Brake work was completed back in June of 2020, just before my second left ulnar nerve surgery.  I had some brake lines made up at Colliflower and purchased a radial master cylinder with a remote reservoir.  The master cylinder was from a Beull, part number H0507.1B7.  I used a radial master cylinder with a remote reservoir because a standard linear master cylinder with integrated reservoir was too big to fit on the 6 bend bars.  After rigging up a remote reservoir and awkwardly bleeding the system, it worked very well.  
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| A rough picture of the master cylinder during mockup.  Notice the limited space on the bars.  Here, I was trying to mount the reservoir on the top of the bar, but I ended up making a tab and mounting it to the frame of the master cylinder. 
 
 |  |  | Finished reservoir setup. 
 
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This bike has the complete stock wiring harness with all the lights, bells, and whistles.  This includes the handlebar controls.  They take up quite a bit of room on 6 bends, where real estate is at a minimum.
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| Awkwardly bleeding the system with the new reservoir mounted. | 
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| The pressure switch for the brake lights was incredibly tricky to mount, but I eventually fought it into submission.  It did not make bleeding the system easy.  Honestly, for a relatively simple system, this one took quite a while to bleed. 
 
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| Caliper hanging out while trying to get all the air up to the m/c.  I ran a 90* into the caliper so the brake line looked cleaner. | 
The caliper is a Hurst Airhart setup, which only gives you a little more braking power than a hill holder.  It's good enough to slow you down a little in the curves, but wont help much in an emergency stop.  It fits well with the vintage look of the bike, so it had to stay.  I cant say that for the radial m/c, but it's the only thing that seemed to work.
I had to replace the caliper bolts and the brake stay as well.  These were simple fixes.
 
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