Motorcycles are built heavier and intended for higher speeds. Bicycles are built for efficiency with human power.
Drum brakes have been available for many years. The types of bicycles that use these brakes have just recently started to be marketed in the US. These are still not as powerful as a good rim brake. They are used by commuters in Europe mostly where there is flatter ground and not at high speed.
Disk brakes did not get popular until recently. There are only a couple of them that I would consider for tandem or motorized bicycle use and these are very expensive.
A major problem with having stronger safer drum or disk brakes is the weight. For drum or disk brakes you need a stronger fork and rear stays. This adds weight and reduces the comfort of the bicycles that do not have shocks. All except a couple of the disk brakes available will fail due to heat coming down a steep canyon with a tandem bicycle. This is because they did not make the rotors heavy enough. I use hydraulic rim brakes and a drum on the rear that is used for a drag to control speed and keep the heat of the rims and allow me to rest my hands when coming down a canyon.
Why are disk brakes the common staple of a down hill competition bike? If you want good brakes guy's use what they are using! Not some tiny rotor set up.
I have been riding with both Hayes hydraulic with 203mm rotors , and Avid BB7s 203mm as well . They work flawless in rain snow or shine. There are a bunch of folks using rotors that are too small for down hill competition or a motor.
Plus there are some shotty calipers out there as well? MINE ARE NOT
Ok gotta ask why do you need a hydraulic set up for V brakes? That weighs too much?
I beg to differ on your weight scenario.
Disk brakes don't weigh any more than hydraulic V brakes. Especially the Avid BB7s I use with 203 mm rotors that are not hydraulic.
Ok Here is another one I have had V brakes hot enough to see smoke come off the pads. Giving the different tension on the spokes that lead to having to re true the wheel ever so slightly. I just don't think that ever was a good design. We are not talking about bicycles anymore.
I have yet to warp a rotor as I have used the correct size for the application. My wheels have never been so straight!
Besides, from an engineering standpoint, aluminum is a lousy brake surface. Little rubber pads wear out fast! If they are hard enough to last? Your rim is wearing out sintered metallic pads on steel rotors last a lot longer. [Quoted from elsewhere]
Why do race cars use disk brakes and not drum brakes? snork
Can someone show me a down hill mountain bike with V Brakes that is practical? snork
When v brakes have their death grip on the rims and you are going through a corner or bumps that does terrible things to a spoke set up[think warping]. They are better served to let flex naturally. That also allows better traction over terrain. True nice handling down hill bikes and motorcycles work this way and the wheels stay straight.
These are the true pinnacles of design!
Another important thing to say here is we are not talking about bicycles any more...Seriously.
Some of us joined the forum and put motors on them. snork
I can take my Morini build, the bike and I combined at about 375 pounds if I am not carrying any thing. I can stop on a dime all day long . The Morini is a very playful motor! So I do a ton of near panic stops. I have well over 2000 miles on my disk brakes and have not had to do squat to them!! Nada thing at all whatsoever except for very slight cable adjustments that took 2 seconds if that..
For the record I don't run small rotors either[think down hill competition]. BB7's 203mm rotors Love them and there grab and feel to me has totally been fine tunable.
Just saying......
Disk brakes have been around for awhile now. The sad thing is all the folks using undersized rotors. The technology is not that new
Until Wall mart sells a bike with real brakes.........Ha now that was funny!