This is true. I've got a couple of bikes (Muddy Fox Roadrunner and Specialized Hard Rock) with the original thick cable and a Giant Super Sierra with a cut down standard cable and I think the Giant's brake has more finesse.Ha that's one u brake problem I've thankfully not had
I always swapped the main cable to a standard one so much more modulation/feel than the standard Shimano one at iirc 2mm..... you could tow a truck with that!
They are all 1987 bikes: the golden era of U brakes, if a single model year could ever be an era. The Muddy Fox is the only bike I've ever owned from new and was the typical 'grow into it' sizing. Eventually, I did.
And this is very true. As an impetuous teenager, I needed to slam on the brakes whilst following too fast and close behind a bus down a hill in Upton, Wirral when it stopped - predictably enough - at a bus stop. The tyre on my Muddy Fox burst, loudly, when the brake pads were pulled into it. I ended up jammed down the side of the bus and the kerb without any serious damage.From a friend who had a specialized stumpjumper comp with them bitd, he reckoned without regular maintenance and careful watching they had a tendency to eat tyres. As they wear, the blocks move towards the tyre, while cantilever brakes moved spoke-wards as they wore.