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Tolle Sprocket Brake

Sprocket brake by Tolle

Item №
27-750

Sprocket brake by the Swedish manufacturer Tolle where the 48 teeth chain sprocke acts as a brake disc. Thus the right wheel side is completely cleared of attachments and single flange hubs or wheels can be mounted. The kit comes with stainless steel sprocket disc, polished dual piston caliper with anchor plate and mounting parts. Fixing the the brake anchor requires the supplied bracket to be welded to the frame.

The brake pads supplied have an anti-rotation device. If you are bothered by the protruding tab, you can saw it off flush with the caliper housing. However, the anti-rotation lock should be retained.

  • for 14 mm master cylinders
  • stainless steel / billet aluminum
  • required brake fluid: DOT 4 or 5
  • Inner Ø: 50 mm
  • number of teeth: 48
  • pitch: 530 (5/8” x 3/8”)
  • with drilled disc, polished caliper
  • Sweden
  • gross weight: 4.19 kg

Brake Fluids

On your brake fluid bottles you will find notes like: "corresponds to DOT 3" or "specified according to DOT 5", or similar. These notes are important to us bikers. For basically, the biker should always refill what's already in his brakes. Don't mix! So why is that so?

There are two chemical bases you make brake fluids from. One is called glycolic ester. The other one is a silicone oil. Both are by no means compatible. If you mix brake fluid made from one base with its opponent made from the other base, you will get a highly aggressive mixture, that nibbles on your brake system's rubber gaskets and can coagulate to lumps that will eventually block your brake sytems. Not the stuff you will ever want to see in your bike ...

So, why are there two bases, and can't we agree on just one?

Brake fluids on a glycolic ester base are not compressible. That means they transfer pressure better. This is an important fact when you need a precise pressure point. E.g. on the race track or on a high power bike. On the other hand, these fluids are hygroscopic, that means they attract and incorporate water from the ambient air. This lowers the boiling point and you can experience problems under high brake stress, on the race track or when heading down passes in the Swiss Alps. Because of this you have to change this kind of brake fluid every two years. Glycolic ester based brake fluid is not nice to paint or plastic either. So don't spoil it on a refill. And choose only rep kits that can handle the stuff.

Silicone based brake fluid does not have these disadvantages. This is why it was invented in the 70es. Instead it is compressible to a certain degree, and you will have a less defined pressure point. So keep the stuff out of ABS systems. And, in some cases, water was found to literally deposite down in the brake calipers. Because water and silicone don't mix and silicone floats. And of course these brake systems also breathe the ambient air and take up water. The fluid just doesn't incorporate it. Therefore please change your silicone based brake fluid also regularly.

The glycolic ester based fluids are classified according to DOT 3, 4 and 5.1 . Silicone based brake fluids are only avilable as classified according to DOT 5. This is the point where confusion can start and lead the all too money-saving biker to risky action. So, once again, don't mix!

Harley used DOT 3 up to September 1976, after that they prescribed DOT 5. In the years 2005 - 2008 the factory returned to using DOT4, depending on models:

Touring 2005, Dyna 2006, Softail and V-Rods 2006, XL 2007, XR 2008.

Price incl. VAT*
924.09 €
* The price includes 147.54 € German VAT (19% or reduced rate of 7% for Books).
In stock. Ready for immediate delivery from our Würzburg, Germany warehouse
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