Author Topic: Do any of your bikes have Magura rim brakes?  (Read 252 times)

Chris667

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Do any of your bikes have Magura rim brakes?
« on: September 25, 2024, 12:50:34 PM »
Hello everyone.

I have had Magura rim brakes since... forever. A faff to set up, but then you can forget about them.

Do any of you choose them for your Thorn (or not Thorn) touring bikes?

I am just curious - they seem to have fallen out of favour a bit, and I have a big bike purchase coming up in the future.

PH

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Re: Do any of your bikes have Magura rim brakes?
« Reply #1 on: September 25, 2024, 05:39:12 PM »
Were they ever in favour?  I know they were the go to for a lot of German cycle tourists for a number of years, but they were always a bit of a rarity in the UK. At least amongst touring cyclists, I understand they were a real boon for trials riders, but that isn't a field I know anything about. I tried them on my Raven for a short while, I didn't dislike them, but neither was I wholly impressed, the front one needed a brake booster to get the squealing down to an acceptable level and although I appreciated the light touch, and the self adjusting, I don't think they greatly improved my stopping distances.   I would have stuck with them, but along came carbide rims and there was no Magura pad, so the V's went back on.
I know they have their fans and if they work for you I can see no reason not to continue with them, but for me, hydraulic discs are preferable in every way.

martinf

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Re: Do any of your bikes have Magura rim brakes?
« Reply #2 on: September 25, 2024, 08:42:44 PM »
I have had Magura rim brakes since... forever. A faff to set up, but then you can forget about them.

Do any of you choose them for your Thorn (or not Thorn) touring bikes?

I've used them on a borrowed bike and they worked well.

But I prefer old-fashioned V-brakes or cantilevers on my touring bikes, mainly because I reckon it is easier to replace a broken cable than to repair hydraulics.

I do still have two other types of brake in service:

- a roller brake on the rear of one bike that has no provision for V/cantilever brakes or discs. Not very fond of this brake, it works OK but doesn't give the "feel" of other types of brake.

- a cable operated disc brake on the rear wheel of one of my Bromptons. Main advantage here is that the transmission stays clean for longer.

Andre Jute

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Re: Do any of your bikes have Magura rim brakes?
« Reply #3 on: September 26, 2024, 12:25:03 AM »
I have Magura hydraulic rim brakes on a Utopia Kranich. I like them for being sealed for life, maintenance free, very progressive (I run mine without the rim-stiffening brace), and excellent value relatively speaking when compared to the same quality of disc brakes. Also economical in operation: I fitted new brake blocks at 8000km. I vaguely remember dialling out a small but irritating squeak by simply swapping the blocks from side to side.

Among the brakes on my other bikes, like Martin I have a mixture:  mechanical discs, sudden-death roller brakes -- not for the inattentive and other social riders, in the past have had the usual more common types like V-brakes and cantilevers, and from schoolboy days remember back-pedal drum brakes and, if you were lucky, rod-operated front brakes.

I prefer the Magura rim hydraulics over any of the others I have experienced. The only downside to the Maguras is the inevitable replacement of the rim when it wears down, and in my case the hassle of finding suitable rims (24mm or more over the beads) to make the 60mm Big Apples I like perform right.