Rob F said:"A brake made up of only rigid lines (all else being equal) would be extremely 'wooden' and wouldn't improve the brake at all."To give a good progressive feel at the lever, you need some movement in the system. "
Disagree.
A brake (system) made up of only rigid lines (all else being equal) would be IDEAL.
The
ONLY reason flexible lines even came to exist at all in hydraulic brake systems is to allow steering and suspension movement. Period. No other reason.
I can think of no example where 'more flex' has been deliberately 'engineered' into a hydraulic system to enhance 'feel'.
Quite the opposite. Engineers and manufacturers presently go to every extreme to totally eliminate flexing in their hydraulic systems; reinforced braided lines, radial mount calipers, and so on. Flex is simply an unintentional by-product of engineering and manufacturing shortcomings.
The feel, braking power and operator effort of any system are the combined results of many things: the ratio of the master cylinder bore vs. caliper bore, and actuator pivot and leverage points, friction materials and (unintentional) flex.
If you are not comfortable with how hard (or wooden) your brake lever feels, or if it is too far away from your handlebar to modulate precisely while braking and you personally feel that more more 'flex' or 'sponginess' is the solution(???) for you, don't add more flexible hoses. Just don't bleed all the air out. Air compresses, fluid doesn't. You'll get the same effect.
And air is free.
Adjustable levers (some with variable pivot points) exist so brakes can be 'tuned' for the individual rider, depending on their hand size and strength. I haven't seen any direct fits for our relic airheads.
As far as the rigid line between calipers, the very few actual failures (or near failures) I have seen were caused by sloppy wheel or caliper servicing. I've never seen one damaged by road debris or outside projectiles.