No, just ignorant about bikes and wanting to learn[/quote]
TROLL ALERT: NO ONE IS THIS STUPID
ps.encule means to “fuck anally”
No, just ignorant about bikes and wanting to learn[/quote]
TROLL ALERT: NO ONE IS THIS STUPID
ps.encule means to “fuck anally”
I will do this
wat? lol![/quote]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWBUl7oT9sANo, just ignorant about bikes and wanting to learn[/quote]
TROLL ALERT: NO ONE IS THIS STUPID
ps.encule means to “fuck anally”[/quote]
If you want to help post, if you want to insult, go to the tinaj revealed thread! keep shit on track
also, be more original, your insults are boring
wat? lol![/quote]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWBUl7oT9sA[/quote]haha lol! i dident know!
I think your cool tina!
I swear thats what the guy did, I when in because I had a flat tire so I was obviously riding slower (I am not a fast rider anyway) and then I heard the squeaking noise which hadn’t happened before. The guy did what he need to do and told me to ride around and see if it kept squeaking and figure out which one it was. I did so, told him it was the back break, he took my bike and when he came back said he had sanded it down a bit more, he didn’t see any problems and it was probably the rain. Again, the bike hasn’t been ridden under the rain but it been wet around so maybe some water got to the brake
I don’t know exactly what kind of brakes they are, I will take a picture and post, maybe someone can tell me
If the road was wet, you can assume it got your wheels wet. And if your wheels got wet, you can assume your BRAKE got wet.
Chances are they’re just squeaking because they’re wet.  Could also be brake pad angle (like Rusty suggested)
also just an fyi…the reason behind sanding the brake pads is because after some wear the pads will develop a coating of brake dust/road grime that gives them a hardened surface and can cause them to squeak.  Lightly sanding the surface sort of refreshes them so to speak.
wat? lol![/quote]
Of all the people to not get that joke…[/quote]
I am ashamed that my username has something in common with pierre’s avatar… but I will stay strong.
Yr cogs probably on backwards.
Angela, meet Sheldon
for real, read this. It is one of the best things on the internet.
get some kool stop salmon pads.
also take your bike in to a shop with a knowledgable person and ask that person to you make sure your calipers have enough toe-in.
they should stop squealing after that.
also, you probably have bad balance because you’re so top heavy.
send me naked photos plz.
Ok, this is old as fuck but why were people so confused by sanding brake pads?
I do that all the time. They get dirty and small pieces metal/sand/other crap get embedded in them and that makes the pads wear down the rim, makes a horrible sound and kills the stopping power. I could clean them which is messy and no good against the embedded shit, or I can sand them and be done with it. This has nothing to do with squeaking though… that’s caused by pad compund and toe-in AFAIK.
I sand my pads when they get glazed. It makes a big difference. As for the squeak, I would clean the rim well with a very light abrasive (brass wool) and make sure the shoes are toed in.
for real, read this.  It is one of the best things on the internet.[/quote]
Doing that right now
[quote="(|)"]also, you probably have bad balance because you’re so top heavy.
send me naked photos plz.[/quote]
I am not “so top heavy” ,perhaps a descent bossom (if you are going by the picture I posted, Its not that large), but my torso around that area is 34inches. I do have a horrid balance, I am doing lots of balance exercises (mainly playing wii fit) to correct that.
I just want everyone to know how much I love them. I’d bet 20 bucks that almost everyone that read the title of this thread immediately had the same answer in mind but it took 15 posts of random trolling for Rusty to hint at the solution.