Shep
Shep of the Dessert
The rear brake arm is in nearly the perfect position for when the brake is 'on' and the shoes are in full contact with the drum, from the looks of its position now it can only get worse the more the lever moves forward.

BUT they do need setting up right on the eccentric shaft.Agreed- there is nothing to add to Myke's posts - which is a rarity on any forum.


Do Airheads have brakes?
NO
Perhaps the PO wasnt a big user or brakes, and the pads are simply glazed. Or they could have been contaminated and never really recovered .
You could try scrubbing the disks with a SS scouring pad followed by heavy brake use, do it a couple a couple of times - if you notice any improvement then new pads will probably make it even better.
Like Rob said, scored disks wont work, and all the pivot points on the cable and MC must be well lubed and free.
ATE calipers pivot on a pin, and the pin also rotates to keep the pads aligned with the disks, so if that pin is not good and loose nothing much happens.
Your bike will almost certainly be on its second master cylinder by now, and the PO might have fitted the wrong size replacement.
11mm work best but are had to find , but 12 mm are easy to get and will make a big difference if your existing is a 14 or 15mm - the size is on the cylinder.
Forget about tales of long travel and spongy lever - it just doesnt happen unless you are doing something else wrong.
Seeing as the builder of the cafe racer made such a cock up on the rear brakes i expect he didn't have a clue how to set up the bmw front ATE brakes.
There is a cam that holds the caliper to the slider. This cam needs to be rotated on each caliper so the inside pad is just skimming the disc.
Undo the cam cover underneth the caliper (17mm or 19mm hex head) put your finger up inside (or bend down and look) and you can feel the slot in the cam where a thick screwdriver needs to be inserted and the cam turned.
Another good idea is to pull the cam out of the caliper and grease it - undo one of the wheel spindle clamp bolts and screw it into the cam from underneth, then grip it with a set of mole grips and pull it out.
These BMW cafe racer builders that seem to be springing up everywhere are a good source of work for me at the moment, correcting all their cock-ups.![]()