Result! I'm pretty sure as the brakes are,I'd wait to fall off after hitting the dog.mangocrazy wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:17 pm I was able to lock the front and fall off when a dog ran out in front of me...
Kawasaki H1 1971
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
"Be kind to past versions of yourself that didn't know what you know now."
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
An 8” (or nearly 8”) twin leading shoe brake should work well enough for sensible road riding, though it’ll get hot if you have racing daydreams and brake into all the corners.
Obviously it has to be adjusted so that both shoes actually meet the drum, but even then linings can take a few hundred miles to bed into the exact curvature.
Obviously it has to be adjusted so that both shoes actually meet the drum, but even then linings can take a few hundred miles to bed into the exact curvature.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
^^^^
This.
Good luck doing it though, it's a fiddly job and very easy to make the braking performance worse. I'd be inclined to get some engineer's blue, paint it on the drum, reassemble, ride it for a bit and see if all the blue has been cleaned off. That would be a start.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Puzzled. That will tell you if the drum is out of round ie if part never touches the pads but if part of the pads touches the drum (across the width of the drum) and the drum is round won't that clean all the blue off? ie it won't tell you if all the pads surface is in contact. Am I missing something?mangocrazy wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:43 pm^^^^
This.
Good luck doing it though, it's a fiddly job and very easy to make the braking performance worse. I'd be inclined to get some engineer's blue, paint it on the drum, reassemble, ride it for a bit and see if all the blue has been cleaned off. That would be a start.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
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But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Sounds blooming awesome! Love to read about making someone smile THAT much!!! (I know, the smile goes all through )
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Yes, I was suggesting that to test roundness of the drum. If you want to test whether all the shoe surface is touching the drum it might be possible to paint the shoes, but the blue would probably soak into the shoe material and negate the test. It might also cause the brakes to grab violently, throw you off and kill you.Count Steer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:57 pmPuzzled. That will tell you if the drum is out of round ie if part never touches the pads but if part of the pads touches the drum (across the width of the drum) and the drum is round won't that clean all the blue off? ie it won't tell you if all the pads surface is in contact. Am I missing something?mangocrazy wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 2:43 pm^^^^
This.
Good luck doing it though, it's a fiddly job and very easy to make the braking performance worse. I'd be inclined to get some engineer's blue, paint it on the drum, reassemble, ride it for a bit and see if all the blue has been cleaned off. That would be a start.
Perhaps...
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Also you said it's 'only' done 800 miles since a total rebuild
If the pads are pretty hard you may still not have full contact across the whole pad as others have suggested
If you take the wheel out you will see where contact is occurring on the shores without resorting to blue, it will be darker and shinier where it has made contact
You could find someone to reline them with a softer compound ( or AM4 asbestos for the win, none of this modern shite )
Glad you are enjoying it
If the pads are pretty hard you may still not have full contact across the whole pad as others have suggested
If you take the wheel out you will see where contact is occurring on the shores without resorting to blue, it will be darker and shinier where it has made contact
You could find someone to reline them with a softer compound ( or AM4 asbestos for the win, none of this modern shite )
Glad you are enjoying it
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Bart is a fat guy. Marj has blue hair.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
On-off-on-off juddering.
I’m surprised at the need for explanation. When you have the juddering going on when you brake, that’s when you address the oval drum problem.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
It's been nearly 50 years since I rode a bike with a drum front brake, and I can't remember ever experiencing that kind of sensation. So not really surprising.JackyJoll wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 11:08 pmOn-off-on-off juddering.
I’m surprised at the need for explanation. When you have the juddering going on when you brake, that’s when you address the oval drum problem.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Skub, that looks and sounds great (experience and sound).
As it's 1971 you can blitz around the ULEZ stinking up the place with 2 stroke goodness Not much of a holiday mind
As it's 1971 you can blitz around the ULEZ stinking up the place with 2 stroke goodness Not much of a holiday mind
Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Tom Pemberton was the only person I remember who could race these competitively. I did run in the same race once at Brands hatch. He won easily enough and I was placed somewhere about half a lap behind on a Honda 500 four. ( Long lap on the Brands full circuit !)
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
On my Z1 I had high bars,a worn rear tyre and a topbox,I'd only have been about 10 stone too. It bucked me off at around 120mph.
The perfect storm.
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
Tony Dunnell was leading the 1969 500cc Proddy TT by a fair margin and looked set to win until his H1 spat him off at the 33rd milestone on the 2nd lap...
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Re: Kawasaki H1 1971
The most spectacular one I recall was an early Fireblade going into one and ejecting the rider down Bray hill at a rate of knots.mangocrazy wrote: ↑Sat Jul 22, 2023 2:28 pm Tony Dunnell was leading the 1969 500cc Proddy TT by a fair margin and looked set to win until his H1 spat him off at the 33rd milestone on the 2nd lap...
"Be kind to past versions of yourself that didn't know what you know now."
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https://soundcloud.com/skub1955
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