RE: [CR]NOS Masi on E-bay, Now: Cable routing

(Example: Framebuilding:Norris Lockley)

Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2007 19:33:07 -0400
To: <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
From: "John Betmanis" <johnb@oxford.net>
Subject: RE: [CR]NOS Masi on E-bay, Now: Cable routing
In-Reply-To: <ABD079F38D58E54FBCC327A1D1BBD86302D5383C@kaci-mail-10.na.bvcorp.net>
References: <c44.12620e62.334d10be@aol.com>


At 11:20 AM 10/04/2007 -0500, Cheung, Doland wrote:
>I've also heard another line of reasoning is, "That is the way
>motorcycles are routed."
>
>I myself prefer left-front because it coincides with left-front-shift on
>my modern bikes.

So how do you reconcile having your motorcycle front brake on the right handlebar? (I started riding Eastern European and Japanese motorcycles and it took some effort to adapt to the right foot gearshift on British, Italian and some Spanish bikes. However, I have read somewhere that the human body is better at coordinating the left hand and the right foot. That was irrelavant when I raced motocross because I never used the cltuch to shift.)

Anyway, as I recall when I first started riding bicycles in England in the 1950s, they all had the front brake on the right. Take a look at pictures of some old roadsters with roller-lever brakes. They mostly all have the front brake on the right and it can't be switched without major work. When I got back into cycling in the late 1970s, I found the brakes had been switched. At first I thought it was a Japanese thing, but it turns out it was a decree by the U.S. Consumer Safety Nazis. Kids who grew up sliding the back wheel of their coaster brake bikes could do the same with a heavy right hand. It's all in here: http://www.cpsc.gov/BUSINFO/regsumbicycles.pdf "Unless a customer specifies otherwise, the hand lever that operates the rear brake must be on the right handlebar. The lever that operates the front brake must be on the left handlebar."

Of course, when it comes to classic/vintage bikes, I guess the best arrangement is how the bike was originally assembled (unless you find that awkward or dangerous to ride).

John Betmanis
Woodstock, Ontario
Canada