Could be worse than a single rotor and a 4 or 6 piston caliper, see below.

This is my "other" bagger. It weighs in at about the same weight as my new Brembo ABS system on the SERK, but with that single piston caliper, you have to yank on the lever so hard you feel like you'll break the lever off. I've gotten used to allowing for things to happen and I guess I have good hand strength, worked on that all my life...

I traded bikes with the guy I bought this from originally before the restore who now rides an '03 SE Deuce and on the first country road stop sign, he ran through the stop. He asked me if the brakes were not working and I told they work fine, but he needs more piss in the pistons to make them work better.
Now I'll have to admit I have the cheap swapmeet pads installed and was actually thinking of trying the Lyndall (spelling) pads to see what help that would be.
Anyone have the old banana calipers like this with the new aggressive brake pads?
I have a friend with a fully restored '70 FLH and it has drum brakes on it. He said you need to start to stop a block ahead of the intersection to make it all work.
On my new boardtrack bike I'm building, I have a 13" rotor and HHI 4-piston calipers front and rear, but it is a single front setup. I think with a bike in the 400# range I'll be okay on that setup. But on the '76 FLH I'm probably pushing 1,200# fully loaded two up and that single banana brake just doesn't do it very well. So count your blessings with the new single 6-piston setups as they HAVE to be better than the old style brakes.
We're getting spoiled with all the new brakes they have now. Just think of some guy with a restored '55 Chevy running drums front/rear and then getting into a modified '55 with disc/disc setup. Man that IS night and day. I've done just that and you feel that the old drums aren't even working, but they drove with them for decades without power assist and then disc brakes and power assist.
Technology is a blessing. Think of all the lives it's saved over the many years; even in bikes.
I know that if I were in a panic situation with the '76 FLH that I could not stop as good as the SERK. I can lock up the brakes on the FLH, but it does take mental and physical strength.
Rambling, I know, shut up...
