Motorcycles

BrakeBuTT gives nearly any motorcycle adjustable linked braking

BrakeBuTT gives nearly any motorcycle adjustable linked braking
This simple box on the handlebars lets you switch the system on and off, and choose how much brake pressure to send to the back wheel
This simple box on the handlebars lets you switch the system on and off, and choose how much brake pressure to send to the back wheel
View 7 Images
The actuator is hiding behind the heel guard there, with a cable down to the brake lever pivot
1/7
The actuator is hiding behind the heel guard there, with a cable down to the brake lever pivot
Barely noticeable when fitted to this Yamaha streetbike
2/7
Barely noticeable when fitted to this Yamaha streetbike
Kits are available for many different dirt bikes
3/7
Kits are available for many different dirt bikes
Fitted to a KTM Duke road bike
4/7
Fitted to a KTM Duke road bike
This simple box on the handlebars lets you switch the system on and off, and choose how much brake pressure to send to the back wheel
5/7
This simple box on the handlebars lets you switch the system on and off, and choose how much brake pressure to send to the back wheel
Custom kits fit the system to a growing range of bikes
6/7
Custom kits fit the system to a growing range of bikes
The actuator unit is roughly the size of a GoPro, and wires in to the bike's battery
7/7
The actuator unit is roughly the size of a GoPro, and wires in to the bike's battery
View gallery - 7 images

Braking is one of the toughest skills to learn on a motorcycle. Get into most cars, and it's pretty simple. Stomp big pedal, car stop. Bikes, as any rider knows, are much more complex. There are two brake levers, each with its own way to kill you.

The front lever controls the powerful front brakes, and if you grab that too hard all the bike's momentum will shift the weight forward. If the tire grips, you might lift up the rear wheel and launch yourself Superman-style over the handlebars. If it doesn't, you can be flat on your face in less than a second. Try it in a corner, and you can quickly eat up whatever traction you were using for cornering and slide merrily off into the bushes.

The back lever – an unresponsive pedal you stab at with a stiff motorcycle boot, I might add – controls the rear wheel brake. Stomp it too hard, which is very easy when you're pooping yourself in an emergency, and you'll lose traction and lock the back wheel up straight away. Many a new rider has gone and over-prodded that lever, steering clear of the front brake due to uncomfortable weight transfer, and given themselves their first taste of road rash.

The proper way to do it, of course, is to apply both brakes together, making sure you've got around about a 70:30 ratio of pressure between the front and rear brakes. The front brakes handle most of the stopping, the rear brake causes the bike to hunker down instead of pitch forward, the angels sing and you stay out of hospital. But this is easier said than done, especially where spongy foot pedals are concerned.

Linked brakes are reasonably common on higher-end streetbikes now, Honda having developed its combined braking system through the late 70s and early 80s. Many of today's ultra high-tech sportsbikes rock electronically controlled proportional braking systems, most with lean angle-sensitive ABS included, and they're absolutely terrific at their jobs. But the BrakeBuTT is the first system we've come across designed to retrofit to just about any bike, giving you a fully adjustable combined braking experience.

The actuator is hiding behind the heel guard there, with a cable down to the brake lever pivot
The actuator is hiding behind the heel guard there, with a cable down to the brake lever pivot

This electronic system fits to your bike in two places. At the handlebars, it places a hydraulic pressure sensor that reads how much brake you're applying at the front lever, as well as an on/off switch and a dial that lets you choose how much braking you want at the rear wheel. Somewhere near your right boot sits a pressure control unit the size of a GoPro camera, that can put as much as 1,000 psi of pressure onto a cable that actuates the rear brake lever.

The effect is near-instant, putting as much brake pressure as you've dialed in back to that rear brake. BrakeBuTT's inventors seem primarily to be dirt bike riders, and you can easily see how handy this kind of system would be when negotiating steep downhill sections in motocross boots. The ability to flick it on and off and modulate the pressure as you ride gives you total flexibility.

The system also works on "most" road bikes as well, and it leaves you free to operate your own back brake as and when you like. Having a simple on/off switch makes this a linked brake system that lets you pull burnouts and/or stoppies at will, if you're into that kind of thing.

Fitted to a KTM Duke road bike
Fitted to a KTM Duke road bike

How much? It's AU$630 (approx. US$380), if your bike's one of the ones BrakeBuTT has already created a kit for. This includes a range of KTM, Suzuki, Yamaha and Husqvarna dirt bikes. A smaller deposit of AU$200 (US$120) can be put down for whatever other bike you've got, and the team will set about creating a kit to suit and charge you the rest once it's sorted. If they can't make one for your bike, you get your money back.

It's an interesting idea, and it makes a lot of sense as an aftermarket add-on if you can get around the idea that you're giving an electronic brain control of the brake lever on your motorcycle.

BrakeBuTT is live now on Kickstarter and you can check out the pitch video below.

BrakeBuTT- Stop better, faster, safer, for Motorcycles. (Canceled)

Source: BrakeBuTT Kickstarter

View gallery - 7 images
2 comments
2 comments
Martin Hone
Interesting take on braking control, but I can see people coming undone if they start playing with whilst riding. In an emergency you need to know what you have and how to use it to the max
Crimsontiger6
If you know how to brake properly you can stand most modern bikes on their nose using just the front brake. The trick is to squeeze it on not just grab a handful. If you grab it too fast the forks compress then rebound. The front looses traction and dumps you on your face. If you squeeze it on the front doesn't rebound dramatically and you can keep squeezing until the rear lifts. Better still buy a bike with the latest ABS.