Clayton,

No apologies necessary. You are right that a lot of brake judder can be 
cured with toe-in adjustment. However, on these carbon forks, even the most 
extreme toe-in doesn't solve the problem - we tried everything (including 
toe-out, different pads, etc.). On our first long ride on that particular 
bike, we actually stopped multiple times adjusting the brakes (with several 
professional bike mechanics on the team, everybody felt that _they_ could 
cure the problem, even if the others couldn't). I am glad that your bike 
doesn't display the brake judder any longer, because it's annoying, and not 
something I'd gladly live with on a daily basis.

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly

On Friday, June 12, 2015 at 7:50:46 AM UTC-7, Clayton wrote:
>
> Jan, I apologize. 
> I did not mean to offend anyone, and was totally mistaken about your 
> connection to Rene Herse. Your connection to them in my mind, somehow 
> became your brand, that you sold. However I stand by my brake comments. I 
> had intense brake judder on my Specialized Crux, and it was cured by toe-in 
>  (regardless of the cause). Other forks may not have the same results, and 
> using different brake pads could change things too.
>  

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