This came in my latest email from BQ, any ideas what the next bike review is?Unfortunately, your subscription expired with the Autumn BQ. We are already working on the Winter edition. Among the many exciting articles: a visit to the workshop of maestro J. P. Weigle; a report from the incredible Silk Road Mountain Race; an affordable randonneur bike that rode, performed and handled like my own bike.
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My first guess is Norther. I have a feeling it rides like a Jan bike.
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I still don't see it... Where's the oval headbadge? Isn't it covered by a bag? The decal on the down tube kinda sorta could be Crust, but still hard to tell.
That oval head badge looks pretty similar to the other crust head badges. Probably the new lightning bolt
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Great stuff and very helpful once you get hold of them, but it's hard to keep on top of things.
Later,
Stephen (who's not fond of Instaspam)
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This came in my latest email from BQ, any ideas what the next bike review is?Unfortunately, your subscription expired with the Autumn BQ. We are already working on the Winter edition. Among the many exciting articles: a visit to the workshop of maestro J. P. Weigle; a report from the incredible Silk Road Mountain Race; an affordable randonneur bike that rode, performed and handled like my own bike.
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Later,
Stephen (who thinks social media is an oxymoron)
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On Nov 8, 2019, at 8:03 AM, satanas <nsc.e...@gmail.com> wrote:
Are any details actually known yet? I've no idea how to use IG, the images can't be enlarged on Android from links posted here and unfortunately Crust don't seem to supply info in any other way. :-(
Later,
Stephen (who thinks social media is an oxymoron)
https://theradavist.com/2019/09/ultra-romances-crust-lightning-bolt-is-lighter-than-a-soft-whisper/
Murray Watson - Melbourne, Australia
On Nov 8, 2019, at 8:14 AM, Andy Bailey Goodell <abg...@gmail.com> wrote:
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I wouldn't characterize it as a "drift towards carbon" as much as it is keeping up with the development of all-road bikes. Jan obviously thinks it's a big deal that manufacturers, not just custom builders, have picked up on this idea and are running with it. But look at what he most recently had built for himself:

Gram-shaving was a big deal for the Weigle CdM
bike that Jan commissioned in 2017 -- they were explicitly
trying for lightest bike, which indeed they achieved -- but
aside from a few weight-weenie parts like titanium brake pad and
cable hanger bolts and tubular fender stays, I don't see much
evidence for a blanket charge of "obsession."
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-- Steve Palincsar Alexandria, Virginia USA
> look at what he most recently had built for himself:
I'm close to pure vintage myself -- have never ridden a bike with any kind of brifters, and the only carbon bike I ever owned was a 1976 Exxon Graftek. Which I sold without ever riding it even once. But I still read BQ pretty much cover to cover, even the carbon bike reviews. I'd rather walk than buy one of those [jk], but it doesn't bother me that they're there.
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Honestly I don't find the time to read magazines. I like shorter bits of info, and so emails like 650/ibob are where I get my fix. More recently Reddit too: r/xbiking and r/bikecommuting. And a handful of Instagram accounts. I like the option to skip stuff that doesn't interest me, but when it's a printed I feel obligated to read it all and then feel like I wasted time reading about something I didn't want to.
I wouldn't characterize it as a "drift towards carbon" as much as it is keeping up with the development of all-road bikes. Jan obviously thinks it's a big deal that manufacturers, not just custom builders, have picked up on this idea and are running with it. But look at what he most recently had built for himself:
Gram-shaving was a big deal for the Weigle CdM bike that Jan commissioned in 2017 -- they were explicitly trying for lightest bike, which indeed they achieved -- but aside from a few weight-weenie parts like titanium brake pad and cable hanger bolts and tubular fender stays, I don't see much evidence for a blanket charge of "obsession."
On 11/8/19 11:35 AM, Michael Mann wrote:
I still subscribe and I find value in every issue. But I’m also turned off by the drift towards carbon bikes I just find Aesthetically ugly. And Jans obsession with incremental gram shaving and incremental speed improvements is of no value to me in my bike world. Even he occasionally acknowledges that scientifically at some point we have to reach peak supple. And then he’s off on another chase.
