Today when you're picking out baby and toddler toys, the groovy thing to look for is a toy that requires the human to do 90+ percent of the work. A book versus an audio book or video game, Tinker Toys versus online building things or whatever. Adult toys used to be that way, but bicycles, more than most, have eliminated the need to make mechanisms perform. All riders have to do it push to the click, or share the task with a motor. It's no skin off anybody's nose, who even cares?, except that I think everybody should have at least one bike that is more manual than automatic. It's not a matter of trying to make simple things harder; it's more like not seeking out the easiest, most brainless way to perform a function that formerly required a little skill, and then feeling puffed up for your "smart shopping."
SILVER shifters and any modern slant parallelogram rear derailer (Shimano makes good ones) is a good way to go. A little practice and you'll be fine in a week!
Second, I think this whole long wheelbase thing is getting completely out of hand. I agree that a super short wheelbase is sort of overkill, but there's no reason a Clem should have the wheelbase it does. In fact all sorts of reasons it shouldn't. I can say that, not as someone whose never ridden a long wheelbase Rivendell, but as someone who owns two! (Formerly three!) Unfortunately, I have no way to make a head to head comparison, but I feel pretty safe postulating that I'd love my Medium Clementine more if the chainstays were 3/4 shorter. Which I should add; would still be considered long.
I am sorry if I come off contrarian; I am not in favor of change for changes sake and there's loads of "technical Improvements" in the bike industry that make me ask why? But in the last 10 years I've probably bought 10 bikes; the Only ones that didn't have threadless stearers/headsets, Disc Brakes, etc. Have been Rivendells; I didn't buy the Rivendells because they didn't have those things, but in spite of them not having those things. As a former bike mechanic and person who wrenches my own bikes, I recognize an improvement over pointless gadgetry. I've recently bought not one, but two bikes with thru-axles and I can honestly say I dig'em a lot! Prior to that a good vertical drop out was my favorite, but these thru-axles are undoubtedly an improvement.
Anywayz, I realize I'm tilting at windmills here, but there's a certain amount of catharsis.
Honorable? Lol. Bike geeks aren't Jedis.
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I love Silver Power Ratchet shifters but they do indeed belong in the simple/fixie category of bikes you don't shift much..a thing Grant has promoted since way back in the Bstone days. When I use them I tend to stay in a particular gear longer and just grind it or coast down because hunting for gears with friction can be more bother than it's worth. This works great for me - especially on my eClem which hardly needs to be shifted - but as masmojo says wouldn't be great on hilly dirt rides. If I bought a Gus/Susie it would get a 1x indexed drivetrain, my custom will have one Silver shifting two rings up front.
Second, I think this whole long wheelbase thing is getting completely out of hand. I agree that a super short wheelbase is sort of overkill, but there's no reason a Clem should have the wheelbase it does. In fact all sorts of reasons it shouldn't. I can say that, not as someone whose never ridden a long wheelbase Rivendell, but as someone who owns two! (Formerly three!)…
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"Our souls as well as our bodies are composed of individual elements which were all already present in the ranks of our ancestors. The “newness” in the individual psyche is an endlessly varied recombination of age-old components. Body and soul therefore have an intensely historical character and find no proper place in what is new , in things that have just come into being. That is to say, our ancestral components are only partly at home in such things. We are very far from having finished completely with the Middle Ages, classical antiquity, and primitivity, as our modern psyches pretend.
Nevertheless, we have plunged down a cataract of progress, which sweeps us on into the future with ever wilder violence the farther it takes us from our roots. Once the past has been breached, it is usually annihilated, and there is no stopping the forward motion. But it is precisely the loss of connection with the past, our uprootedness, which has given rise to the “discontents” of civilisation and to such a flurry and haste that we live more in the future and its chimerical promises of a golden age than in the present, with which our whole evolutionary background has not yet caught up.
We rush impetuously into novelty, driven by a mounting sense of insufficiency, dissatisfaction, and restlessness. We no longer live on what we have, but on promises, no longer in the light of the present day, but in the darkness of the future, which, we expect, will at last bring the proper sunrise. We refuse to recognise that everything better is purchased at the price of something worse; that, for example, the hope of greater freedom is cancelled out by increased enslavement to the state, not to speak of the terrible perils to which the most brilliant discoveries of science expose us.
The less we understand of what our fathers and forefathers sought, the less we understand ourselves, and thus we help with all our might to rob the individual of his roots and his guiding instincts, so that he becomes a particle in the mass, ruled only by what Nietzsche called the spirit of gravity.
Reforms by advances, that is, by new methods or gadgets, are of course impressive at first, but in the long run they are dubious and in any case dearly paid for. They by no means increase the contentment or happiness of people on the whole. Mostly, they are deceptive sweetenings of existence, like speedier communications, which unpleasantly accelerate the tempo of life and leave us with less time than ever before. Omnis festinatio ex parte diaboli est – all haste is of the devil, as the old masters used to say.
