I bought my CSS rims about three years ago, that was before the recommendation to only put one CSS rim on a bike due to poor braking power that develops as the rims get polished by repeated braking over time. I have CSS rims on the front and rear of my Nomad and I have always used the Koolstop Rigida CSS brake pads.
When I heard that recommendation, it surprised me because my brakes were great and I was sure they would stay great forever. But, the front is less powerful than it used to be as the rim has been polished more over time. It is not bad yet, and hopefully it won't get bad. But, it is no longer great.
So, I have a rather crazy idea that I am wondering if anyone knows if it would work. I am using V brakes, regular brake levers that have the amount of cable pull you would normally use on a cantilever brake, and am using Travel Agents that convert the amount of cable pull so that a lever that uses a short cable pull can work with V brakes that require a long cable pull.
The Travel Agent is the weird round thing in the photo that substitutes for a brake noodle. If you are not familiar with a Travel Agent, more info here:
http://problemsolversbike.com/products/travel_agents/If I remove the Travel Agent and use my cantilever brake levers directly on the V brakes, that would almost double the amount of pressure that I would apply at the brake pad when I apply the brakes, compared to using the Travel Agent. The down side is that with less cable pull, I would have tighter clearance between the brake pads and the rim when I am not using the brakes, thus my wheel would have to be perfectly true.
So, the question is should I remove the Travel Agent? Is there a down side that I have not thought of? I have not made this modification yet, am not in any hurry to do so, but I thought I would run this idea past some of you to see if you thought there might be any downside that I have not thought of.
I am using a mini V brake on my foldup bike and using a normal cantilever type brake lever on that, the mini-V has 80mm of length from the brake pivot point to the cable attachment. I have never used a travel agent on that brake. The brake feels a little soft, but I do get great braking, almost too much braking power. But on my Nomad, the V brakes arms are much longer at 110mm, so there would be a lot more leverage applied than with my foldup bike.