Saw the Maico billet plates at the Buladelah Vinduro on the weekend. One on a 490, the other on his 250. They sure look nice.
The owner told me he just built the 490 up and took it for a squirt down the road. Got up to approx 50 kph and pulled the front brake on to turn around. The front backing plate shattered, spun around and smashed a section of the lower fork leg clean off. Scary shit.
Then he put the billet ones on. Happy days now
I can see why guys are nervous of the old magnesium plates. Safety HAS to come first and foremost.
Exactly the same thing happened to me!
I was testing my 490 Maico beside a busy road and pulled front brake on in 5th gear and backing plate mount sheared, snapped fork bottom off at axle and sent me careening onto the busy road with no steering narrowly missing several cars! Scariest thing ever!
Hence the Yamaha front wheel in my Maico and my concern over the std backing plate rule in the new proposed Evo rules.. understandable I think.
What proposed rules?? You cannot even resist when Dave is trying to genuinely get feedback on a serious issue. Strictly speaking the current rules don't allow billet backing plates either but lets not turn this into another BUN fight.
Heaven VMX never questions the billet backing plates for Maicos because it is a safety issue they offer no real performance gain over the originals except they are trouble free and don’t try to kill anyone.
Congratulations Dave on opening a serious issue up to constructive input. Parts that allow bikes to stay on the track by replacing suspect or unobtainable parts are essential.
***This my personal input not Heaven VMX
Classic Trials bikes in the Pre65 class also have issues with wheel hubs and brake components. They have chosen a good hub from the period, in the case of Pre65 that is a Honda hub and brake available in 1964 (only just). This hub just happens to be virtually identical to the Postie bike hubs still available today. This is a very cheap and easy solution that works and is equal for everyone.
Possibly a similiar solution for our sport could be the Yamaha conical front and alloy rear hubs pretty much standard on every Yammie dirt bike from about ’71 until ’80 including trail bikes. I know this is not a purist approach but ensures a ready supply of wheels with very affordable rims and spokes, good brakes. I realise another hub would be required for right chain final drive machines but I am sure another hub could be nominated.