One defect is that it lacks sprightly writing: Jan writes competently
but not hugely interestingly. Grant is in the opposite camp: not
always right (and who can blame him?) but always interesting.
Personally, I'd like to see more articles like that a year or two ago
by the woman who toured India on an Indian 3d world roadster.
Moving on: can anyone suggest good general purpose cycling mags, with
an interest in history and in the more unusual bike tech (trikes! Jest
kiddin')? RR is now a very rare bird. Bicycling is not as bad as in
its abysmal days under one Z Espinoza, but it is bland, decaf,
soporific; Cycling Plus is expensive and too bland for the price, not
to mention the fact that it is (of course) Britain focused. Road Bike
Action, Velo News, meh. Mountain Bike Action -- does that still exist?
If so, meh again. Is there another Bicycle Guide out there in the
media cosmos?
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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
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> Curious why you don't like it. I've subscribed for several years
> (don't hoard the back issues; usually use them as impromptu trading
> scrip) and find it interesting enough to keep at it, but it does
> strongly reflect the editor's own interests -- and who can blame him?
> The latest issue was quite interesting, IMO.
While my preferences differ from Jan's in terms of bike geometry, etc., BQ covers enough different stuff to keep me reading it. Some of the historical stuff is really good and I have thoroughly enjoyed his interviews with various French randonneurs et al.
> One defect is that it lacks sprightly writing: Jan writes competently
> but not hugely interestingly.
On the other hand, his review of the Calfee CFRP bike bordered on the weird with much discussion of what he might have done with the bike rather than about the bike.
> Grant is in the opposite camp: not
> always right (and who can blame him?) but always interesting.
The Riv Reader remains my favorite cycling "periodical."
> Personally, I'd like to see more articles like that a year or two ago
> by the woman who toured India on an Indian 3d world roadster.
>
> Moving on: can anyone suggest good general purpose cycling mags, with
> an interest in history and in the more unusual bike tech (trikes! Jest
> kiddin')? RR is now a very rare bird. Bicycling is not as bad as in
> its abysmal days under one Z Espinoza, but it is bland, decaf,
> soporific; Cycling Plus is expensive and too bland for the price, not
> to mention the fact that it is (of course) Britain focused. Road Bike
> Action, Velo News, meh. Mountain Bike Action -- does that still exist?
> If so, meh again. Is there another Bicycle Guide out there in the
> media cosmos?
Not that I have found. There's just not enough market for this sort of thing to pay for it, I suppose. But if someone knows of something, I'd be delighted to hear about it.
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Personally (emphasis: "personally") I'd like to see more historical
articles; perhaps another monthly feature? Also, as someone suggested,
readers' touring/travel/adventure contributions.
OTOH, BQ is largely a platform for Jan's own preferences (and he has
every right to make it so), so I wonder what the future will bring: a
change to a more general cycling publication but with the same quality
of production and information (my vote) or continuation on the current
route?
On Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 8:27 AM, Peter Pesce <pete...@gmail.com> wrote:
I just hope that as Compass Bicycles
> grows, Jan can keep cranking out BQ!
>
> -Pete
>
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Blogs may provide interesting reading, but they aren't journalism and
the authors aren't bound by journalistic ethics. For the most part, I
give them the same amount of credence I'd give a story told to me in a
bar by the guy sitting next to me. You expect more than that from a
magazine. (Of course, you often don't get it...)
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BSNYC, a perfect example. As much in the way of wisdom, insight, talent
and culture as the words of the prophets that are written on toilet
walls, tenement halls...
On Tue, 2011-10-18 at 16:49 -0700, Jan Heine wrote:
> On Oct 18, 4:11 pm, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery <thill....@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > I somewhat doubt that BQ is peer-reviewed in the same way that science
> > journal articles are peer-reviewed.
>
> When I was working in science, I reviewed a number of papers, and had
> mine reviewed. The process is the same as the one we use at BQ. The
> copy editor (not Jan!) gets a submission and decides whether it
> warrants another look or not. If the paper makes assertions about
> history or technical issues, it goes out to review. The reviewers are
> outsiders who are not directly involved with BQ: Jim Papadopoulos,
> Frank Berto, Andreas Oehler and a few others. They are very qualified
> and certainly not loath to criticize what they read. If they raise
> objections, we don't publish the article unless the objections are
> addressed by the authors. Like scientific journals, we also publish
> all corrections and rebuttals concerning articles in BQ. (Does any
> blog do that?)
>
> I think the fact that we had to retract only a handful of statements
> in the last 9.5 years shows that the process works. You may have
> different preferences in bikes – we all do, even among the BQ crew –
> but when you read in Bicycle Quarterly that Bike A has more wheel flop
> than Bike B, you can be confident that this is true. Whether you
> prefer bikes with a lot of wheel flop is a different matter, but the
> basic facts have stood the test of time.
