pads is an expensive affair,but doing it in by early is not. (Depending purely on riding) I do it every year,15000 kms. Proper maintaining doesn't mean I have to wait until it's broken,every part might work much more but life is priceless,investing a few grands on motorcycle won't do any harm. That includes tires,brakes,oil,filter,fluid,chain,cables etc.
Nice and simple. I work on bicycles and we have the same setups on mountain bikes.
Well explained
I have mannaged to get better brake feeling out of a fully axial setup that some to out of a radial. I drove a 2007 Moto Guzzi Breva 1100 with 2x Brembo P4 30/34's axially mounted, 4 piston callipers. Together with a higher qualaty Brembo PSC16 maser cylinder that thing has a more direct feetback than my brand new Guzzi V100 with Brembo M4 callipers and PR16 (or 18?) master cylinder. And im currently upgrading my SC59 Fireblade Trackbike from Tokico callipers / Nissin master, to Brembo Stylema callipers and PSC16 master.
@zeke2566
Ай бұрын
😊you are correct! Axial gives much better feed back than radial,but radial can swap out parts,rotors easier ,just an observation from a long time rider,racer of sorts,be safe all and have fun!
You can see that on the RS125 two stroke, newer versions have the radial brakes, but the main difference is the new Brembo system with bigger calipers rather than the radial system.
I thought that radially mounted callipers were originally used to enable easier swapping of brakes at the circuit as you only have to add spacers to the calliper mount for different disc sizes.
@marcbrasse747
11 ай бұрын
Probably not as much disk size but quick swapping of troublesome calipers. So the advantage for every day motorcycles is less clear. The radial mastercylinder argument makes a bit more sense though. Then then the efficiency of the axle around which the handle turns becomes important and on conventional setups these tend to be built rather cheaply.
any comparison can only be made in brake systems that have similar specifications. in truth the only advantage, although significant, is that radial brakes with the dowel pin locators mount with far greater accuracy in relation to the disc position allowing less energy to be lost during actuation of the brake
Great video, thanks for this, as well as for all the comments beneath. What I don't fully understand yet is absence of any floating element in radial geometry. Is it necessary or not? Years ago I had a bike with floating disc, then I had a bike with floating caliper, but currently on both Hondas it does not seem any of these have any floating element. How do these deal with pads wear of thermal expansion? Thanks
I have both a Z900 and Z900RS. RS brakes are radial, Z's are axial. Both 4 piston up front. To tell you the truth, when riding hard on the street the Z's axials seem to perform as well as the RS. When sitting in the garage though, grabbing the brake levers, the RS feels a lot more firm. Might upgrade to stainless lines on the Z for better feel and performance.
A great advantage of the radial brake caliper is that it does not require maintenance like axial brake calipers. Which require lubrication on the movable fixing pins.
Drum brakes is sitting in the corner like, "what am I chopped liver?"
Hey thanks for that great info, been riding for 45 years and just found that out...got more?
He, who brakes last, is longer fast.
@marianandnorbert
Жыл бұрын
yes but he who brakes most wins the race
@mannyechaluce3814
Жыл бұрын
He who takes brakes the most, will soon be at the unemployment line sooner - Lazy Tzu
@dsofe4879
Жыл бұрын
would have would have bicycle chain
@Termodramatisch
Жыл бұрын
@@dsofe4879 Lol. Damit habe ich nicht gerechnet
@simonthomas5367
Жыл бұрын
He who brakes late, maybe. Not last!
Another great vid! Here I thought I would lose interest after you sold your Duke (I had a Duke when I started watching your vids) but your content just keeps getting better!
@ChaosCauses
Жыл бұрын
I'm happy to hear that!
Ducati streetfighter 848, all radial en iron covered brake hoses, its good, and looks nice!!
on bicycle can be axial/radial brakes, same caliper is mounted on both way and it is good because shims can be mounted on both to get right position of caliper
Same as you, radial on the street triple r and axial on the Crf sumo.
4:50 Exactly!
I'd say that a radial conversion kit for a 450 super moto for street use is a must, with that kind of power in the twistes here in Italy you better hope to have at least a radial caliper installed instead of the oem axial 2p caliper, don't underestimate brakes even in a sporty street use
I’m not that sure about calipers, but from physics point of view, there should be basically no difference between radial/axial master Cylinder, only difference would come from bending in the leaver, and that would be super insignificant.
@eliinthewolverinestate6729
16 күн бұрын
The difference is rotor placement. More force required the closer to the axle the rotor is.
@banaana1234
16 күн бұрын
@@eliinthewolverinestate6729 But that isnt dependent on the mounting type. Piston ratios etc also are hugely important
Very good explanation. Thank you sir.
I have a sport bike from the 1990s, and a budget underbon that has an old brake design from over 20 years ago (both have axial front brakes)
Really but the math says it's not how the caliper is mounted but where the rotor is mounted. I always thought rotors closer to the axle make the caliper work harder to stop. While rotors away from the axle mean the caliper don't have to work as hard. I have axial on my Buell and is superior to radial. Not because of caliper or how it's mounted but because of where the rotor is mounted.
always thought the words originated from one another... radial = radius of wheels, axial = axle of wheel. but even if it isn't its nice to remember :D
I have axial calipers but without problems with play and flexiness (R1150R) - just 4 pistons.
