K2 Bike K2 BICYCLE manual

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Brakes are designed to control your speed, not just to stop the bike. Maximum braking force for each wheel occurs at the point just before the wheel “locks up” (stops rotating) and starts to skid. Once the tire skids, you actually lose most of your stopping force and all directional control. You need to practice slowing and stopping smoothly without locking up a wheel. The technique is called progressive brake modulation. Instead of jerking the brake lever to the position where you think you’ll generate appropriate braking force, squeeze the lever, progressively increasing the braking force. If you feel the wheel begin to lock up, release pressure just a little to keep the wheel rotating just short of lockup. It’s important to develop a feel for the amount of brake lever pressure required for each wheel at different speeds and on different surfaces. To better understand this, experiment a little by walking your bike and applying different amounts of pressure to each brake lever, until the wheel locks.

When you apply one or both brakes, the bike begins to slow, but your body wants to continue at the speed at which it was going. This causes a transfer of weight to the front wheel (or, under heavy braking, around the front wheel hub, which could send you flying over the handlebars).

A wheel with more weight on it will accept greater brake pressure before lockup; a wheel with less weight will lock up with less brake pressure. So, as you apply brakes and your weight is transferred forward, you need to shift your body toward the rear of the bike, to transfer weight back on to the rear wheel; and at the same time, you need to both decrease rear braking and increase front braking force. This is even more important on descents, because descents shift weight forward.

Two keys to effective speed control and safe stopping are controlling wheel lockup and weight transfer. This weight transfer is even more pronounced if your bike has a front suspension fork. Front suspension “dips” under braking, increasing the weight transfer (see also Section 4.F). Practice braking and weight transfer techniques where there is no traffic or

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Contents Page Page Contents Page General Warning First Bike FitSafety First Mechanical Safety Check First Ride Safety BasicsRiding Safely Off Road Safety Wet Weather Riding Night RidingPage Changing Components or Adding Accessories Downhill or Competition BikingStandover Height Saddle PositionPage Handlebar Height and Angle Control Position Adjustments Brake ReachTech WheelsPage Page Page Page Page Page Brakes Page Shifting Gears How a Derailleur Drivetrain Works Page Page Pedals Page Bicycle Suspension Tires and Tubes Page K2 Razorback Set-Up Instructions Air Spring Valve Rebound Adjustment Wheel Lockout K2 Tirade Set-Up Instructions Page Position a Rebound Adjustment Knob Lithium Set-Up Instructions Fig34 Attack Set-Up Instructions Page Service Service Intervals Page Page If Your Bicycle Sustains An Impact