If you HAD to choose new V brakes for a Retrobike?

Paul Motolites, if you can justify the expense for this particular bike. I first tried them in 1998 when V-brakes were still a new thing. (to me, at least) Easy to set up, modulate more finely than other V-brakes and you can use them with multiple wheel sizes on the same bike. This is how I saw others using them that year. There was a bike messenger race that year (and again in '99) that was taking place on a figure-8 velodrome. Riders who didn't have track bikes were using their 26" MTB rides and fitting 650b wheelsets with skinny tires onto them. (it helps maintain the same wheel diameter that the bike was designed for) The Motolites were everywhere at that event. They're the best V-brakes I've ever used. They look trick as well.
 
Never Shimano with the parallel push for me - over complicated, they are always troublesome with screeching from that extra mechanism's slop.

Avid 25 are my first choice - lighter than XTR and work just as well.
I have few sets of Shimano XT V brakes with parallel push and I had trouble with noise and vibration. I have Avid 2.0 brakes on my Tempest and Shimano LX (same shape as the red DX sets) brakes on my Tequesta and they work just fine.
 
I have bough recently some V brakes for my pro racing, cheaper than the M900, the last SD7. I wold prefer my old ones but this are black and match better than the orange or grey ones.

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