nklr- 45 hp two stroke
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ebc brakes
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ebc brakes
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- Posts: 712
- Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2004 7:48 am
ebc brakes

Sorry to say but EBC USA is lacking in lots of ways which I won t go into here but if you want real help with anything EBC, you need to contact the manufacturer in England. http://ebcbrakes.com/contact-ebc/ I have better connections if this doesn t work for you. Fred http://www.arrowheadmotorsports.com [b]From:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [b]Sent:[/b] Friday, February 06, 2015 12:20 PM [b]To:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [b]Subject:[/b] [DSN_KLR650] Fw: EBC Brakes I sent a request to EBC Brakes, yesterday, in which I asked for information regarding their HH pads for the front of the Gen1 & Gen2 KLR650. I asked about the friction to clamping pressure relationship, the effect of pad area, and the effect of increasing rotor diameter. I asked for links to web resources such graphs, but also asked for general effects which would be applicable to technician level understanding. Here was the response. I have to say that this will strongly influence my respect for EBC. I will pay the difference for OEM in future because I hold this to be unacceptable. Others' results may vary. Other brake manufacturers may be more helpful. ------ Forwarded Message ------ From: "Ben Lappin" To: "normkel32@..." Sent: 2015-02-06 8:45:33 AM Subject: EBC Brakes Hi Norm, Sorry, I don t have any graphs or resources that would illustrate the information you are looking for. Larger diameter discs, larger pad contact and multiple piston calipers all change the brake effort and effect but no graphs available that I know of to show the relation of this information. Kind regards Ben Lappin Meet our team at the following events: Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, FL, USA 15-18 October 2015 Las Vegas Convention Center Las Vegas, NV, USA 3-6 November 2015 Registered office: EBC Brakes USA Inc, 6180 South Pearl Street, Las Vegas, Nevada 89120. This email represents the opinions of the sender and may not portray any official company views and is not binding on the Company. Prices and deliveries quoted are only valid if countersigned by a Company Director and otherwise are to be considered an approximate quotation. No purchase orders are valid unless accompanied by a Company order number. This email is private and intended solely for the addressee. The contents may be confidential. If you are not the intended recipient of this email please do not read, print, copy, distribute or act in reliance on it. If you receive this email in error please notify us immediately so that we may forward it to the correct person and kindly immediately permanently delete it and any attachments from your system. Warning: Although the company has taken reasonable precautions to ensure no viruses are present in this email, the company cannot accept responsibility for any loss or damage arising from the use of this email or attachments. From: EBC Website Reply-To: "normkel32@..." Date: Friday, 6 February 2015 00:37 To: webmaster EBC Brakes Subject: Form submission from EBC website - Contact Page Form Your Name (required) Norm Keller Your Email (required) normkel32@... Select Your Country (required) Canada Your Message I am a retired automotive and motorcycle technician who is attempting to better understand braking performance. Are you able to point me to a technical level web resource which will help me to better understand the relation of brake pad clamping force to braking effort/effect. I will try to provide context in the hope that my request will be better communicated: The first generation KLR650 Kawasaki uses a 38 mm single piston front brake caliper. The second generation KLR650 Kawasaki uses a 27 mm dual piston front brake caliper. I estimate the piston area of the first generation as about 1134 mm2 and the piston area of the second generation as about 1145 mm2 or about 101% of first generation. I estimate the pad area of the first generation as about 1384 mm2 and the pad area of the second generation as about 1664 mm2 or about 120% of first generation. The first generation uses a 260 mm rotor while the second generation rotor is 280 mm. Both use the same master cylinder. The brake performance of the second generation is significantly better than the first generation when each use stock brake pads or both use your HH pads which are what I generally install onto bikes. Talking from a layperson's perspective and estimation: 1) How much of the improved braking is due to the larger diameter rotor? 2) Since the piston area and hydraulic pressure are similar, what improvement is due to the larger pad area of the second generation? 3) Is there a graph of apply pressure/clamping force which would illustrate the effect of increasing the lever pressure on braking? It feels as though the lever effort and braking effect are not linear. I appreciate your attention and will report positively the information to several large motorcycle internet groups. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Joined: Sun Mar 11, 2012 8:16 pm
ebc brakes
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- Posts: 2434
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 10:08 am
ebc brakes
I've been using EBC HH pads on both my Gen 1 KLR ( 40,000 miles ) and my 1250S Bandit (74,000 miles ) for many miles and years. Noticed the improvement in braking right on with stock disks on both. When breaking in the fronts on the KLR with Kenda 761, Kenda 21 , Gripsters, Plus what ever tire I had on at the time ( probably about 5 or 6 front pad changes due to dusty. I could make it howl on the old blacktop around the hood. I don't want/need any more than that. The Bandit will slide the front if I get stupid. Never cared at performance graphs and the like. Guess I'm old school and do and use what feels good to me and works for me.
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- Posts: 2434
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 10:08 am
ebc brakes

Sorry to say but EBC USA is lacking in lots of ways which I won t go into here but if you want real help with anything EBC, you need to contact the manufacturer in England. http://ebcbrakes.com/contact-ebc/ I have better connections if this doesn t work for you. Fred http://www.arrowheadmotorsports.com [b]From:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [b]Sent:[/b] Friday, February 06, 2015 12:20 PM [b]To:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [b]Subject:[/b] [DSN_KLR650] Fw: EBC BrakesI sent a request to EBC Brakes, yesterday, in which I asked for information regarding their HH pads for the front of the Gen1 & Gen2 KLR650. I asked about the friction to clamping pressure relationship, the effect of pad area, and the effect of increasing rotor diameter. I asked for links to web resources such graphs, but also asked for general effects which would be applicable to technician level understanding. Here was the response. I have to say that this will strongly influence my respect for EBC. I will pay the difference for OEM in future because I hold this to be unacceptable. Others' results may vary. Other brake manufacturers may be more helpful. ------ Forwarded Message ------ From: "Ben Lappin" To: "normkel32@..." Sent: 2015-02-06 8:45:33 AM Subject: EBC Brakes Hi Norm, Sorry, I don t have any graphs or resources that would illustrate the information you are looking for. Larger diameter discs, larger pad contact and multiple piston calipers all change the brake effort and effect but no graphs available that I know of to show the relation of this information. Kind regards Ben Lappin Meet our team at the following events: Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, FL, USA 15-18 October 2015 Las Vegas Convention Center Las Vegas, NV, USA 3-6 November 2015 Registered office: EBC Brakes USA Inc, 6180 South Pearl Street, Las Vegas, Nevada 89120. This email represents the opinions of the sender and may not portray any official company views and is not binding on the Company. Prices and deliveries quoted are only valid if countersigned by a Company Director and otherwise are to be considered an approximate quotation. No purchase orders are valid unless accompanied by a Company order number. This email is private and intended solely for the addressee. The contents may be confidential. If you are not the intended recipient of this email please do not read, print, copy, distribute or act in reliance on it. If you receive this email in error please notify us immediately so that we may forward it to the correct person and kindly immediately permanently delete it and any attachments from your system. Warning: Although the company has taken reasonable precautions to ensure no viruses are present in this email, the company cannot accept responsibility for any loss or damage arising from the use of this email or attachments. From: EBC Website Reply-To: "normkel32@..." Date: Friday, 6 February 2015 00:37 To: webmaster EBC Brakes Subject: Form submission from EBC website - Contact Page Form Your Name (required) Norm Keller Your Email (required) normkel32@... Select Your Country (required) Canada Your Message I am a retired automotive and motorcycle technician who is attempting to better understand braking performance. Are you able to point me to a technical level web resource which will help me to better understand the relation of brake pad clamping force to braking effort/effect. I will try to provide context in the hope that my request will be better communicated: The first generation KLR650 Kawasaki uses a 38 mm single piston front brake caliper. The second generation KLR650 Kawasaki uses a 27 mm dual piston front brake caliper. I estimate the piston area of the first generation as about 1134 mm2 and the piston area of the second generation as about 1145 mm2 or about 101% of first generation. I estimate the pad area of the first generation as about 1384 mm2 and the pad area of the second generation as about 1664 mm2 or about 120% of first generation. The first generation uses a 260 mm rotor while the second generation rotor is 280 mm. Both use the same master cylinder. The brake performance of the second generation is significantly better than the first generation when each use stock brake pads or both use your HH pads which are what I generally install onto bikes. Talking from a layperson's perspective and estimation: 1) How much of the improved braking is due to the larger diameter rotor? 2) Since the piston area and hydraulic pressure are similar, what improvement is due to the larger pad area of the second generation? 3) Is there a graph of apply pressure/clamping force which would illustrate the effect of increasing the lever pressure on braking? It feels as though the lever effort and braking effect are not linear. I appreciate your attention and will report positively the information to several large motorcycle internet groups. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Posts: 262
- Joined: Sun Mar 11, 2012 8:16 pm
ebc brakes
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- Posts: 2434
- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2000 10:08 am
ebc brakes
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- Posts: 712
- Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2004 7:48 am
nklr- 45 hp two stroke
Check out this video on YouTube: http://youtu.be/Rxdka2igpRk[b]Subject:[/b] [b]Ursus C-45 1st start after 40 years[/b]
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