Reforms by retrogressions, on the other hand, are as a rule less expensive and in addition more lasting, for they return to the simpler, tried and tested ways of the past and make the sparsest use of newspapers, radio, television, and all supposedly timesaving innovations.
In this book I have devoted considerable space to my subjective view of the world, which, however, is not a product of rational thinking. It is rather a vision such as will come to one who undertakes, deliberately, with half-closed eyes and somewhat closed ears, to see and hear the form and voice of being. If our impressions are too distinct, we are held to the hour and minute of the present and have no way of knowing how our ancestral psyches listen to and understand the present – in other words, how our unconscious is responding to it. Thus we remain ignorant of whether our ancestral components find elementary gratification in our lives, or whether they are repelled. Inner peace and contentment depend in large measure upon whether or not the historical family, which is inherent in the individual, can be harmonised with the ephemeral conditions of the present.
right click to view and you can make it larger.
STI/Ergo/DoubleTap will become obsolete
Mechanical brifters don’t make much sense any longer: The levers are hard to push, especially for riders with small hands. The many small parts in the levers wear out quickly, especially if you’re a racer who is used to rapid shifts. Electronic shifting already is more reliable and easier to use. Soon it’ll be cheaper, too. Plus, it automatically trims the front derailleur…
For those who prefer more involvement in the workings of their bikes, downtube shifters will make a comeback. There is a joy to feeling the chain move as you pull on a lever, and getting a shift just right is very satisfying. Just like sports car makers are re-introducing mechanical gearboxes, bike component makers will bring back downtube shifters and even a friction option. (Hopefully!)
I don't think he's right about the return of dt shifters. I would also contest his contention that manual shift is making a comeback in sports cars; there's a stalwart few who never abandoned them, but I'm not seeing a mad rush back in that area. Dual-clutch semi-autos with paddle shifters are not the car equivalent of downtubers.
They’re hard to wheelie?Grant belittles a “playful” mountain bike in this post, but getting the front end up to get over an obstacle, or just to have fun, is part of mountain biking.My Jones LWB is a very capable mountain bike, but it’s noticeably harder to loft the front than a shorter stayed bike. I can’t recall even trying to wheelie my Clem.Oh, and they take two chains.
On Thursday, January 2, 2020 at 1:55:08 PM UTC-8, masmojo wrote:--Second, I think this whole long wheelbase thing is getting completely out of hand. I agree that a super short wheelbase is sort of overkill, but there's no reason a Clem should have the wheelbase it does. In fact all sorts of reasons it shouldn't. I can say that, not as someone whose never ridden a long wheelbase Rivendell, but as someone who owns two! (Formerly three!)…
I've only scant experience with the LWB bikes, having built a couple or three for a friend (so have to do shakedown rides), and riding the MIT Atlantis one time at RBWHQ. I didn't really find anything objectable with them at all, and the only remarkable challenge I saw was fitting a LWB into a car. They rode similar to other Rivendell bikes (of which I have four) – stable and predictable. So what didn't you like about your LWB bikes? Given that handling is more than the sum of its parts, how did you come to attribute any difference solely to the LWB?
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AC |
3 | Close | 106.66 100 93.3 |
A rare model, made for club bicycles, time trials. |
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I love Silver Power Ratchet shifters but they do indeed belong in the simple/fixie category of bikes you don't shift much..a thing Grant has promoted since way back in the Bstone days. When I use them I tend to stay in a particular gear longer and just grind it or coast down because hunting for gears with friction can be more bother than it's worth. This works great for me - especially on my eClem which hardly needs to be shifted - but as masmojo says wouldn't be great on hilly dirt rides. If I bought a Gus/Susie it would get a 1x indexed drivetrain, my custom will have one Silver shifting two rings up front.
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The answer though, at least for the time being is Microshift. Surly's have come with'em for years. Unfortunately, that's pretty much it. To me the issue is not indexing as much as it is these overly complex, non user serviceable shifting contraptions of the last 25 years. This all makes me think that maybe electronic shifting ain't really that bad!???
My recently built Crust Scapegoat has a 10 speed SRAM "trigger" shifter. I'd like to say I hate it, but truth is it's not that bad. I just don't have too much faith that it'll hold up very well.
Very simply shifting is shifting, I've done it 10s of thousands of times and I really don't derive a high amount of satisfaction from doing it right. Exactly the opposite really; I expect to do it right & I am just mildly annoyed if it goes awry for some reason.
