My wife and I were two hours into a planned seven day trip on our Stallions when approaching a "T" intersection my wife experienced a total brake failure. I was leading and had stopped at the intersection. She went "screaming" by me and make a 90 degree turn at about 35 MPH, coasted about 200 feet and stopped in a drive-way. We thank God there was no conflicting traffic. We were in a rural area. Note: she has only had the Stallion about three weeks and ridden less than 300 miles. She did a great job driving through this emergency.
The failure was caused by the jam nuts backing off the front caliper stabilizer rod on the ride side. The jam nuts had backed off enough that the rod departed the bike. When this occurred, either the departing rod or movement of the caliper severed the brake line and all pressure to the brakes was GONE! We were fortunate the failure was in a very rural area. We were headed for the Sierra's and Yosemite where the failure could have been VERY serious negotiating the mountain curves or in heavy traffic on an urban highway.
We checked the jam nuts on the left side and one had backed off all the way and the other was loose. Another failure waiting to happen. I checked the jam nuts on my Stallion and discovered that one out of the four was loose. From now on, pre-ride checks will always include the jams nuts as well as checking tire pressures and oil, etc.
I am posting this as a strong suggestion to check the tightness of the jam nuts on your caliper stabilizer rods!
The failure was caused by the jam nuts backing off the front caliper stabilizer rod on the ride side. The jam nuts had backed off enough that the rod departed the bike. When this occurred, either the departing rod or movement of the caliper severed the brake line and all pressure to the brakes was GONE! We were fortunate the failure was in a very rural area. We were headed for the Sierra's and Yosemite where the failure could have been VERY serious negotiating the mountain curves or in heavy traffic on an urban highway.
We checked the jam nuts on the left side and one had backed off all the way and the other was loose. Another failure waiting to happen. I checked the jam nuts on my Stallion and discovered that one out of the four was loose. From now on, pre-ride checks will always include the jams nuts as well as checking tire pressures and oil, etc.
I am posting this as a strong suggestion to check the tightness of the jam nuts on your caliper stabilizer rods!