I'm sure there's a reason, I'm just not sure what it is.
You could make the rear rotor and the rear sprocket one entity. Basically a thick rotor with teeth. Obviously, the caliper would need to be "deeper" to clear said teeth and still reach the braking surface, but I see no other reason it wouldn't work, really. Slowing the sprocket vs. slowing the rear wheel would have the same effect, plus you'd have the added benefit of lessened weight and a thicker brake disk(which would probably be requisite for the intense force on it as a sprocket). Seems like something Buell would have tried. Again, I'm a lowly english major so I assume some of you people with careers in mechanical fields can school me on why this wouldn't work, but it just seems like a plausible idea.
You could make the rear rotor and the rear sprocket one entity. Basically a thick rotor with teeth. Obviously, the caliper would need to be "deeper" to clear said teeth and still reach the braking surface, but I see no other reason it wouldn't work, really. Slowing the sprocket vs. slowing the rear wheel would have the same effect, plus you'd have the added benefit of lessened weight and a thicker brake disk(which would probably be requisite for the intense force on it as a sprocket). Seems like something Buell would have tried. Again, I'm a lowly english major so I assume some of you people with careers in mechanical fields can school me on why this wouldn't work, but it just seems like a plausible idea.