For those of you who check out the pissed off thread, you're probably well aware of my first ride on my 75 cb400F ending abruptly when I encountered a lawn tractor crossing my path. With hindsight being 20/20 I beat myself up wondering if I had only done this or that to avoid it but I can't change the past and I'm done beating myself up over it. However I am certain that if the front brake had just a bit more braking power, I would've had that precious 1/2 second needed to clear that tractor. The front pads were new, I can't remember the brand but they are semi sintered and hadn't had enough miles on them to be bedded in. That's kind of the irony because I was planning on bedding them in during the ride but met the tractor mower before I got around to it so I'm willing to give the pads the benefit of the doubt at least for now. My question what can I do with its existing brakes to improve its ability to stop? It currently has...
Rebuilt factory MC
New OEM style (not SS) brake hoses
Semi sintered pads
Drilled rotor
Rebuilt caliper with new SS piston
It goes without saying, the only thing that matters is you survived and will recover.
To your point about what changes to your bike you might make to improve your chances next time, I’d offer the following advice: consider your tires also. From the pictures, you had a set of Shinkos that are a decent bias ply tire, but in no way are they as effective as more modern radials. Yes, I know it’s hard to source radials in the stock equivalent sizes, but they are out there.
Braking (relying heavily upon the front only) unsteadies a bike. It transfers all weight forward, compresses the suspension, and requires the front tire to perform all the road friction force to slow you down. At a minimum, using
both sets of brakes is necessary and possibly would have provided you that extra moment of steering around. That is unknowable but is typically supported by post-incident analysis.
Regardless, front brakes alone are not the answer. Front, rear, tires, riding/braking techniques are what keep you safest and performing best (racing). Braking wins races, braking saves lives. It is a skill all too frequently left unpracticed despite our years of riding experience. Nothing within here is meant as a sleight or criticism, only intended to offer you more information to consider as you rebuild the bike and ride again.
As always, very happy to hear you’re recovering and my empathy for your accident. Good on you for wearing the proper gear too!