Fair enough, it doesn't look right to me..Really? The arrow is pointing the right way
Fair enough, it doesn't look right to me..Really? The arrow is pointing the right way
They’ve all got their own little quirks!Fair enough, it doesn't look right to me..
That arrow is on the caliper. Look at what the caliper is attached to, that is what I believe is what wheeliepete meant, I do believe.Really? The arrow is pointing the right way
Nope, that arrow is definitely on the carrier.That arrow is on the caliper. Look at what the caliper is attached to, that is what I believe is what wheeliepete meant, I do believe.
The mounting adapter ! A strong possibility....
I would not have noticed, he must have eyes like a Hawk!
regards
Andy
Is the marking possibly misleading? Does the Disk Pad cover the right area on the disk?Nope, that arrow is definitely on the carrier.
The caliper is mounted to it behind the washers
Sounds good, and it does imply that something was misaligned before....UPDATE!!
today I fitted a floating rotor. The noise has stopped! No idea why I just hope it stays that way!
Did you try unbolting the caliper tie it up and see if the noise went away ?New Update (For anyone who still cares!)
The grinding noise from the front brakes is back, so I'm thinking it is more than just a rotor.
Time to let David and Claude from Wisper take over!
Did you try unbolting the caliper tie it up and see if the noise went away ?
Also did you check the rotor wasn't rubbing the inside of the fork ?
Watching the short video's we can only guess, it's so much harder when the bike is not in front of you to diagnose.
Hi, how's it going? Have you managed to solve the issue?I checked that the rotor wasn't touching any part of the bike (fork or calliper) but only whilst on a repair stand. Is it possible that with a riders weight on it, and the force exerted by braking, the forks could be flexing a little and causing the rotor to touch somewhere?
When on the stand the noise isn't apparent.
Upon first setting off, when the brakes are cold, the noise is almost non existent, when they reach normal operating temperature it comes back, and when going down a large hill (hot brakes!) it goes again until they cool off a bit. Then when getting back home you can make the noise happen as I did in the videos by pushing the bike (until they have cooled again.)
Thanks for taking the time to try and help, and I do appreciate that its difficult without physically seeing it.
I used to work for Audi and the amount of times I was asked to diagnose somebody's car over the phone was unbelievable! It was always followed by "well why don't you know what's wrong with it!"
Hi David.Hi, how's it going? Have you managed to solve the issue?
All the best, David
Hi Dan, please keep me in the loop on this, it may mean the anchor points on the forks were not properly faced. If that's the case we will need to get the bike into the dealer so this work can be done.Hi David.
I'm good thanks, how are you and the team?
The last I heard was that Adrian was sending out a new rotor and set of pads.
He believed that the brakes may not have been set up properly by the dealer.
I am a little sceptical as I have put new pads and a rotor on myself, then had the brakes set up by my local bike shop and the noise still came back after some distance.
Cheers,
Dan
Hi, it’s pretty straightforward but if you need assistance please call Claud on Monday, please say I asked you to call.I have just had a new set of brake components delivered from Wisper (front and rear discs and pads)
Thank you for David and the guys for sorting that out.
Is there anything I should be doing before fitting them? I’m fine with doing car brakes, but not sure if there is anything different when it comes to bikes