I have not read all the loose stuff that has been put out over the years. But I have read whatever I have been able to find, for the most part.
Agreed the book is a good way of having a physical copy of grants writing. Always a good read. Fits in a jersey pocket(pretty sure that was done on purpose) so if you do like it you can give it out to the next cyclist you see.
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Buying the book is also a nice way to support a guy who has done and continues to do some things that we benefit from.
Or maybe they'll just think you're crazy, jinxed. :-)I've been dropping Riv-ish tid bits on my bike-commuting bro-in-law for a couple years. He's even ridden my AHH and a friend's loaner Riv-ish Schwinn High Sierra. He seems responsive in conversation and had nothing but high praise for Homer and the Schwinn, but in the end his first criteria remains that a bike has to be sub-18lbs. He talks about getting a more comfortable bike with all the Riv-ish tid bits and fit but he can't bring himself to buy a "heavy" bike.
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On Mon, 2012-08-27 at 20:19 -0700, Will wrote:
> My thinking is that he's simply too heavy for the tires. I'm thinking
> 135-145 pounds are about what those tires can support.
> There are no professional racers pushing 200 pounds.
I don't know about 22mm, but almost everyone I know who uses 23mm tires
is above 145 pounds. I used them for at least 10 years @ 200 lb, and I
have friends who weigh 220 and over who use 23mm tires. You do have to
run them at high pressure, of course: 120 psi for a 200 lb rider.
> Also, I think it is dangerous to ride 22mm tires on a carbon fork.
> You're pushing the pressure limits and doing so on a fork that
> probably won't support a flat at speed.
Why more dangerous with carbon than with any other fork material? I
don't see that at all.
I bought two; one to be my keeper, and then another to be my loaner.
While its true that if you're on the RBW-Owners-Bunch, you are probably well versed in it; however, I have to admit, one of the early chapters had some advice in it that I'd not read before, and it's proven to be a tidbit that was a realization for me, something I'd might've almost seemed to have had an inkling about but never quite put a finger on; after reading it, it took some woolin' over, some digesting, then some attempts at practicing such, working through it, it finally caught...
Well worth picking up, for me, at least....
Aww, man, don't keep us in suspense....