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On Mar 20, 2025, at 7:19 AM, John Robert Williams <johnrober...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Mar 20, 2025, at 11:50 AM, Drew Fitchette <drewfi...@gmail.com> wrote:
Love this thread Leah!
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On Mar 20, 2025, at 1:33 PM, Armand Kizirian <kiziria...@gmail.com> wrote:
Speaks to the merits of having as little bikes as one needs. As life goes on, I find the decisions that allow for the most abundance of time (and actual bike rides) are the best ones to make. I rebuilt my road and mountain bike last year. Bikes that I've owned for 10+ years (and have rebuilt many other times). It was a pain. I don't ride them as much as I used to. Having one bike and making peace with that grows more and more attractive by the day.
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On Mar 20, 2025, at 12:31 PM, Kainalu V. -Brooklyn NY <kaivi...@gmail.com> wrote:
I personally think shims are pretty great!, certainly best to avoid, but when they’re necessary to use in order to use what you’ve got, great.One thing I was curious about was your method of sealant refilling. Sounds like you pop the bead out of the wheel and pour it in? Then hope for a relatively mess free reseating? It works, but not as good as sending it through the valve stem. If you’re not familiar, your presta valves on your tubeless wheel sets have easily removable cores that, when removed, provide an open tube into the tire. Orange seal sells these small bottles with the properly sized feeder tubes to make it easy and clean. They also provide a dipstick/reamer to clear that tube into the tire in case that sealant has sealed over the valve. It’s very straightforward and rarely messy, and no reseating of the tire necessary, just pump it up and you’re on your way.As for my bike life lately, I’m working on a rack for my Clem, and was scrounging for small bits of brazing rod last week to finish some small stuffs and accidentally used some brass rod that looked the part. Didn’t “flow” like it was supposed to, but all’s well after some filing and a trip to the olde welding shoppe.Last question- do you and anybody else out there dedicated to friction shifting swap your lower and upper derailleur pulleys? I believe the idea is that no side to side float on the upper pulley gives more feedback to your body’s sensors when it’s not settled, and presumably could lead to less ghost shifting?Curious.-Kai
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<IMG_1038.jpeg>
During the Great Stem Swap of ‘25, I managed to drop a hex wrench. I heard the ping of it striking the top tube of my raspberry Platypus on its way down. Ah, my first real paint chip, and right in a place I’ll see every day. Tonight, I painted that chip with nail polish I found in a close color match. It’s passable, but sad.
On Mar 20, 2025, at 4:16 PM, Ben Miller <ben.l....@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Leah,
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On Mar 20, 2025, at 6:57 PM, Ben Miller <ben.l....@gmail.com> wrote:
Leah,
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What have you all been up to? Are you having the same struggles? Who else is wanting to throw up their hands and just talk shop?
My experience with TP U tubes is mixed. I got several flights punctures right away. Tubolito replace 2 of them without question. The third I had to eat.
I have also had mixed results with patching them. Some paches very well others not so much.
I'm a glutton for punishment as the weight savings in a wheel are substantial so I'm gonna keep trying I currently have two running and they seem to have lasted a respectable period. I will try the Renee Hurst next
On my Rd. bikes and have run around 40 lbs
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My experience with TP U tubes is mixed.
