Yes, that’s what I’ve heard about these. Also, i can see from the pics how the cable angle might cause problems, especially on the rear.
Just like you, I’m living in a predominantly flat area. So weight saving is not much of a benefit. Also, Campy brakes and levers work exceptionally well together. Super powerful. Setting them up is a breeze. Cut the cable to length, set them up and off you go.
And I just love the look of skeletons.
Thanks so much for the STL file. I’ll give it a try. Mine is still intact. But also I wasn’t happy with the super sharp metal piece that is used to screw the cable port into. It’s biting into the inside of the seat tube. So I bodged it with multiple washers to distribute the pressure against a larger surface area. But I’m still not happy with that solution.
To be clear - only the setup woes gave me mixed feelings. Its pretty solid now and I'll report back after I've put some significant miles. The build quality is very good for how much I've paid... However I'd be upset if I paid what Cane Creek is asking for full retail. Seems like they've significantly
cut costs saved weight with each generation ever since they bought the rights to the design.
That being said, I'll probably swap to the unit you are using as soon as these things start malfunctioning... not taking chances with the brakes!
Also, to make the STL work, you still need the sharp metal piece... maybe ill design something to redistribute that pressure you are speaking of as a second piece to this....
Me too.... me too...
Ok the rivet for the bb makes sense. ALso cant you order the thru hole from aliex? But I would use PETG or abs even for a temp job. As PLA will bio degrate. and more easily melt in the sun.
It was a choice between easily designing and printing something overnight for free and getting to ride the very next morning and ordering on AliEx and paying for shipping and waiting like a month.
Also PLA gets a bad rep for the properties you've mentioned but in order to degrade and take UV damage to failure it would take a quite a long time and neglect. Im not worried about the temperature either as it's also mostly out of direct sunlight/UV, in a mostly occluded area of the bike, and if the weather got anywhere close to the melting point of PLA... lets just say we'd have a bigger environmental disaster to worry about. Besides, if I was really worried about the integrity of the part in question I can swap it out as part of every maintenance cycle like a brake pad as it only takes 5 minutes. Also the most important consideration when choosing materials for me is I was too lazy to swap the filaments
I've also purposely overbuilt the parts and printing it at 100% infill should be able to withstand repeated abuse. I'll also report back on how the part holds up over time as its purely assumptions at this point without actual real world use.