I feel like this is bizarro world where people are trying to convince me that it's actually a good thing to run with a hyper-sensitive rear brake with the same lever and caliper as the front. For all that extra weight and braking capacity the rear has that I never engage, because it simply locks up way before...and I don't do trials, I feel like that extra weight and braking capacity should be utilized at the front caliper. Make it bigger, give it more power, more heat capacity, etc. The shimano example above was decent...I like how hard the servo-wave up front clamps down. I have many places where I ride where I want to bleed a bunch of speed RIGHT NOW, right on the verge of locking up the front, but that kind of power for the rear brake is just dumb...so most people end up running a smaller rotor so it's not all screwed up...but then they get into the burning through pads fast because the heat capacity is crap with the smaller rotor. People do this IMO because this is how the industry packages brakes. With XC it's more common IME to run different size rotors front and rear, at least I do. No ridiculous 140mm rear rotor, but there the braking is a lot more short-impulse and the same kind of heat-management just isn't as prevalent.
Seems most stuff is being made for e-bikes these days...at least that means actually strong brakes finally for DH...even if they are over-doing the rear.
Seems most stuff is being made for e-bikes these days...at least that means actually strong brakes finally for DH...even if they are over-doing the rear.