No. You can modulate your speed fairly well with a fixed wheel without needing a brake. Rapid changes of speed cause crashes rather than prevent them. This is the reason why track bikes don't have brakes. They cause more crashes than they prevent. Panicked riders grabbing a handful of brake and skidding cause plenty of crashes on the road, however on the road brakes are an overall benefit.zill wrote:
From reading that he got too close to the rider on the front, I get the impression that it was this that caused the crash?
He could have prevented himself from being too close by using brakes instead of steering into the duckboard?
In this case it sounds as if the rider was not aware that he was momentarily faster than the rider in front and chose to steer left down onto the flat section on the inside of the track (the duckboards) rather than to the right. What happens at the end of the straight and the track starts to bend left, a rider on the duckboards will either fail to have enough grip to turn without the assistance of the banking and will crash, or they will turn too late and find themselves going straight on when everyone else is turning left and either hit the back wheel of the rider in front and crash, or take out the front wheel of the rider behind often crashing themselves in the process. (I have had each scenario happen to me in consecutive weeks, fortunately not resulting in broken bones but it did cost me a new front wheel and clothes)
Overlapping on the inside is usually a bad move on the track.
Cheers,
Cameron