Issues with your bike's brakes can range from minor and irritating to major and dangerous. Many minor annoyances can be fixed easily in your own garage.
June 30, 2015
Issues with your bike's brakes can range from minor and irritating to major and dangerous. Many minor annoyances can be fixed easily in your own garage.
Adjust your brakes and cables
Over time, bike brakes lose their bite and responsiveness because brake cables inevitably stretch and bolts work loose. At first, this is annoying, but if left unchecked it will eventually make braking unsafe. To remedy the problem, start by deglazing your brake pads. Next, you'll need to adjust the brakes and cables to ensure that the pads are efficiently contacting the rim.
Time needed to fix bike brakes: 30 minutes.
You will need: wrenches, Allen wrenches, pliers and screwdriver.
Toe-in your brake pads
Brakes screech as the pads attempt to grip onto the moving wheel rim. It's easy to stop the squeals through a process called toeing-in.
When you brake, the front edge of your pad should contact the wheel just before the rear edge; this slight angle of the pad, called toe-in, ensures quieter braking. In the past, all brake pads were flat, and the only way to create the toe-in angle was to bend the brake arms with a pair of pliers — this is not recommended as it weakens the structure of the arms and is difficult to do accurately.
Today, however, you can buy pads that include domed washers, which enable the pads to be set at any angle.
Easily retrieve their info anytime you need it on any of your devices