… A few things:
I just want to talk bikes for a little bit. Threads with subjects are great and all, but so is talking shop. And we are about to hit a spate of cold weather here in SW Michigan and I am a little morose after a few days of Pretend Spring. I did get 25 miles in today and Monday, but now I want to talk shop.I don’t know what you all have been up to, but I have been fighting with and fidgeting with my bikes.Recently, I went through a great stem swap where I changed over most of my bikes to Faceplater stems. I even put one on my college boys’ big old Clem with Bosco bars. I even used my new torque wrench, and…the bars slipped! So now I have new Albatross bars and stem and shims because Riv believes this 31.8 clamp will grip 25.4 bars better. I have little experience with shims. And what I have learned about them is that they will set you to cussing. You want the bars centered, but then the shims slink out of their spot. When you want to nudge them just a bit, they have bitten into the center of the Albatross bar and you must find a way to knock them loose. Then the whole bar moves and you have to re-center and line up the gaps in shim/clamp. When you knock the shims loose a few times you realize there are metal shavings on your fingers, which means you are damaging stuff. And every time you decide to adjust the position you have to fight with the shims AND loosen and re-tighten 4 bolts with your torque wrench. I have emailed 2 people about this, badgering them to check my work and say it’s safe. I made peace with the shims being a millimeter uneven because at least the bars are centered. Then I went to wash the metal shavings off my hands.Shims. In short, I hate them.During the Great Stem Swap of ‘25, I managed to drop a hex wrench. I heard the ping of it striking the top tube of my raspberry Platypus on its way down. Ah, my first real paint chip, and right in a place I’ll see every day. Tonight, I painted that chip with nail polish I found in a close color match. It’s passable, but sad.I turned my attention to the mermaid Platypus, which I have no good excuse to have anymore, and noticed the rear tire is flat again. This is because on Monday, I decided I would top off the sealant, and could not be bothered to put the bike in the stand. The clamp on the stand needs more seatpost and I didn’t want to raise my saddle. So I did it with the bike on the kickstand and was never able to recover the seal between rim and tire. I have gotten by with this in the past. Got cocky and have now been brought low. Every week, and you can set your watch by it, I do the walk of shame into the shop. I fling open their door, the cowbell rings, and I announce, “Guys! A terrible thing has happened!” I will go there again tomorrow because a terrible thing has happened - that seal did not hold and we are back to flat tire and dripping sealant. They are sick of me at this point but they are Michiganders, good folk through and through, and they do not let on.Meanwhile, Charlie. I’ve been running away with Charlie on club rides. High winds have really cramped our style. Charlie and I are on a learning curve. I try and find out if the sounds he’s making are benign or malignant. There was a screeching pedal (a terrible thing that happened!) that my shop addressed. But now there is ghost shifting and something whirring when I stand to climb and toss my weight on the drive side of the bike. Charlie had been denied his accoutrements because I tried to make him Pure Road Bike and keep his accessories minimal. We failed miserably and I’ve junked up the bars just like Charlie’s a Platypus. The final piece, his German mirror, arrived today. I still don’t know if Charlie is any faster than a Platypus. Nothing is fast in these winds. We are out there shredding our thighs, trying to brave winds and get fit for the season with Charlie and his junked-up non-aero bars.What have you all been up to? Are you having the same struggles? Who else is wanting to throw up their hands and just talk shop?Leah
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On Mar 22, 2025, at 9:04 PM, Dan <gril...@gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you for your interesting posts Leah. I love reading about your thoughts as you grow and tinker your bike collection in ways to suit your preferred way of riding.
I'd like to touch on one aspect of what you've brought up, and share a similar experience. You say you tried to make your Charlie a "Pure Road Bike" with minimal accessories, but that you failed miserably. I can relate. I have a Roadini as of the start of the year. It's built as my Pure Road Bike, one to bring along on rides I take with the roadies I've been riding with lately. So it has fenders yes, but no racks. I've been trying. But I'm so used to being able to carry things on my bike that I feel like I am contorting myself to bring the bare minimum required for a ride: lock, pump, spare tube. With those jammed in I've no room leftover in my small handlebar bag for a coffee, outer layer, or book and pen for when I want to stop at a cafe to write in my journal. I feel like I'm only riding at 90%.I'm inspired by you. Why fight what we know works well for us? I can see in my future a small front or rear rack, just enough to support a larger handlebar bag or saddlebag. It'll still be my 'road' bike, no doubt. But it will be MY road bike. I shouldn't fight who I am, just because nobody else is carrying a practical-sized bag on their 'road' bikes. Now that I think on it, that's a good philosophy for life in general...