Excellent explaination imho. That said, brakes like all other components continue to evolve. The hard fact is that if someone knows the limits of even drum brakes they are going to out perform the novice with even the latest techware.
Fantastic video 👏👏👏 Im on an order bike, so axial for me...
Well said. All things being equal, radial mount callipers are better, and radial master-cylinders are better. That presumes all things are equal. They rarely are. In principle, it's a very small detail difference, but in real life, it's usually a fairly large and noticeable difference. In principle, the only people who would notice it and be able to tell the difference, are top level racers. In practice, the quality and execution of the whole thing, is (commonly) advertised by the radial or axial orientation. If having 'good brakes' is important to you, you go radial. That means the quality of execution, of manufacture, of design and engineering, is usually significantly higher with radial setups. That, possibly more than the defining detail, is what makes the difference.
never used radial but my modified 1998 600 facer has 2000 RSV mile r frontend with a set of billet 6 callepers based on the tokodo desine and a 2003 R1 master cilinder this set up is way better than stock blue dots it came with
Its interesting that the current generation of the MT 09, whether it is stock or SP, have Radial brakes and Radial Master cylinders.
What happens when the batteries die in the tracker?
I have recently upgraded the 'floating' 2 piston axial calipers on my V-Strom 650 to axial 'ridgid' mounted 4 piston calipers. My experience is that these brake much better and have a more liniar feel then the standerd ones. Maybe this is because Nissin is better quality then Tokico? Maybe it's because the are solidly mounted instead of floating? I honestly don't know but it was definitely worth the money if you ask me.
@diyfury
10 ай бұрын
The floating ones are the worst type possible (also the cheapest). They only have pistons on one side and they rely on the caliper sliding to transfer force to the other side. I assume that means the force will never be the same on both sides and some force will be lost trying to make the caliper slide while it is under tension.
Soooo if you have a radial mounts you have no fading brakes? I am still used to the the old school....
Even with Ad, the video is short enough to explain Axial vs Radial in a crystal clear way. Just an idea, can you please make a video that explain whether or not dual disc brakes have better stopping power ?
Excellent info,
So, basically, IS mount vs. post mount? 😁
Make a video about KN filters vs Normal filters
@thorstenmetalhead9666
Жыл бұрын
Or DNA, Sprint or do... all the so called "performance" air filters, the increase airflow but thus messing up the air/fuel ratio, if the parameters are not adjusted.
@ghaviorizky3961
Жыл бұрын
@@thorstenmetalhead9666 not to mention, that "performance" filters is focused on well performance, so your engine lifespan might not be as long as stock / foam filters
@Jorek19
Жыл бұрын
@@thorstenmetalhead9666 you're supposed to adjust air/fuel ratio when putting on performance parts (filters, reeds in case of 2T, exhausts, cylinder/head mods, etc...) especially if the bike has carburetor
@Jorek19
Жыл бұрын
@@ghaviorizky3961 performance filters are meant to allow engine suck more air into it to mix with fuel, so if the engine is properly jetted (accordingly to mods) and filter properly installed there is no reason for shortening the lifespan. Filters are there to filter the air and eliminate any particles to enter the engine. The engine will take as much air as needed and allowed to. With performance filter you'll only allow it to take more air with less obstruction.
@ghaviorizky3961
11 ай бұрын
@@Jorek19 yeah less obstruction but more of DIRT from the environment will enter your engine, WHICH IS BAD. thats why most factory filters have so small tolerance (like 10 microns) or smth
Good content 👍 👍 I am from India, I have a 220cc motorbike (Bajaj Pulsar 220F) with axial type braking installed, but I have modified my master cylinder into a brembo rcs radial master cylinder but the caliper still has the default ones.. and also i am using sintered brake pads in my case to improve the braking ability.. 😊
You missed the main differences entirely, Your axial calipers have brake pistons on both sides of the disc that squeeze the pads onto the disc that is between them while your radial brake is actually a sliding caliper type that you will find on most cars and they have brake pistons on only one side of the disc. It pushes on the pad on one side and when that bottoms out the caliper is pulled across on its slide pins and applies pressure to the disc pad on the other side of the disc so one piston applies both disc pads. It sounds cumbersome but it happens very quickly and works well for everyday braking situations. Having piston on both sides of the disc is seen as a better system for heavy duty braking but it is more expensive to make so you only see it where necessary or where brake pad changes need to take as little time as possible as in racing. The situation with the master cylinder pistons means nothing in relation to their ability to apply the brakes if the leverage and freeplay is the same for both. In that case the force applied will be the same. You may well have a difference in feel but that is subjective and will be different for a variety of riders. Hydraulic pressure is equal in all directions so if your handle leverage is the same and the master cylinder piston dimensions are the same and the caliper pistons are the same spec then braking force will be the same no matter what brake handle system is used.
