This was a fantastic video watched the whole thing. With my Suntour and Shimano vintage bike building, I am EXTREMELY uneducated with Campagnolo and you are teaching me all the cool history and details! I was aware of delta brakes but wow, how many parts are in that brake caliper is crazy!
Wow , once again another great video. Taking me back. 50 years ,always hated center pull brakes found them to be too fidgety. Looking forward to your next video. All the best!
Thanks for the Kool Stop brake pad tip. My vintage Campagnolo brake pads are hard like rocks, and I just order Campy replacements. I will try Kool Stop next time.
I am always surprised center pull brakes never work as well as you would expect . You would have thought it was the most straight forward design . Years ago i had some delta (version ?) on a tt bike and they were ok at stopping , but you never felt like you could lock up your back wheel without both hands.
I figure its down to mechanical loss - despite the quality fit of the parts and pivots, there`s just too many small parts that can flex ever so slightly that adds up to... modulation... or the feeling that you could never get them to lock a wheel up... Dan
Almost picked up Campy Delta on eBay for a pricey import. After watching this video I changed my mind and stick to my C-super record, on a Colnago. They work great and looks classy. I subscribed.
My dad had the Shimano versions. I think they were 600 or Dura Ace AX. Compared to the Delta's, they were pig-ugly as were the Shimano elongated aero brake levers with hoods in this horrible greenish colour. I would have loved some Delta's but being a young tester, what I really lusted after was a set of Modolo Kronos. They looked far more minimalist and slightly futuristic for the time. No way near as beautiful as the Deltas, but they looked fast. The Kronos calipers were also centre-pull and the iconic levers were extremely popular with the UK time trial scene in the mid-late 80's . They still occasionally crop up on ebay, and if I ever get round to finally rebuilding my old 80's frameset..............haha.
@@andymossYep, heard the same but havn`t worked on a set - suprised by how easy adjustments are on the deltas and how adjustable they are - especially toe in and pad angle, Dan
Have Record C 1st edition on my silver Alan with Campy pro fit clipless pedals , to my eye the Deltas look too big , cobaltos a bit dated , went with Chorus monoplanars 1st ed . Record C 1st ed cranks are the most beautiful in cycling , same goes for the 1st ed rear derailleur with the shield and no pulley shield cut outs . 2000 era smooth titanium skewers also look good .
Blimey, thought I was the going mad being the only one that super glues the ends of cables - ferrule ends drive me mad! Clean cut and super glue - neat, doesn`t unwind and you can strip and refit the cable - a no brainer, Dan
Thus writes somebody who has not had a set of these brakes in their hands. The design may have been flawed, and beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but I think one thing they are not is 'ugly'.
@@kris8165 Easy there guys, its just a set of brakes - beauty and/or ugly has no definitive answer, just personal taste - I did read about some chap who thought they reminded him of a fat mechanic in overrals working on a bike from behind and I can kind of see that.... Dan.
I was always curios about these brakes, They are so different to everything else. Thanks for a very informative video again.
This was a fantastic video watched the whole thing. With my Suntour and Shimano vintage bike building, I am EXTREMELY uneducated with Campagnolo and you are teaching me all the cool history and details! I was aware of delta brakes but wow, how many parts are in that brake caliper is crazy!
They are mad... Dan
I still ride Deltas. Never had a problem with them.
Well set up they do seem to work nicely, Dan
As you say, "spectacularly over-engineered", but things of absolute beauty. Great video sir, thank you.
Glad you liked it, Dan
Fascinating deep dive. Cheers for this.
Wow , once again another great video.
Taking me back. 50 years ,always hated center pull brakes found them to be too fidgety.
Looking forward to your next video.
All the best!
The best advise for Delta brake set up is to take the tire off. Run the cable through the presto valve hole so you can set the pads on the rim.
Yep, getting the cable length correct then trimming it is the challenge, Dan
Mine are GEen5 and they are simply the best functonaing brakes I've ever used. Still on my favourite bike.
Yep, they had it sorted by gen 5 - a fine brake but still a bit weighty in comparison with dual pivots, Dan
Thanks for the Kool Stop brake pad tip. My vintage Campagnolo brake pads are hard like rocks, and I just order Campy replacements. I will try Kool Stop next time.
