I'm going to keep my eye on eBay then for the P4 calipers (not worried about fashion I still have some flared jeans!) and also for a master cylinder. If no calipers turn up before my pads wear out i'll try some of those suggested here. When they do turn up i'll also use those suggested here with them.
Regarding the sag, its not set up correctly yet as i'm going to fit an Ohlins shock that i have quite soon, but will do it after that.
Antonye's route will give the best bang for buck. The 19mm master cylinder will give the biggest improvement as the stock 16 is a little undersized. Pads (Bendix MF work very well) then calipers and ultimately discs.... I ran Brembo master, P4's, Brembo supersport floating discs and Bendix MF pads. They out performed the 1098 with much better feedback
Antonye's route will give the best bang for buck. The 19mm master cylinder will give the biggest improvement as the stock 16 is a little undersized. Pads (Bendix MF work very well) then calipers and ultimately discs.... I ran Brembo master, P4's, Brembo supersport floating discs and Bendix MF pads. They out performed the 1098 with much better feedback
I second Nelly on his choice of Bendix MF Pads - they are great pads with loads of feedback and not too pricey too.
Antonye's route will give the best bang for buck. The 19mm master cylinder will give the biggest improvement as the stock 16 is a little undersized. Pads (Bendix MF work very well) then calipers and ultimately discs.... I ran Brembo master, P4's, Brembo supersport floating discs and Bendix MF pads. They out performed the 1098 with much better feedback
Thanks, so will all Brembo 19mm master cylinders fit or do i need to look for specific part numbers?
There are 3 19mm cylinders. the differ in ratio...how it feels and how much lever movement you get. wouldn't bother with the 16 ratio. 18 is most popular while the 20 gives very little lever travel but arguably the best feedback. It is a bit "hair trigger" though. I'd suggest 18 for most
Note the 19mm Brembo radials have the banjo fitting on the bottom and will require the use of an alternative brake switch setup, such as a hydraulic pressure switch. I have often used the Brembo Radials but never with the standard hose having always gone to aftermarket aeroquip hose at the same time, so i'm not sure how well the standard Hose adapts to the 19mm radials.
A few years ago a mate updated his 748RS, adding Mag wheels, Corse spec Mag arm, shock, linkage along with a few other mods and after watching him stick it on pole at Castle Combe in the Sound of Thunder quallifying its safe to say the upgrades worked. So I thought I'd ask him out of all the upgrades which did he think was the best and his answer was the P4 Calipers
There are 3 19mm cylinders. the differ in ratio...how it feels and how much lever movement you get. wouldn't bother with the 16 ratio. 18 is most popular while the 20 gives very little lever travel but arguably the best feedback. It is a bit "hair trigger" though. I'd suggest 18 for most
Right then it will the 18 for me, thanks.
Quote:
Note the 19mm Brembo radials have the banjo fitting on the bottom and will require the use of an alternative brake switch setup, such as a hydraulic pressure switch.
I have been told that there is an RCS type that comes with a brake switch and these are much more reliable than using a hydraulic switch, but they are much dearer. Can anyone advise on this?
I have been told that there is an RCS type that comes with a brake switch and these are much more reliable than using a hydraulic switch, but they are much dearer. Can anyone advise on this?