My gen 1 r125 is axially mounted caliper (layer ones are radially mounted however looks like it has a radial style master cylinder, (brembo made so who knows) 😂
I prefer top notch pads in axial calipers than crap pads in radial calipers. EBC HH for my Versys and my SV1000S
I have brembo axial brake caliper with axial brembo master cylinder on my Ducati 1000S, still works much better than a brand new mt09 with axial brakes
Good disertation.
As usual with safety-related parts on a vehicle, the best parts are often cheapest when including the cost of an accident and the chance of avoiding it through better gear. Saving money on tires means buying the absolute best for riding on the street, because that's where the dangers are. With brakes, it's similar, but the price increase is often too much for some to bear. Buy the best brakes, best tires and never skip the abs. If in doubt, remember how many drivers are texting and driving.
I'd wager your average Joe or Jill Kickstand couldn't tell the difference using 'em if they couldn't see which type they had and nobody told 'em, but thanks for explaining something I'd wondered about for awhile but was too lazy to really investigate.
I ride a Chinese 450 sumo (KTM replica) that came with an "Axial" caliper. just did the oversize 320mm rotor upgrade with Galfer pads, stock was 260mm with I don't even know what type of pads it came with. I agree that the "Radial" caliper are better. But, that upgrade is freaken incredible. If I pull as hard like I did with the 260mm rotor, I will endo over the bars... I also now how good "Radial" calipers are as I owned from a 350cc to a R1. So I really don't think I need anymore breaking power.
@johnmeurer4780
Жыл бұрын
Interested in what kind of Chinese ktm clone you have? Never heard of such Chinese 450.
I prefer Fred Flintstone brakes.
@ChaosCauses
Жыл бұрын
They rock!
Radial master cylinder feels so good when braking, I feel like I am in complete control of the braking force. It completely eliminated the spongy feel of the stock master cylinder and there is no going back . Is it necessary for the street ride? Absolutely not, but it’s a nice thing to have if you could afford one.
Drums and best 😅
Tacing applications maybe the radial is worth it. Normal street riding any setup is more than enough
Radial towards the Radiator, if there's one :P
My bike is an old Harley. HD has no clue what radial mounted brakes are😰
Next question is: Which is the floating part in the brake system? The caliper or the brake disc?
@eliinthewolverinestate6729
16 күн бұрын
My floating brakes are axial.
The big differences between radial and axial caliper designs are 1) the additional stiffness achieved with a monoblock body, and 2) accurate location via dowels in the fork leg. (Note how the radial caliper in the clip almost 'clicks' into place on it's dowels). The dowels take the shear loads very well. A dowelled monoblock body reduces the deflections that exist in other designs; less deflection means more load applied for a given pressure/load at the master cyl. It also probably improves the feel, being less 'spongy'. The solid / one piece nature of a monoblock caliper is better at reacting the piston forces which are, in simple terms, trying to open the U shaped cross section of the caliper. If an axial monoblock caliper was made as accurately and more specifically, accurately dowelled to the fork leg lugs, given the same piston area, it is likely it'd be almost as effective. Split axial calipers however, need to have their two halves very well connected/clamped together, with large mating surfaces (a thick, wide bottom of the U) to reduce bending loads in the clamping bolts and thus deflection, but the disc gets in the way of doing that evenly and within the small space envelope. One solution, or improvement at least, for split axial calipers would be to have relatively thin walled dowels (with the largest feasible dia.) running across the two halves and that were a very smooth or almost interference fit...
@ruquik
11 ай бұрын
you could just as easily make them in two pieces like any other automotive type 4 piston caliper instead of a mono design...
I just checked the bikes I've ridden and mostly, newer bigger bikes around 900cc have radial, and 600s below has axial. Older models like the T120 and the R9T has Axial even with huge engines. My Trident 660 has Axial since it's light weight, while my MT09 has Radial.
@rossmilespickersgill502
11 ай бұрын
my 390 duke has radial
Axial calipers can slide thus need pistons on one side only. The other sides barke pads ride on the calipers body itself. On radial mounts, you need to either have pistons on both sides (making the hydraulics path complex and calipers costly to make and maintain, or make the rotor disk floating on bobbins (costly rotors).
Nice 👍
What do you want brakes for? They only slow you down!!
Radial callipers are better on tarmac, where you have more traction and using slicker tyres breaking force is bigger. On motocross track you don't need such a strong breading force especially on front because your break caliper will simple block front wheel and cause crash.
I worked in hydraulics for 30 years and the answer to what is better is easy to answer... For the average person it doesn't matter what system is used. The difference between the two are very small and can easily be compensated by technology and clever engineering. Yes... there are differences between the two systems but these are more theoretical and- / or only in extreme contexts like on a race track for example. Again , for the everyday person in normal road conditions it doesn't matter 👍😀.
i even run radial master on my yfz450 quad....😎 the feedback is amazing
with radial I have better feel of the pressure throughout the squeeze.