Hello folks!
I have been sorta... well, really kind of busy trying to sort out this
CB400F weak front brake!
I have some great results finally! At least for this 1st attempt.
I arduously searched the internet for a 33mm Honda front fork with a proper back-side caliper mount (not like the pivoting, front mount) and found the 33mm CM400 fork would work, with minimal mods.
Well, minimal mods in my opinion anyway!
I installed the CM400 front fork and then modified the CM400 axle to work with the CB400 hub.
It's a really LONG story, but the CM400 has a a single piston like the CB400F (same piston diameter) but has rectangular friction pads for more surface area.
The CM400 is also a floating-caliper design, so the caliper body is rigidly mounted to the dual fork lugs on the fork lowers and internals float left and right with pad wear.
The CM400 fork tubes are about 2" longer than the CB400F forks, so to keep the ride height, they need to be raised about 1.5" in the triple clamps. I found that after installation, the bike's weight brings it closer to 1.5" difference.
It looks perfect to me after installation, and in fact if you are a cafe dude, it allows a placement to mount 33mm clip-ons!
I'm keeping the amazing CB400F low tubular bars... the best ever stock bars from Honda!
I started with a drilled and surface-ground OEM CB400F rotor, machined by TrueDisk LLC
tokarz48117@hotmail.com
This guy is fantastic, and has been used by many others here on this forum.
Soon, I realized the OEM 400F rotor did not work with my new forks and caliper position, due to pad and rotor contact diameters.
So, I transferred the newly drilled and surfaced rotor to my 2nd CB400F (yellow) with the stock front front-mounted circular-pad caliper...perfect!
It works SO MUCH better than the old, warped, glazed stock rotor.
Anyway, I ended up using the CM400 forks and a fixed caliper with a floating center section, rectangular pads and a Chinese CM400 rotor I got on AliExpress.
The CM400 rotor is thinner than the CB400F rotor, so it works as intended with the CM400 caliper.
I had to make an aluminum adapter plate on my lathe that had a centering relief for the center hole, and an offset outward that would place the flatter CM400 rotor in the center of the pad grip section.
I did that on my trusty Harbor Freight mini lathe, and it worked out well.
I drilled the 4 holes for the CB400F hub, and drilled the 6-hole rotor for the other two holes.
Not as squeaky-clean as it sounds, as I had to oblong two of the CM400 rotor holes (larger BC)
It all worked out just fine, and it works just great!
I replaced my drippy OEM circular-lid master cylinder (kept blowing DOT 3 onto my fuel-tank paint!)
I got a CM400 (rectangular lid) master cylinder and installed a new custom Venhill single-line brake line direct to the caliper.
I wired the original brake light sensor wires directly to the new master cylinder switch.
Here are a few photos that show the progress:
Here's one with the CB400 drilled rotor and the CM400 forks and rear caliper:
Here's another one with the CM400 drilled rotor and my adapter plate:
And some more:
The braking power is immensely better on both of the bikes... due to drilled rotors I suspect
BLIGHT