Haven't used the BB7s but would think they would be great in modulation/control/feel - as it is a direct pull.
I forgot how great the BB7s work. Everything about them works great.
I look at it as, BB7s have less chance to throw you over the bars in an emergency situation since the power generated is not multiplied
and therefore more controllable by us.
I meant to mention this - if you have a brake that throws you over the bars, you don't know how to use your brakes, plain and simple. There are no two ways about this. I remember when I was younger and riding cheap bikes on steel rims and the brakes couldn't stop a free-falling feather, but somehow folks could still manage to flip over the bars because they had no idea how to use the brakes. So, any brake has the "power to throw you over the bars" if you let them.
I don't care if you've got 200mm rotors with multi-piston downhill brakes or weak single-pivot road brakes - if you can't do an emergency stop without fear of flipping -
stop right now and go learn. You need to know how to panic stop before you're in a panic situation. You need to know how to get your weight back. You need to know how to apply the front brake firmly but not with a sudden jerk. You need to know how to modulate the brakes so you can adjust as necessary without having to think about it.
I've been in plenty of emergency stop situations, and there have even been times when I've lifted the rear tire. I've never flipped over the bars (well, not from braking alone
) because I've taken the time to learn how to stop.