On a long descent using the rear brake lets the rear wheel share some of 
the heat load.  A good thing on any bike, even more vital on a tandem or 
when running tubulars to avoid softening the glue.

Redundant brakes are good thing, too.

Bill
Stockton, CA

On Thursday, January 14, 2016 at 9:44:51 PM UTC-8, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> I just reinstalled the rear brake on the '03 Curt, because I wanted to use 
> the 18 t (66") freewheel on the flip side of the rear hub. This is 
> annoying, to me, because I have become so used to the ease of fender 
> installation and wheel installation and removal that you have without a 
> rear caliper messing things up (damned modern complications).
>
> I'm very used to having only a front brake (operated with a right-side 
> lever, of course; what else would you use???) and only install a rear with 
> a freewheel, since I've been told I shall *die* if I don't have a backup 
> brake.
>
> So, is the principal use of a rear brake merely as a backup should your 
> front one fail? Are there other uses? I guess if one is accustomed to 
> taking corners at the fastest speed possible, a rear brake for small, 
> precise speed adjustments without unduly loading the front tire, might make 
> sense; but does this make sense in fact?
>
> My first bike had a freewheel and no brake except my right Ked shoved onto 
> the front tire between the fork blades -- and I rode this thing on steep, 
> winding downhills and in heavy urban traffic. (OK, I was 15.) So a good, 
> solid front brake seems -- dare I say it? -- sufficient. Tell me why I am 
> wrong.
>
> -- 
> Resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, and letters that get interviews.
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> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nouvelle Mexique,  Vereinigte Staaten
> **************************************************************************
> **************
> *The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a 
> circumference on which all conditions, distinctions, and individualities 
> revolve. *Chuang Tzu
>
> *Stat crux dum volvitur orbis.* *(The cross stands motionless while the 
> world revolves.) *Carthusian motto
>
> *It is *we *who change; *He* remains the same.* Eckhart
>
> *Kinei hos eromenon.* (*It moves [all things] as the beloved.) *Aristotle
>
>
>

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