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 8, 2019, at 8:14 AM, Andy Bailey Goodell <ab...@gmail.com> wrote:
I asked for it several years back and read it, but interest waned after a few years. A lot of it at the time was Jan's custom fabricated bike stuff and his anecdotes about bike physics that he writes as scientific fact. I had a hard time enjoying the writing when I felt like I was filtering everything like "oh sure, of course your $90 tires don't ever flat". Every time he'd comment about a good-enough aspect about bikes being terrible compared to how Rene Herse would have made a custom better was another bit of interest lost and those aspects eventually turned me off to it. The bike reviews were also way above my pay grade, so I found it less useful once my stable was full (with $400 frames). I did find it shaped what I like about bikes, and now that it's stuck I don't care too much to read about disc brakes, carbon Calfees, or why their taillight is best because it's not visible from the side.
On Fri, Nov 8, 2019 at 9:44 AM Pat Smith <pbsm...@gmail.com> wrote:
Do you all feel that a BQ is a subscription that's worth having? May be good to throw to a family member as a Christmas present idea.--
On Wednesday, October 16, 2019 at 12:30:35 PM UTC-4, jamin orrall wrote:This came in my latest email from BQ, any ideas what the next bike review is?
Unfortunately, your subscription expired with the Autumn BQ. We are already working on the Winter edition. Among the many exciting articles: a visit to the workshop of maestro J. P. Weigle; a report from the incredible Silk Road Mountain Race; an affordable randonneur bike that rode, performed and handled like my own bike.
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And where else do you find that in a cycling
magazine? It's quite refreshing in my opinion to see modern
claims and enthusiasms being knowledgeably contrasted with and
evaluated against classic prior art.
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What does "obsession" mean? I looked it up
and found this: "an idea or thought that continually
preoccupies or intrudes on a person's mind." Not just
"occasionally," or "considered where appropriate under special
circumstances," but continually. I submit that a few
Ti bolts and a tubular fender stay out of the entirety of the RH
catalog do not constitute an obsession. I think their presence
in the RH catalog is closer to something like this: "We've
developed and tested these things for a special purpose and
they've proven themselves in practice, the R&D's been done
and the costs paid; why not make them available for general
sale?"
I don't care for the look of carbon bikes and so-called modern components either, and agree with your opinion that they are ugly. Here's what I like:

I honestly don't know whether this bike has those Ti brake bolts and tubular fender stays or not. If not, I wouldn't bother to change to them.
-- Steve Palincsar Alexandria, Virginia USA
D'oh, you're right! Maybe they'll make some of both. :^)
... Gatorskins ... it would have been much less pleasant.
When did you let your subscription lapse Stephen?
I'd say that the reviewer bias changed quite a bit about 3 or 4 years ago. The Jones review would count as the turning point for me. His reference bike the last few years is often a high trail Firefly All-Road. Bikes don't need to be 7/4/7 standard diameter tubing with sub-40mm trail and impeccably built to get a good review anymore. I'm not going to argue that Jan doesn't have his biases, just that the variety and styles of bikes have changed. His pool of co-reviewers has also expanded quite a bit.
The other thing that has changed is that the magazine has taken a shift from being rando focused to having more of a touring/adventure focus. I also really like the contributions by Natsuko who adds both a women's point of view and an excitement about destinations and the scenic aspects of the journey.
I was pretty heavily involved as a technical contributor 10 years ago and am mostly just a reader now, but the current magazine has even more for me to connect with than the issues from 10 years ago. I'm a bike tourist (who loves backroads dirt routes) and commuter, but not a rando.
alex
From: 65...@googlegroups.com <65...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Stephen Poole <nsc....@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, November 8, 2019 8:09 AM
To: Eric Daume <eric...@gmail.com>
Cc: Pat Smith <pbsm...@gmail.com>; 650b <65...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [650B] next BQ bike review
Yeah, maybe - it depends on your tolerance for propaganda. I let my subscription lapse because Jan's bike reviews seemed largely to be a soapbox for him to spout off ad nauseam about The One True Way everything should be. The Japanese industry and historical stuff was interesting, but the tests appealed to me about as much as the Murdoch press - bad for my blood pressure.--
Of course, if you're a fully paid up disciple of the gospel according to Jan this might not bother you.
Later,Stephen
On Sat, 9 Nov. 2019, 03:00 Eric Daume, <eric...@gmail.com> wrote:
I really enjoy BQ. They have a very strong bias in what they like, but their bikes tests and features are far better than any other bike magazine.
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Let's not forget, they tried indexing back in
the 1940s but it died due to lack of interest. (Of course, if
you only have 3 gears how great is the need for indexing?)
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I subscribe and enjoy reading it, although as time passes, I find that less and less content is relevant to the kind of riding I do. Few of us, I would guess, ride like Jan, and that, together with his known biases, helps me to interpret what I'm reading.
I don't buy the whole package, but I've adopted some of this knowledge for my personal benefit.