I've experienced a strange behaviour from a set of Tektro Auriga Comp hydros since I acquired the bike they came with about 18 months ago. The bike in question also features regenerative braking via a DD hub motor, which means I hardly ever use the physical brakes, hence why I ignored the issue for so long.
I can't remember how the brakes performed when I bought the bike (couldn't have been too bad since it passed an unpowered test ride), but the rotors were warped to buggery so I replaced them immediately. I also performed a brake bleed as part of the initial bike prep. I didn't replace the pads since they looked pretty fresh and as if had plenty of life left in them.
Here's the problem – Under normal circumstances, braking is pretty pants. It takes quite a bit of effort to stop, more than hydros should anyway. However, if I carry out a few high speed stops (30mph to 0) and get some heat into the rotors, the braking performance is amazing.
Why would this be? Could the pads be contaminated and are causing lacklustre low-temp performance? Yes, I could have replaced them by now, but didn't in case the whole brake system needs replacing.
Anyone got any ideas?
I can't remember how the brakes performed when I bought the bike (couldn't have been too bad since it passed an unpowered test ride), but the rotors were warped to buggery so I replaced them immediately. I also performed a brake bleed as part of the initial bike prep. I didn't replace the pads since they looked pretty fresh and as if had plenty of life left in them.
Here's the problem – Under normal circumstances, braking is pretty pants. It takes quite a bit of effort to stop, more than hydros should anyway. However, if I carry out a few high speed stops (30mph to 0) and get some heat into the rotors, the braking performance is amazing.
Why would this be? Could the pads be contaminated and are causing lacklustre low-temp performance? Yes, I could have replaced them by now, but didn't in case the whole brake system needs replacing.
Anyone got any ideas?