I`ve got a stupid question. Any advice?

kdxjpn

Member
Dec 15, 2007
7
0
Spent the entire day yesterday crashing my KDX while riding slippery downhill switchbacks. Everytime I turn right, I have to put my foot down, and can`t use my rear brake.
Has anyone ever added an additional brake pedal on the left side of the bike?. Or maybe a small brake lever beneath the clutch lever?.
 

ridejunky

Member
Dec 6, 2005
340
0
kdxjpn said:
Spent the entire day yesterday crashing my KDX while riding slippery downhill switchbacks. Everytime I turn right, I have to put my foot down, and can`t use my rear brake.
Has anyone ever added an additional brake pedal on the left side of the bike?. Or maybe a small brake lever beneath the clutch lever?.
I known people who have put a recluse clutch on their bike and turned the clutch lever into a rear break lever but I'm not sure of the availability for the kdx.
 

abramja

Member
Mar 29, 2006
4
0
optional clutch

The stunt bikers run hand brakes for the rear, they use a short lever, like a compression release lever with a hydraulic mechanism like your front brake. Or you can use a standard brake assembly and just cut off the handle to make it short. A little brake line and a T connector on your rear brake line, and you will have two levers for the rear brake.
 

MattTB

Member
Dec 9, 2001
6
0
No need for another brake in my opinion (which ain't worth much! :) )...

One thing my father drilled into my widdle brain when I first started riding back when I was 12 yrs old: "Keep your feet ON the pegs, toes up!!!". I rarely and do mean rarely put a foot down for a corner, etc... Did this make me a better rider? Tough call... it did keep my feet out of harms way for the most part over the 23 years I've been riding off-road. If you ride standing/crouched and corner with your feet up most of the time, you will not need another brake because your right foot will be there to use the pedal. You just need to compensate with body movement/balance to take your right handers. I actually can't believe how much some of my friend put their feet down around corners... I'm surprised more toes are not missing from them!

Sounds like your riding some really neat stuff! I love when the trail is slippery, nasty, hilly, etc... the worse the better. Also, your front brake can be your best friend in those conditions too, but you've gotta be real 'gentle' with that on slippery/downhill stuff. Try slowing it down a little, keep the feet up and use that rear brake instead of putting the leg out. Have fun and keep it on two wheels!

Matt
 

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