Thank you for the breakdown.
As someone who stopped all this is '95, this in completely new to me so it's a bit of a minefield...
When you say that initially they simply made the forks wider [presumably the fork manufacturers just made wider versions of their existing crowns?] and that the disc mounts were 5mm from where they should have been, how did they get the brakes working?
Did they use spacers or something presumably?
I'm interested in who was driving the change - if it was the fork people then they would have had the mounts in the right place, so presumably it was the hub people?
In the way that certain cranks require certain width spindles to allow correct chainline and chain stay clearance, were there different requirements between hubs and forks to allow brakes to work?
Seems bonkers! Presumably there must be a breakdown somewhere of what works with what, and which need spacers [if they were indeed required], or is it all just guess work with late 90s / early 00s crossover?
Apologies for the questions, but this just seems very complicated! Changing from 100 to 100, fine I can understand that, but surely there must have been some cohesive effort between people to ensure things actually worked?!
They weren't all proprietary systems presumably, so you weren't stuck with products made by one manufacturer only, so how were things mixed and matched?
:? :?