Deacon,

I am glad that you were able get your brakes to work the way you want. I 
suspect you were told the opposite of what I am telling you, and that you 
understood what they were saying. Sadly they told you wrong. But happily 
they still steered you to something that worked for you.

The phrase "slushy brakes" suggests to me low effort producing large brake 
lever travel with little braking effect. If that's what you had it was 
likely due to elasticity in the brake system, which is a separate thing 
from leverage. If you experience that sort of thing, look for what moves 
when you squeeze the lever hard after the pads hit the rim. For example, I 
found the steel front cable hangers flex a lot. Replacing mine with the 
aluminum ones improved the feel of my brakes significantly. Cables that 
change shape as the brakes are applied can be another source of excess 
travel.


On Friday, February 20, 2015 at 4:21:44 AM UTC-8, Deacon Patrick wrote:
>
> Ted, et al engineer types: I happily bow to your knowledge on the angles 
> and leverage, though I was told the opposite (as I understood it) before I 
> made the change. Interestingly, either way, the experience went from slushy 
> brakes (short saddle cable, < 90˚ intersection with the brake arm) and 
> salmon pads, to passable strength except in single track steep descents 
> (long saddle cable, close to 90˚ intersection with the brake arm). But that 
> point is mute now, as the Paul's are wonderful! I look forward to snow-free 
> trails so I can try them out!
>
> With abandon,
> Patrick
>

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