Looking at the options available from Lewis, you see a very similar product but a price tag that is much, much easier to digest as a consumer. $459 USD per set seems almost too good to be true for something eerily similar to the bespoke offerings from Trickstuff.
Lewis isn't hiding that they have borrowed ideas and used similar design language in their products. Rather than hide the fact that they have taken what Trickstuff is doing and expanded upon the concepts, it is an admirable approach, but it's not about who did what and why.
I will likely never be able to afford or justify purchasing a set of brakes from Trickstuff. Their least expensive offering is just shy of $1,200 USD, and while I don't have any doubts that the price reflects the R&D, testing, and manufacturing processes, that is a substantial price tag for a set of brakes.
There is no getting around the fact that Lewis has clearly copied the design and processes of the Trickstuff brake offerings, but the way they have done this is a bit different.
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