Whereas if you'd snatched too much back brake, you would have skidded the back and slid over instead. There is no escape from mechanical insensitivity!
Think it’s something to do with indicating (arm out) to cross oncoming traffic and which you can use with the remaining hand. Think that’s why U.K. is opposite to other countries as we cycle on the left so are free to indicate to turn right.
All my fixies only have front brakes. I've never come across one with the lever on the left, although I can see the usefulness for right turns on steep downhills. Unless you're capable of superhuman leg braking, it can be a case of signal-brake-signal-brake and hope the following car gets the idea.I can verify the risk, in the UK , of having a front brake lever on the left.
As a youngster I had this setup, indicating right and braking with my left hand. Braked too quickly and went over the handlebars.
In my defence, I had been riding a fixed gear bike for several years. For these bikes, with only one brake, the convention is to have the lever on the left and had kept the preference on my first geared bike. I very soon afterwards switched the front brake to the right.
It is a legal requirement in the UK to have two effective brakes, so while it may not be as good as the front because physics, the back brake should still be capable of stopping the bike easily.However it really doesn't work for us in the UK given the back brake doesn't do that much, so trying to signal right whilst braking is very tricky.
It is a legal requirement in the UK to have two effective brakes, so while it may not be as good as the front because physics, the back brake should still be capable of stopping the bike easily.
However it really doesn't work for us in the UK given the back brake doesn't do that much, so trying to signal right whilst braking is very tricky.
That said, I'm too old to swap em round, especially as i am also used to a motorcycle