Is it possible to add front disc brake (possibly a rear disc brake) to a single speed
#26
mosquito rancher
It would require a huge amount of work to add rear disk brakes to a bike that wasn't built for them. It would require even more work with a single-speed. Consider this: with most single speeds, you adjust the chain tension by moving the wheel back and forth in the dropout. If you had a disk caliper mounted to the frame, the disk would move relative to the caliper, and that would be Bad. There are single-speed disk-brake bikes, but these have special dropouts where the whole dropout moves to tension the chain, and the disk caliper is bolted to the dropout. Adapting a frame to do this would almost certainly cost more than the frame is worth.
__________________
Adam Rice
Adam Rice
Likes For adamrice:
Likes For WizardOfBoz:
#28
Member
Thread Starter
Sorry for the very late reply. (I decided to leave this thread. I'm interested on converting now) It doesn't have a brand nor model. It's 26x1.95. I found a 1 inch disc brake compatible fork that is compatible with my bike. I have bicycle rim that have disc rotor mounting.
Last edited by Adis; 08-28-20 at 05:04 AM.
#29
Banned
One of my friends found a widget to put a disc brake caliper on a bike without the mounts @ Walmart...
reduce quality expectations as you should given that source..
reduce quality expectations as you should given that source..
#30
Expired Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: TN
Posts: 11,543
Mentioned: 37 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3674 Post(s)
Liked 5,432 Times
in
2,759 Posts
How is school? Back to in person or just online? FWIW the idea doesn't make any more sense now than it did in March.
#31
Member
Thread Starter
#32
Member
Thread Starter
#33
Senior Member
Sure, it's real easy once you have the proper fork with disc mounts. I really like Avid BB7's for their simplicity. Generally you can keep the same brake lever. Just mount the rotor to the wheel, mount the caliper loosely to the fork, run a new cable if needed, put the wheel on, squeeze the brake lever and tighten the caliper down. Quite often you won't even have to use the adjustments on the caliper. I've done this with two older 26" mountain bikes. Running discs on front, v-brakes on rear. No complaints.