<IMG_0257.jpeg>On Thursday, 20 March 2025 at 12:53:40 UTC+10:30 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! wrote:I just want to talk bikes for a little bit. Threads with subjects are great and all, but so is talking shop. And we are about to hit a spate of cold weather here in SW Michigan and I am a little morose after a few days of Pretend Spring. I did get 25 miles in today and Monday, but now I want to talk shop.I don’t know what you all have been up to, but I have been fighting with and fidgeting with my bikes.Recently, I went through a great stem swap where I changed over most of my bikes to Faceplater stems. I even put one on my college boys’ big old Clem with Bosco bars. I even used my new torque wrench, and…the bars slipped! So now I have new Albatross bars and stem and shims because Riv believes this 31.8 clamp will grip 25.4 bars better. I have little experience with shims. And what I have learned about them is that they will set you to cussing. You want the bars centered, but then the shims slink out of their spot. When you want to nudge them just a bit, they have bitten into the center of the Albatross bar and you must find a way to knock them loose. Then the whole bar moves and you have to re-center and line up the gaps in shim/clamp. When you knock the shims loose a few times you realize there are metal shavings on your fingers, which means you are damaging stuff. And every time you decide to adjust the position you have to fight with the shims AND loosen and re-tighten 4 bolts with your torque wrench. I have emailed 2 people about this, badgering them to check my work and say it’s safe. I made peace with the shims being a millimeter uneven because at least the bars are centered. Then I went to wash the metal shavings off my hands.Shims. In short, I hate them.During the Great Stem Swap of ‘25, I managed to drop a hex wrench. I heard the ping of it striking the top tube of my raspberry Platypus on its way down. Ah, my first real paint chip, and right in a place I’ll see every day. Tonight, I painted that chip with nail polish I found in a close color match. It’s passable, but sad.I turned my attention to the mermaid Platypus, which I have no good excuse to have anymore, and noticed the rear tire is flat again. This is because on Monday, I decided I would top off the sealant, and could not be bothered to put the bike in the stand. The clamp on the stand needs more seatpost and I didn’t want to raise my saddle. So I did it with the bike on the kickstand and was never able to recover the seal between rim and tire. I have gotten by with this in the past. Got cocky and have now been brought low. Every week, and you can set your watch by it, I do the walk of shame into the shop. I fling open their door, the cowbell rings, and I announce, “Guys! A terrible thing has happened!” I will go there again tomorrow because a terrible thing has happened - that seal did not hold and we are back to flat tire and dripping sealant. They are sick of me at this point but they are Michiganders, good folk through and through, and they do not let on.Meanwhile, Charlie. I’ve been running away with Charlie on club rides. High winds have really cramped our style. Charlie and I are on a learning curve. I try and find out if the sounds he’s making are benign or malignant. There was a screeching pedal (a terrible thing that happened!) that my shop addressed. But now there is ghost shifting and something whirring when I stand to climb and toss my weight on the drive side of the bike. Charlie had been denied his accoutrements because I tried to make him Pure Road Bike and keep his accessories minimal. We failed miserably and I’ve junked up the bars just like Charlie’s a Platypus. The final piece, his German mirror, arrived today. I still don’t know if Charlie is any faster than a Platypus. Nothing is fast in these winds. We are out there shredding our thighs, trying to brave winds and get fit for the season with Charlie and his junked-up non-aero bars.What have you all been up to? Are you having the same struggles? Who else is wanting to throw up their hands and just talk shop?Leah
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<IMG_0257.jpeg>
I just want to talk bikes for a little bit. Threads with subjects are great and all, but so is talking shop. And we are about to hit a spate of cold weather here in SW Michigan and I am a little morose after a few days of Pretend Spring. I did get 25 miles in today and Monday, but now I want to talk shop.I don’t know what you all have been up to, but I have been fighting with and fidgeting with my bikes.Recently, I went through a great stem swap where I changed over most of my bikes to Faceplater stems. I even put one on my college boys’ big old Clem with Bosco bars. I even used my new torque wrench, and…the bars slipped! So now I have new Albatross bars and stem and shims because Riv believes this 31.8 clamp will grip 25.4 bars better. I have little experience with shims. And what I have learned about them is that they will set you to cussing. You want the bars centered, but then the shims slink out of their spot. When you want to nudge them just a bit, they have bitten into the center of the Albatross bar and you must find a way to knock them loose. Then the whole bar moves and you have to re-center and line up the gaps in shim/clamp. When you knock the shims loose a few times you realize there are metal shavings on your fingers, which means you are damaging stuff. And every time you decide to adjust the position you have to fight with the shims AND loosen and re-tighten 4 bolts with your torque wrench. I have emailed 2 people about