Re: [CR]Cable routing

(Example: Production Builders:Peugeot:PX-10LE)

In-Reply-To: <BAY103-W5302374CF0181BE9B2F3390580@phx.gbl>
References:
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2007 18:41:27 -0400
To: Doug Smith <douguk2007@hotmail.co.uk>, "classicrendezvous@bikelist.org" <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
From: "Sheldon Brown" <CaptBike@sheldonbrown.com>
Subject: Re: [CR]Cable routing


Doug Smith wrote:
>Following on from Hilary's comments and positioning of brake routing.
>His thinking is correct although I would like to add another theory.
>
>I always understood the reason was due to the UK cyclists riding on
>the left hand side of the road. The idea being when making a turning
>signal with the right hand your left hand is free to operate the rear
>brake thus making it more safe controlled manoeuvre on a busy road.
>When riding a fixed wheel and then having front brake on the left hand
>side it still gave the right hand freedom to signal with!

I am reasonably confident that this is the reasoning behind the custom. However, it is flawed reasoning, based on the widespread, but incorrect, belief that the rear brake is more important and "safer" than the front one.

See: http://sheldonbrown.com/brakturn for more on this.

When replying to threads on email lists, it would really help if you would either quote relevant parts of the message you're replying to, or leave the "Subject:" line intact.

When you change the "Subject:" line for a reply, you break the thread.

If you do this _and_ don't quote, it makes it difficult or impossible to know what/whom you're replying to.

Not every list subscriber reads every posting in the list; I typically get over 1,000 emails per day, so I have to be a bit selective.

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