Not a counterpoint but some thoughts on your above, Andre...
I don't really have a problem braking my tandem with the self-energizing rim brakes and Kool-Stop salmon pads I am using...until speeds top ~72kmh/42mph. The barcon-actuated big Arai drum-drag brake simply keeps speeds to 72kmh and below, where the rim brakes are most effective.
Even so, I have hauled the bike down in amazingly short distances from 100kmh -- once, because overheating prevents a second go till everything cools down again. Jack (Dad) and I were booming down Chambers Hill here in Eugene, topping 101kmh when the traffic light at the bottom turned red shortly before we approached it. Despite seeing then 87 year-old stoker Jack in my rearview mirror, arm waving "go faster", I didn't figure we could make it through the intersection against the light before the cars waiting at it turned. Being pilot/captain, I could see better and was right. To be honest, I didn't even think of the drag brake and simply squeezed the blood out of my knuckles to actuate the rim cantis. Don't forget the magic ingredient of adrenaline in the braking mix! I do recall Jack yelping when the backs of his legs caught some melted brake pad, but the pads were far from gone after that one panic-fueled stop.
Some factors often overlooked by non-tandemists in braking discussions are a) the long wheelbase, which allows front braking at levels that would cause an endo on single bikes and b) the weight on the rear, which more heavily loads the rear tire and ups the level where it would break away in a skid. Of course, all this assumes reasonably fresh, grippy tires on good tarmac to maximize the friction coefficient between tire and pavement. All bets are off when it comes to downhill braking on gravel logging roads, but I can assure you it is possible to drift a fully loaded tandem with well-built wheels on soft surfaces and so scrub off speed on poor road surfaces. My stokers might disagree in principle -- and certainly in advance -- but have been grateful After.
It also helps to have minimal slop in the braking system which includes the frame. My tandem has massive tubing cross-sections, and I brazed a tubular cromoly brake booster for the front and tied it into the crown of the massive unicrown fork. I've ridden the bike solo on any number of 200km day rides, and though it feels a bit stiff up front, the ride is remarkably good due to being suspended well inside the long wheelbase.
All pretense of "good" braking goes right out the window when ridden solo and that is exactly the situation where I find myself shy on tire cross-section. Under heavy braking that would endo a single bike, the tandem ridden solo simply locks up the front tire and plows resolutely forward. I really can't use the drag brake at the rear without causing a skid due to the easy breakaway of the lightly loaded rear tire and the same for the rim-mounted brakes which also cause easy breakaway of the tire contact patch.
It was just this situation that resulted in a sad loss of life several years ago when a husband/captain rode a couple's tandem solo down a local pass to get the car for his exhausted wife/stoker. He "turned up missing" as the odd phrase goes, and a search was convened. He was found at the bottom of a ravine. Analysis of the skid marks determined the crash was caused by excess speed and poor handling...weight distribution was off without the stoker, speed was too high, and tire-pavement friction coefficient was insufficient for good braking/cornering and off he flew, with tragic results.
Most of my tandem day-touring is done on 26x1.5in road slicks. Oddly enough (especially given the overall weight of tandem with riders), they work fine and are remarkably comfortable and durable. When my Dutch pal came over for a tour, we took the bike with these tires up into the lower reaches of June Mountain on logging roads, fully loaded and towing a trailer. All-up weight with both of us and the very heavy Dutch Army tank driver's boots he brought for hiking was right at 272kg/600lb. My Danneauxbuilt trailer alone weighed 57kg/125lb fully loaded with food and lots of water (heavy in itself) for our dry camps. No real problem braking on 10% downgrades provided we kept the speed limited with the drag brake...it also proved up to the job as we descended past the Layng Creek Fossil Beds. On last Fall's tour through the Coast Range, I swapped in a 26x2.0 Schwalbe Dureme at the rear. The bike has clearance for *much* wider tires, but so far these have had no real shortcomings.
I have to admit, compared to my single bikes all expectations wrt to braking and tire cross section on a tandem carrying two people with or without luggage seem to be thrown out the window in practice and have gone counter to all I would have predicted. Biggest reason for the impending swap from self-energizing cantis to v-brakes is simply to try something new and to have a deeper perch for my hands and better leverage/comfort when riding atop the brake hoods. This change is a chance to play and compare, never a bad thing. If results are worse, I'll simply switch back.
You may find these links interesting:
http://santanatandems.com/Techno/UnderstandingBraking.htmlhttp://www.precisiontandems.com/arai.htmhttps://www.sheldonbrown.com/tandem-brakes.htmlFor those pining for a replacement Arai drum brake (no longer manufactured), a machinist local to me is offering a replacement in the Tom Maddox Machine "Mad Dog Drag Brake", described here:
https://tandemgeek.wordpress.com/2013/07/10/next-generation-drag-brake-now-available/I'll end my tandem ramblings here, or the topic may veer enough to be split and moved to the Tandem Talk board:
http://thorncyclesforum.co.uk/index.php?board=24.0All the best,
Dan.