this, badgering them to check my work and say it’s safe. I made peace with the shims being a millimeter uneven because at least the bars are centered. Then I went to wash the metal shavings off my hands.Shims. In short, I hate them.During the Great Stem Swap of ‘25, I managed to drop a hex wrench. I heard the ping of it striking the top tube of my raspberry Platypus on its way down. Ah, my first real paint chip, and right in a place I’ll see every day. Tonight, I painted that chip with nail polish I found in a close color match. It’s passable, but sad.I turned my attention to the mermaid Platypus, which I have no good excuse to have anymore, and noticed the rear tire is flat again. This is because on Monday, I decided I would top off the sealant, and could not be bothered to put the bike in the stand. The clamp on the stand needs more seatpost and I didn’t want to raise my saddle. So I did it with the bike on the kickstand and was never able to recover the seal between rim and tire. I have gotten by with this in the past. Got cocky and have now been brought low. Every week, and you can set your watch by it, I do the walk of shame into the shop. I fling open their door, the cowbell rings, and I announce, “Guys! A terrible thing has happened!” I will go there again tomorrow because a terrible thing has happened - that seal did not hold and we are back to flat tire and dripping sealant. They are sick of me at this point but they are Michiganders, good folk through and through, and they do not let on.Meanwhile, Charlie. I’ve been running away with Charlie on club rides. High winds have really cramped our style. Charlie and I are on a learning curve. I try and find out if the sounds he’s making are benign or malignant. There was a screeching pedal (a terrible thing that happened!) that my shop addressed. But now there is ghost shifting and something whirring when I stand to climb and toss my weight on the drive side of the bike. Charlie had been denied his accoutrements because I tried to make him Pure Road Bike and keep his accessories minimal. We failed miserably and I’ve junked up the bars just like Charlie’s a Platypus. The final piece, his German mirror, arrived today. I still don’t know if Charlie is any faster than a Platypus. Nothing is fast in these winds. We are out there shredding our thighs, trying to brave winds and get fit for the season with Charlie and his junked-up non-aero bars.What have you all been up to? Are you having the same struggles? Who else is wanting to throw up their hands and just talk shop?Leah--
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On Mar 23, 2025, at 3:43 PM, Ben Miller <ben.l....@gmail.com> wrote:
Jason, nice bike! Looks like a great ride :)
Yeah, to quote Uncle Ronaldo Benedict Ultra Ronnie Romance, "Where are you even going without a bag?" Even Jan says a "performance" bike should be fully outfitted: "[It's] ironic: Even the most exotic sports cars are equipped for driving at night and in the rain." Even though he's focused on going fast on "performance" bicycles, he believes bikes should be equipped with fenders, lights and luggage.I live in SF, where it rains infrequently, so I only have 1 bike that remains fully fender'ed. But all my bikes have luggage and lights. My Roadeo is my most road-only focused bike, with STI levers, higher gearing, and 38 mm slicks. It has always had a dynamo hub and a Swift Rando bag (which I don't even think they make anymore?!?), but I can go just as fast on it as I could with my carbon fiber "race" bike that it replaced. That bike would only fit 23 mm tyres and had a tiny little saddlebag from the bare minimum of tools/repairs.A few years back, I did the Kokopelli Bicycle Relay Race with 3 friends. It was ~530 miles from Moab to St George (It's since been retired, but here is the link: https://kokopellirelay.com/moab-st-george/) I rode my Riv Rambouie for my segments, which was ~150 miles. You need to complete it in under 24 hours. We weren't there to win it, but it does mean you need to average >22 mph to finish, not a slow pace. When I showed up with my Ram, with its leather wrapped handlebars, downtube friction shifters, flat pedals, and (comparatively) giant handlebar bag, the other teams laughed and thought I wasn't serious. But as the race went on, and we showed we could hang, all the jokes stopped and they starting respecting us. Sure we did finish last (My team was the definite goofballs, the rag tag underdogs. But we had waaaay more fun than anyone else). But when we finished, the race organizers admitted they didn't think we would and were clearly impressed that we had. Which to me felt like a win!Anyways, one of my segments during the Kokopelli ride was a nighttime ride up to the summit pass near Boulder Mt before descending into the town of Boulder, UT. The climb was ~1000 ft and the descent that followed was >3000 ft. It was 2 AM and the moon was nearly full on a cloudless sky at 7000 ft. The ride up was a decent gradient, so I was pretty warm, but the ride down was freezing. To have a bike that I could carry all those extra clothes, plus food and water, and have a dynamo hub meant I didn't need anything, I was on my own. But everyone else needed to have their team to meet them at the summit to provide clothes and a good number of them also had their support vehicle shadow them done the descent to provide additional lighting. I did the whole thing solo, and it was one of the most magical bicycle experiences I have ever had. Just me, my bike, the moon, and the mountain.Below is a photo from the Kokopelli ride, but during the day when it was pushing 95+ F :) The freezing temps would come later!
