79 PERFORMANCEBIKES.CO.UK | MARCH 2018
PB’S
GUIDE TO
BRAKES
HERE COMES THE SCIENCE BIT
BRAKE MOD WISDOM
OBSESSED ASwearewithgoingforward
fast,we’reequallyconcernedwiththe
business of slowing and stopping as quickly
and as controlled as we or the circumstances
might desire or dictate.
Braking systems have come a long way in the last 20
years or so and we also have access to an aftermarket of
brilliant components, not least in the field of front brake
master cylinders.
However, sometimes the results don’t always live up
to the expectations, as our own Kar Lee found out when
he changed the master cylinder on his Aprilia Tuono V4
Factory in the December 2017 Issue.
Words Alan Seeley | Photography Simon Lee
MASTER OF
YOUR DESTINY
How do master cylinders work, and which is best for optimum
stopping power? PB gets balls-deep in the science of braking
Taking effect
The hydraulic multiplier effect is at the heart of
understanding what goes on in a brake system and
informs the changes we might make to a stock set-up
and the differences they will make.
Imagine a master cylinder and a caliper as two
syringes of unequal bores – small for the MC and large
for the caliper as represented by their piston sizes –
connected by a tube (a brake line). Our syringes and
tube are filled with fluid and all air has been expunged.
When pressure is put on a liquid it moves equally in all
directions; fluid is pretty much incompressible, too.
What this means in our closed system is that when an