I noticed that the Hillborne does not have any shifter bosses. Did Grant ever give a reason for this? I guess it's not a big deal, just curious.
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How does it compare with your Riv, bar/saddle relationship aside?
FWIW, I could reach the dt levers on my Curt Custom back when it had a
rear derailleur and I have no problem with those on the Herse.
These days my custom Riv is the far more comfortable bike for me. The Porter feels zippy but un-comfortable on rides longer than ~30 miles. I ride it when I visit 'home' but these days much prefer my Riv.
All that having been said, Dave is a great artisan and the Porter is still going strong and has a prominent
place in my heart (along with the custom Riv).
-JimD
I have a Sam Hillborne and went with barends for it, but I honestly prefer downtube shifting because of the ease of setup and lack of shifter cables on the bars. The sloping toptube argument seems like a good one for lack of bosses, but I think with my next bike, which will either be a Roadeo or a Hilsen, will be setup with downtubes. I still really love the Hillborne though, even with the shifter cables up on the bars.
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> I remember when the first bikes showed up with two sets of bottle
> mounts. We looked askance at 'em. Those were the soft-core gimmicky
> bikes of their day.
Maybe in California that might be true. Here in Northern Virginia, the
climate won't let you ride in the summertime on just one water bottle.
We have this thing called "humidity" that drapes you in a clinging
blanket of sweat, with temperatures around 100 degrees to go along with
it.
In fact, since most of the country stores have closed in the past 20-30
years, there are many places where even two large size water bottles are
insufficient, and the bikes I ride in the summertime have a 3rd water
bottle cage.
If you like a water/Gatorade mixture in your bottles, it's really nice
to have a 3rd bottle with just water for those times you need to pour
water on your head and onto your jersey. A mixture of water and
Gatorade really doesn't do nearly as well for that!
<snip>
And still hoping that Rivendell eventually makes a bike with just one
set of bottle braze-ons. A lot of folks don't need two bottles all
the time. And it would make the bike stand out just a little bit
more.
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN