More cantilever fascination:
Cantilever set up and maintenance, courtesy of DrystonePaul
http://www.drystonepaul.com/maintenance ... r_1993.jpg
http://www.drystonepaul.com/maintenance ... r_1995.jpg
Discussion of the importance of brake rigidity between Jobst Brandt (famous expert on bike technology and ex-Porsche brake engineer - plus he's German!) and some other guy:
http://yarchive.net/bike/brake_rigidity.html
Brandt details the failings of conventional cantis and Vs when really precise but drastic control is needed - "cosine error" as pads wear. A must-read for anal retentives and obsessives especially! And possibly a boost for disc supremacists -
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.bicy ... 808d?pli=1
A real winner - an online museum of weird brakes -
this is so good! here:
http://www.blackbirdsf.org/brake_obscura/mtb.html
A quote from Keith Bontrager's famous article on cantilever adjustment, which now seems to be unavailable:
The set up basics for any cantilever brake system:
* Spread the arms at the top. Extend the pads out of the arms to do
this. It seems weird, but it's important. Don't get carried away and
extend them out so far that they are not held properly. Make sure they
are held very tight when you are done with toe in adjustments.
* Bring the straddle carrier down as low as you can. If you don't
know how close you can get to the tire, adjust the lowest point of the
straddle carrier even with the underside of the fork brace. This is a
clearance you use all the time and is a good landmark to shoot for.
* Adjust the pads first, then the carrier, them pull the straddle
cable across and make the final cable adjustments.