Increasingly, my fear is that the parts to build a Rivendell are going to go from being commonplace to sort of proprietary. As they move further from the main stream. The choices start to become fewer and more expensive. Finding a 650B disc rim or wheel set is falling off a log easy; rim brake on the other hand, although not too difficult is hard to do inexpensively and it's only likely to get worse.
Increasing the front center of a Clem cockpit, may seem fairly innocent, until you think about putting handlebars on it. Your gonna need bars with more sweep back & really nobody else makes those, only Rivendell. This isn't so much a complaint as an observation.
Manual shifters in cars sadly are not making a comeback, they've just held on & I hope they continue to. But, I'm afraid, especially with the advent of electric cars their days are numbered. More & more CVTs are replacing automatics as the default transmission and that's pretty much the way it's going to go. It's a short script at this point.
Oh Boy-I hate friction shifting with modern cogs, ie the ones designed for index shifting. I tried to use friction with these cogs and got nothing but ghost shifts when I stood up or pedaled hard.Friction is best with an old Suntour six speed freewheels.
I like vinyl and film. But I jammed my Nikon FE yesterday trying to load film in it. It's been a few years since I used film and I forgot how to load the damn thing.
My Joe A. is an awesome bike. It has the nicest ride. But the chain stays are so long. When I wash it, I feel like I'm working in a shipyard. I've been tempted to shorten the stays (cut the back of the bike frame off and put it together better. A bike shouldn't have chain stays so long that you need to buy two chains to get enough length for it.
Hydraulic disk brakes work great and cantilevers will always suck.
I've also though how cool my Joe A would be with disk brakes.
I run many bikes with a 1 x 11 drive train I don't miss the front derailleur. In fact I re-installed one on my Riv custom and it took three different ones and an hour of adjusting to get it to work (small chainrings and loads of BB drop on that frame)
I've been a Rivendell fan & customer since day one. But sometimes I think they are too rigid in their bike philosophy.
As usual, fun, miscellaneous, non-organized content. Much on slant parallels and indexing and the power of Shimano and the smallness of SunTour. But, perhaps this is worth a breath: sure, everyone nowadays wants 13 in back and trouble-free electric, indexed shifting. BUT! I would not be surprised if there is a market "out there" for honorable consumers who like to develop the skills required to do things for themselves. After all, there was the fixie craze during the 10 speed indexing period, and -- I am no expert on current culture, but is there not a trend toward self-reliance, authenticity (not sure how to define this, but at least, don't buy what you can't do), simplicity, and durability? The sorts of people who use knives instead of processors, and knead bread dough instead of using bread makers? (Both for me, tho' I'm no gourmet chef.)The same from another angle: every time you gain with a machine that makes it easier for you to do something, and for neophytes to get into the action, you also pari passu lose skill and expertise, which itself is very often a large part of the pleasure and self-affirmation of practicing some craft, be it only shifting a derailleur system.Now, if you perfect -- as Rivendell's Silvers do --"do-it-yourself manual shifting, might there not be a small but sustainable market for well-meaning, earnest, honest people who'd like to aquire these minimal self-sufficient skills with tools perfected for the purpose?It seems to me that Rivendell ought to actively market to this audience; not the theme, "We're diehard holdouts for old-fashioned skills," but "You want the pleasure and self respect of learning how to do things for yourself; we can equip you with tools perfected for this" -- whether shifters, axes, bags, clothing, what have you. IOW, not "we're holdouts" but "you don't want to be subordinate to the machine; we are on your side with the right stuff."Those new Silver shifters might well be a design that entices me away from beloved SunTour barcons.I didn't like the older, long-levered Silver bar end shifters, but the new ones may make me change my mind.Casting back to the last blahg, with Archie Bunker: I never watched All in the Family until just a week or so ago when I looked it up. I have to say that, from the very few episodes I fast forwarded through, it was well done, and I usually hate TV. That is, it portrayed a bigot well as a bigot in a humorous way.What I have watched what may be BBC's antecedent to the show which, as an Anglophile, I like quite a bit. As usual, as with anything literary or dramatic, the Brits just do it better.Grant, this one's for you:Today when you're picking out baby and toddler toys, the groovy thing to look for is a toy that requires the human to do 90+ percent of the work. A book versus an audio book or video game, Tinker Toys versus online building things or whatever. Adult toys used to be that way, but bicycles, more than most, have eliminated the need to make mechanisms perform. All riders have to do it push to the click, or share the task with a motor. It's no skin off anybody's nose, who even cares?, except that I think everybody should have at least one bike that is more manual than automatic. It's not a matter of trying to make simple things harder; it's more like not seeking out the easiest, most brainless way to perform a function that formerly required a little skill, and then feeling puffed up for your "smart shopping."
SILVER shifters and any modern slant parallelogram rear derailer (Shimano makes good ones) is a good way to go. A little practice and you'll be fine in a week!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------Patrick MooreAlburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
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