The field of invention pertains to bicycle brakes and, in particular, to brakes which act upon the rim of bicycle wheels. Such brakes have been traditionally caliper brakes or cantilever brakes which both styles squeeze the rim of a bicycle between a pair of brake pads.
Caliper brakes may be single-pivot side-pull caliper brakes, dual-pivot side-pull caliper brakes, or center-pull brakes. Caliper brakes are usually less effective as tires get wider therefore reducing the brakes' mechanical advantage. As a consequence, caliper brakes are rarely found on contemporary mountain bikes. Calipers are ever present on road bikes, particularly the dual-pivot side-pull caliper brake with the single pivot style being found on inexpensive bicycles. Until the advent of dual pivot side-pull brakes, center-pull brakes were the option of choice and continued after the onset of more expensive side-pull brakes but have fallen out of favor.
Traditional cantilever brakes have an outwardly-angled arm protruding on each side, a cable stop on the frame or fork to terminate the cable housing, and a straddle cable between the arms. When the brake lever is applied, its cable pulls the straddle cable up causing the brake arms up and inward squeezing the rim between the brake pads, all very similar to center-pull caliper brakes. The side-pull cantilever equivalent to the side-pull caliper is the linear-pull brake such as Shimano's registered trademark V-brakes. This version of a cantilever brake has longer arms and the cable housing attached to one arm and the cable to the other. When the brake lever is applied, the cable is pulled the arms are drawn together similar to a caliper side-pull brake.
With a view of increasing braking power to a cantilever linear-pull brake and reestablishing the center-pull caliper brake as a viable and inexpensive option to expensive side-pull caliper brakes, the invention aims at providing a simple structure for easy assembly and by its mechanical advantage offers increased power and new applications for the abovementioned bicycle brake types.
The new brake requires few parts and is relatively easy to manufacture with little need for adjustment after assembly.
Depending upon applying the various embodiments of the brake, the caliper version brake can be produced competitively with the added benefit of enhanced braking power over standard caliper brakes. On the contrary, the brake can be upgraded to compliment expensive road bikes utilizing more expensive construction materials with more attention to elaborate detail and finish.
The new brake is adaptable to some bicycles using cantilever brakes, specifically the linear-pull variety. The pulley feature located on both arms increases the braking effect when the brake lever is applied. However, the similarity to a side-pull caliper brake is now superseded.
The new brake shares many of the features of a caliper center-pull brakes such as having a spring to return both brake pads at rest and have common actuation and similar components such as a yoke and straddle cable. Also, the entire assembly mounts to a single point. The new brake design draws upon the extended arms of the cantilever linear-pull brake and compliments the mechanical movement of a cable pulling and drawing the arms together creating the braking action. As with existing art, all of the new brake components may be conveniently made from common materials.
Unlike the present caliper center-pull and cantilever linear-pull brakes, the new brake incorporates dual pulleys, and the later now has a center-pull configuration. Regarding the caliper embodiment of the invention, the new brake's resemblance to the letter “X” in design feature parallels the comparison to the letter “V” as with the cantilever linear brake design.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description below, in light of the accompanying drawings.
For purposes of clarity and brevity, like elements and components will bear the same designations and numbering throughout the Figures.
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Having thus described the invention, what is desired to be protected by Letters Patent is presented in the subsequently appended claims.