Artificial intelligent assistant

What does "modulate" mean when referring to brakes? Often in a review of brakes, or an article talking about braking the author will use the term "modulate." E.g. "The brake modulates well" or "Modulate your front brake." What exactly does this term refer to?

Brake modulation how much fine control you have to apply a range of braking power distributed over the pull of your brake levers.

No modulation is basically no braking vs wheel locking. Having low modulation will mean it's hard to feather the brakes and you can only really lock up the pads. Too much modulation means you will bottom out on the levers before you lock up on the wheels. Ideal modulation gives you access to the whole range of braking power desired and allows you to apply it evenly across the range of the brake lever, giving you fine control over feathering the brakes, stopping firmly, or locking the wheel.

!enter image description here

via simkinsdesigns.com/modulation.htm

xcX3v84RxoQ-4GxG32940ukFUIEgYdPy f3aadded89d0ce7fca02c5f0f04113e9