No problem - the Campy ones go soooo hard over time, Dan
I am always surprised center pull brakes never work as well as you would expect . You would have thought it was the most straight forward design . Years ago i had some delta (version ?) on a tt bike and they were ok at stopping , but you never felt like you could lock up your back wheel without both hands.
I figure its down to mechanical loss - despite the quality fit of the parts and pivots, there`s just too many small parts that can flex ever so slightly that adds up to... modulation... or the feeling that you could never get them to lock a wheel up... Dan
Almost picked up Campy Delta on eBay for a pricey import. After watching this video I changed my mind and stick to my C-super record, on a Colnago. They work great and looks classy. I subscribed.
To be honest unless you really want a delta equipped bike in the stable I`d go Cobalto/Record every time, Dan
Thanks, I enjoyed the deep dive on the different brake types.
I was suprised I had so many Campy brakes to hand - too many projects on the go... Dan
My dad had the Shimano versions. I think they were 600 or Dura Ace AX. Compared to the Delta's, they were pig-ugly as were the Shimano elongated aero brake levers with hoods in this horrible greenish colour. I would have loved some Delta's but being a young tester, what I really lusted after was a set of Modolo Kronos. They looked far more minimalist and slightly futuristic for the time. No way near as beautiful as the Deltas, but they looked fast. The Kronos calipers were also centre-pull and the iconic levers were extremely popular with the UK time trial scene in the mid-late 80's . They still occasionally crop up on ebay, and if I ever get round to finally rebuilding my old 80's frameset..............haha.
I’m guessing they were 600AX. I had them on a 1984 Raleigh Road Ace and they looked amazing but were impossible to adjust.
@@andymossYep, heard the same but havn`t worked on a set - suprised by how easy adjustments are on the deltas and how adjustable they are - especially toe in and pad angle, Dan
Nice vid and fantastic Battaglin!
Have Record C 1st edition on my silver Alan with Campy pro fit clipless pedals , to my eye the Deltas look too big , cobaltos a bit dated , went with Chorus monoplanars 1st ed . Record C 1st ed cranks are the most beautiful in cycling , same goes for the 1st ed rear derailleur with the shield and no pulley shield cut outs . 2000 era smooth titanium skewers also look good .
Yep, pretty much with you there, Dan
😊could they have been called deltas because of their triangular shape,such as delta winged aircraft?
Apparently to do with similarity to Greek alphabet, Dan
i just bend the cable inside and there is no need to trim. Been running them since ever.
I know what you mean - I tried that but all seemed a bit tight, Dan
been looking forward to this one Dan they are quite beautiful iv all ways thought.. by the way i use your super glue tip all the time now!
Blimey, thought I was the going mad being the only one that super glues the ends of cables - ferrule ends drive me mad! Clean cut and super glue - neat, doesn`t unwind and you can strip and refit the cable - a no brainer, Dan
Wow great info dude.. subscribed 😊😊😃🚴🏻
Nice, glad you liked the video, Dan
Nice video, but you keep calling sidepull brakes ie Record etc, centrepull.
Yep, I do like to confuse things, Dan
They were the first brakes with ABS.... ;-)
Can feel a bit like that... Dan
9/64th will work if you don't have a 3.5mm allen. 👍
Good tip, Dan
krasny ale brzdici ucinek pry nic moc technologie a vzhled neprekonatelne pokud nekdo vlastnite prosim napiste sve zkusenosti dekuji
Sure, why not... Dan
Regardless of whether they worked well or not, I personally never liked the looks of the Deltas.
And many agree with you, Dan
To me the controversial thing is the design of those brakes! I'm sorry,but that design is awful, ugly 😞
Greetings from Kris
Thus writes somebody who has not had a set of these brakes in their hands. The design may have been flawed, and beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but I think one thing they are not is 'ugly'.
@@worldofameiso5491 They are TO ME!
And they’re brakes, not breaks.
@@Lemond75 Thanks for the correction!
My mistake! They are still, beyond the words, ugly, actually, incredibly ugly brakes 😉
@@kris8165 Easy there guys, its just a set of brakes - beauty and/or ugly has no definitive answer, just personal taste - I did read about some chap who thought they reminded him of a fat mechanic in overrals working on a bike from behind and I can kind of see that.... Dan.