Man you're so fast, i was trying to keep up with you last time and i can't even keep up haha( the level gaps between newbie and pro are really huge, im just doing my best to be pro lol) I'm the guy who's always fist bumping ya hehe
That Mall of Asia area is reclaimed land from the sea. It was all sea from Roxas Boulevard outward when I was young, and now there is more reclamation going on...Manila is short of land. You seemed like having fun with the biking community here.
Brakes: Remove the pads. Applly alcohol 70% or more or use acetone(not nail polish remover) on pads and rotors. After its dry, use 300 or 400 grit sand paper on the pads so they don't have a shiny surface and all grooves are eliminated. Next, sand the rotor in a perpendicular motion to the brake pads action on the rotors. Since they are making noise, it is possible that you may have gotten brake fluid on the rotors and pads in the past, or some other oil or lubricant. The result was overheating the pads and the rotors and they became glazed. You may have to do this a couple of times. Hopefully, your new pads aren't saturated with oil or have become overheated. Hope this helps. I had the same problem. Sand the rotor only where the pad rubs on it.
Man you're so fast, i was trying to keep up with you last time and i can't even keep up haha( the level gaps between newbie and pro are really huge, im just doing my best to be pro lol) I'm the guy who's always fist bumping ya hehe
That Mall of Asia area is reclaimed land from the sea. It was all sea from Roxas Boulevard outward when I was young, and now there is more reclamation going on...Manila is short of land. You seemed like having fun with the biking community here.
Brakes: Remove the pads. Applly alcohol 70% or more or use acetone(not nail polish remover) on pads and rotors. After its dry, use 300 or 400 grit sand paper on the pads so they don't have a shiny surface and all grooves are eliminated. Next, sand the rotor in a perpendicular motion to the brake pads action on the rotors. Since they are making noise, it is possible that you may have gotten brake fluid on the rotors and pads in the past, or some other oil or lubricant. The result was overheating the pads and the rotors and they became glazed. You may have to do this a couple of times. Hopefully, your new pads aren't saturated with oil or have become overheated. Hope this helps. I had the same problem. Sand the rotor only where the pad rubs on it.
You're breaks are like my brakes- you'd be my newly found screeching buddy in that race
New rotor and pads na bado. I think I might have to change the calipers :-(
I did some zone 14 training and it was fun but had a couple heart attacks
Haha! As long as it was fun 😜
You're training or racing
This video is zone 3 training..
Why everyone follow the same short circuit?
Intervals training