<IMG_1481.JPG>--On Sunday, March 23, 2025 at 11:44:15 AM UTC-7 dros...@gmail.com wrote:I hate bar shims more than any other component. I finally figured out that the best thing is a swept bar with a BMX stem. I run a steel copy opt of a Crust Ortho on my Gus with a 70mm Paul Stem. It’s not the most aesthetically pleasing setup but the bars absolutely do not move.On Wed, Mar 19, 2025 at 10:23 PM Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:I just want to talk bikes for a little bit. Threads with subjects are great and all, but so is talking shop. And we are about to hit a spate of cold weather here in SW Michigan and I am a little morose after a few days of Pretend Spring. I did get 25 miles in today and Monday, but now I want to talk shop.I don’t know what you all have been up to, but I have been fighting with and fidgeting with my bikes.Recently, I went through a great stem swap where I changed over most of my bikes to Faceplater stems. I even put one on my college boys’ big old Clem with Bosco bars. I even used my new torque wrench, and…the bars slipped! So now I have new Albatross bars and stem and shims because Riv believes this 31.8 clamp will grip 25.4 bars better. I have little experience with shims. And what I have learned about them is that they will set you to cussing. You want the bars centered, but then the shims slink out of their spot. When you want to nudge them just a bit, they have bitten into the center of the Albatross bar and you must find a way to knock them loose. Then the whole bar moves and you have to re-center and line up the gaps in shim/clamp. When you knock the shims loose a few times you realize there are metal shavings on your fingers, which means you are damaging stuff. And every time you decide to adjust the position you have to fight with the shims AND loosen and re-tighten 4 bolts with your torque wrench. I have emailed 2 people about this, badgering them to check my work and say it’s safe. I made peace with the shims being a millimeter uneven because at least the bars are centered. Then I went to wash the metal shavings off my hands.Shims. In short, I hate them.During the Great Stem Swap of ‘25, I managed to drop a hex wrench. I heard the ping of it striking the top tube of my raspberry Platypus on its way down. Ah, my first real paint chip, and right in a place I’ll see every day. Tonight, I painted that chip with nail polish I found in a close color match. It’s passable, but sad.I turned my attention to the mermaid Platypus, which I have no good excuse to have anymore, and noticed the rear tire is flat again. This is because on Monday, I decided I would top off the sealant, and could not be bothered to put the bike in the stand. The clamp on the stand needs more seatpost and I didn’t want to raise my saddle. So I did it with the bike on the kickstand and was never able to recover the seal between rim and tire. I have gotten by with this in the past. Got cocky and have now been brought low. Every week, and you can set your watch by it, I do the walk of shame into the shop. I fling open their door, the cowbell rings, and I announce, “Guys! A terrible thing has happened!” I will go there again tomorrow because a terrible thing has happened - that seal did not hold and we are back to flat tire and dripping sealant. They are sick of me at this point but they are Michiganders, good folk through and through, and they do not let on.Meanwhile, Charlie. I’ve been running away with Charlie on club rides. High winds have really cramped our style. Charlie and I are on a learning curve. I try and find out if the sounds he’s making are benign or malignant. There was a screeching pedal (a terrible thing that happened!) that my shop addressed. But now there is ghost shifting and something whirring when I stand to climb and toss my weight on the drive side of the bike. Charlie had been denied his accoutrements because I tried to make him Pure Road Bike and keep his accessories minimal. We failed miserably and I’ve junked up the bars just like Charlie’s a Platypus. The final piece, his German mirror, arrived today. I still don’t know if Charlie is any faster than a Platypus. Nothing is fast in these winds. We are out there shredding our thighs, trying to brave winds and get fit for the season with Charlie and his junked-up non-aero bars.What have you all been up to? Are you having the same struggles? Who else is wanting to throw up their hands and just talk shop?Leah--You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group.To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to rbw-owners-bun...@googlegroups.com.
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<IMG_1481.JPG>
On Mar 23, 2025, at 8:50 PM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:Ben, I loved reading about that ride. Night ride with the moon and mountain = magic. But I wouldn’t have wanted to do it alone. I’ve never heard of a bike relay - so you did your segments all solo? When did you get to hang with your buddies? How does everyone get to their leg of the relay? Very interesting. Kinda wish I was doing one of these because it does sound like a party.
On Mar 24, 2025, at 9:14 AM, ascpgh <asc...@gmail.com> wrote:
Ben, that's a great example of the rewards of sticking to what you know and ignoring unsolicited input of others. I rode my Rambouillet across the country with a Carradice Nelson Longflap and some SKS fenders the day after it arrived. The trio of Serotta riders I was with smirked a bit until they saw the aplomb with which my bike handled the situations and conditions at the edge of the envelope in which we rode.
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On Mar 26, 2025, at 10:53 PM, Jason Fuller <jtf.f...@gmail.com> wrote:
Ahh yes, I've been there, but never had to interact with someone who was not privy to what happened before I could clean up. That one is all you. It really doesn't take very much residual pressure in the tire to do this, either.
As mechanically apt as I am I still don't really know how much and how often to add sealant. I have to say though, once the tire seems happy it seems to stay happy even with some neglect. I guess until it doesn't.
Good to see you getting out and it's always nice to see the Purple Platy out and about. You don't use strava / ridewithgps / komoot for logging rides do you? I feel like I've asked this before. For me I don't care about all the various metrics that cater towards "athletes" but I love tracking mileage for myself and each bike. I would totally be sleuthing to find out how many miles each Riv has in your stable on an ongoing basis.
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I log my rides using my Apple Watch. It works great for keeping track of mileage but it does not track mileage according to bike. And that bothers me. Pam has her cycling computer and knows exactly how many miles she gets every year on her Betty, but with 4 in the rotation, I can’t see keeping up batteries on all their cyclometers. Only the raspberry bike has one. I do have Ride with GPS and am constantly frustrated with it. It is, admittedly, new to me though. I planned a ride around the lake with some of my bike club friends and it took us on wrong turns more that once and then barked at me the whole time. Do you use it? I’ve never gotten on Strava because it intimidates me. People will be looking in on me and that seems weird. I might be wrong, since I’ve never actually used it!
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Dorothy has it right. A Serfas E-gel.She wanted a basket, so that's a repurposed Nantucket pannier.
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On Mar 30, 2025, at 1:55 PM, Jay <jason....@gmail.com> wrote:
My bike life this morning involved cleaning out and remounting a tubeless tire.
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@Leah,As mentioned from Piaw Na using helicopter tape to protect your frame set, I second this. I have purchased a 30ft roll of this tape a couple of times. There is enough to cover your whole bicycle with some left over for those areas that you may have forgotten. I highly recommend it. The tape will not pull off the decals on your bike. I purchased it through AMAZON:Kim Hetzel.
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On Mar 31, 2025, at 7:32 PM, Patrick Moore <bert...@gmail.com> wrote:
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WHY does Riv put such low gearing on the big Clems?
On Apr 1, 2025, at 12:12 PM, Piaw Na <pi...@gmail.com> wrote:
WHY does Riv put such low gearing on the big Clems?One visit to Walnut Creek to climb Diablo will suffice to enlighten you on the answer to that question.
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Piaw,Do only tall people on 59 and 64 Clems ride Mount Diablo? Enlighten me.
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No, that is not an April Fool's Joke. 110RPM is a spin, but a do-able spin for a spinner, and I consider myself a spinner90-110 is pretty well established as the range that is most efficient. When I do my gear calculations for single speed and other low-gear-count builds, I calculate how fast I'll be going at 60RPM and how fast I'll be going at 110RPM. So, for example, my RoadUno has two gears: 42 inches and 67 inches. My low gear will go 7MPH at 60RPM. My high gear will go 22MPH at 110RPM. So that bike is good for speeds in between 7MPH and 22MPH.
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On Apr 1, 2025, at 1:44 PM, Bill Lindsay <tape...@gmail.com> wrote:No, that is not an April Fool's Joke. 110RPM is a spin, but a do-able spin for a spinner, and I consider myself a spinner90-110 is pretty well established as the range that is most efficient. When I do my gear calculations for single speed and other low-gear-count builds, I calculate how fast I'll be going at 60RPM and how fast I'll be going at 110RPM. So, for example, my RoadUno has two gears: 42 inches and 67 inches. My low gear will go 7MPH at 60RPM. My high gear will go 22MPH at 110RPM. So that bike is good for speeds in between 7MPH and 22MPH.When people tell me they can't (or don't want to) ride at 110RPM I tend to believe them.
On Apr 1, 2025, at 2:11 PM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:Also, Grant explained that the trad gear inches chart doesn’t account for wheel size, so he isn’t a fan.
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On Apr 1, 2025, at 4:02 PM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:Patrick, I think so. Here’s the commentary on gear charts from Riv. I think Grant amended the chart a bit, as seen in this link…Does this make more sense, Ted?