Jeremy, I didn't read your post as a polemic, but rather as illuminating. 
 My personal experience has been that some road levers, especially Shimano 
SIS, pull too much cable to work effectively with cantis.  My 
recommendation to the OP, before spending any money, call Paul's and talk 
through the problem with them.  They are very customer oriented.  I would 
still bet that the system needs a different set of levers, not a different 
set of brakes.



On Thursday, September 1, 2016 at 10:54:44 AM UTC-4, Jeremy Till wrote:
>
> My post was not intended as a polemic, but rather simply to clarify some 
> of the dynamics at play with cantilever brakes and point out that high 
> mechanical advantage does not necessarily create the highest possible 
> braking force.  High mechanical advantage brakes like v-brakes and discs 
> (both mechanical and hydraulic) are great for mountain biking; I've used 
> both on my off-road rigs.  
>
> On Wednesday, August 31, 2016 at 9:57:54 AM UTC-7, ian m wrote:
>>
>> What Jeremy says also misses the connection between low mechanical 
>> advantage (necessitating more grip strength) and arm/hand fatigue. There's 
>> a reason why systems only requiring one finger braking are highly prized 
>> for off road riding, same would go for any situation in which a rider is 
>> braking often or while fully loaded.
>
>

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