My 2 cents
My 2 Cents worth would be yes The bore dia. is matched to the caliper bores. The larger M/C bore means more volume / less PSI Smaller bore = more PSI / less volume of fluid. The OEM M/C is matched to the OEM calipers needs for both lever travel and feel (and look). The stopping power is determend by the m/c piston / rotor dia, sizes and pad material (Unless your grip is very week, the bike will stop in the same distance with the OEM m/c, you just squeeze harder with the OEM) Once in a panic stop on my then brand new XS750, I lifted the rear tire off the ground I hit the brakes so hard All the spongey feel in our brakes comes from the rubber lines, so your best fix for your dollar IMHO would rebuild the stock M/C's add the S/S lines and put on good quilty pads (not super aggresive, the rotors are not the high preformance racing rotors required for those) I use stock compound EBC and they work great and are quite on my bike
My 2 Cents worth would be yes The bore dia. is matched to the caliper bores. The larger M/C bore means more volume / less PSI Smaller bore = more PSI / less volume of fluid. The OEM M/C is matched to the OEM calipers needs for both lever travel and feel (and look). The stopping power is determend by the m/c piston / rotor dia, sizes and pad material (Unless your grip is very week, the bike will stop in the same distance with the OEM m/c, you just squeeze harder with the OEM) Once in a panic stop on my then brand new XS750, I lifted the rear tire off the ground I hit the brakes so hard All the spongey feel in our brakes comes from the rubber lines, so your best fix for your dollar IMHO would rebuild the stock M/C's add the S/S lines and put on good quilty pads (not super aggresive, the rotors are not the high preformance racing rotors required for those) I use stock compound EBC and they work great and are quite on my bike
Originally posted by old_skool
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