>
> We try to expand the horizon of the magazine without diluting from
> what makes it special. After all, if you want a test of the latest
> Trek, from a rider who just loves getting on a shiny new bike, you can
> get that elsewhere. Technical articles in BQ must break new ground and
> be well-documented (which is perhaps why we get few outside
> submissions - it takes a huge amount of work to do that type of
> research). Historical articles must be documented as well. (I have a
> lovely article on Speedwell titanium bikes that needs more
> documentation before we can publish it.) Ride stories must be both
> well-written and on a topic that is "off the beaten path" in some way
> or other. Basically, it has to meet high standards to be worthy of
> inclusion in Bicycle Quarterly.
>
> Each issue of BQ takes about 3-4 months of full-time work to put
> together. Fortunately, that work is spread among a number of people,
> so I have some time to work on product design for Compass Bicycles and
> even ride my bike. A blog, like our "Off the Beaten Path," is
> relatively simple and takes a few hours for each post.
>
> Jan Heine
> Editor
> Bicycle Quarterly
> http://www.bikequarterly.com
>
> Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/
>
It is evident that a lot of diligent work goes into BQ, no doubt about that. I stand corrected about the peer-review aspect of the process. My sincere apologies. That said, I still maintain that there are blogs out there that are well-written, informative, entertaining, and plenty faithful to technical facts, where applicable. My bias is toward the human experience side of riding bicycles, which BQ often does well. I tend to roll my eyes at the technical stuff, because I've never had wheel flop or tire rolling resistance make or break a fun ride for me.
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I was climbing a 14% grade in a 22" gear one time and wheel flop made
the bike shoot across the road at a 90 degree angle. I was able to stop
the bike before I ran into the bank (it was a sunken road) but it sure
did spoil the fun just then!
I am your 0.1 ton test rider. I own two bikes that have appeared and
favorably reviewed in BQ, a Velo Orange Randonneur and a MAP Randonneur
Project. My bikes are slightly different from Jan's: 8/5/8 tubing vs
his 7/4/7. Otherwise, my bikes are exactly as he describes.
Both bikes were 1:1 frame replacements, the VO replacing a Rivendell
Rambouillet, the MAP replacing a Rivendell Saluki. Both Rivs were 8/5/8
OS, the replacements 8/5/8 std diam. The difference climbing in both
frames is notable.
I just want to make sure I read this right - you've had an improvement
in climbing by going to std diam from OS tubing?
-sv
Yes. I found it impossible to "surge" the OS bikes up rises; I'd have
to downshift-downshift-downshift or bog down hopelessly.
With the std diam frames I can do a few extra-strong "large, round"
pedal strokes and easily surge the bike up a slight incline, or "ride
out of the saddle while still sitting down" - best way I can describe
getting my butt off the saddle by about 1 cm, still riding mostly the
way you do while out of the saddle while barely rising off the saddle
itself; and when I do, the bike surges forward kind of like what happens
when you squeeze a wet and slippery watermelon seed between your fingers
and it shoots forward.
This, I believe, is a manifestation of "the 'P' word."
I believe your impression of events - I've just felt that on a tandem
before and it was a bit surprising - especially considering our tandem
is the very definition of oversized tubing :)
-sv
60 cm, c-t
> as is my Homer (nominally the same bike). I knew you 'upgraded' and
> liked your MAP, and I'm intrigued by the concepts and the classic look
> of a 'traditional' randonneuse. That said, I had a long talk on a
> brevet with a fellow on a gorgeous low-trail Ellis who hated the ride,
> said the bike was terrifying to ride over 20mph, and was working with
> Ellis to get a new fork to increase the trail. I feel that people's
> opinions about bikes tend to tell us as much about the differences in
> people as they do about the differences in bikes.
None of my low trail bikes is terrifying to ride at any speed. I've
owned a bike in the past that was frightening at high speed, the 1972
Paramount I owned for 20 years. In the early years, it had a very
frightening speed wobble, and even after changes in position cured the
speed wobble, high speed descents always made me feel as though I was
carrying my life in a goldfish bowl held in my outstretched fingers.
I think nothing of going full tilt downhill on any of my bikes. Of
course, we have no long hills here, unless I venture into the Blue Ridge
or the Catoctins, and in mountains like that my overwhelming concern is
excess momentum (I have momentum aplenty!) and an inability to slow down
or stop, so I descent very cautiously.
Here, where what passes for a hill is a half mile run down to a bridge
over a creek followed by a corresponding half-mile climb, it's full
tilt, spin 'em up to 120 rpm, cross the bridge and work your way through
the gears on the climb. And never even the slightest hint of
instability.
> To settle things, I think Steve should ship his MAP to me for a few
> months to try out. I'll take good care of it, honest :)
I deeply regret that you are too short... However, if you ever find
yourself in the vicinity of Alexandria, VA we could go down to Toys R Us
and see if they have any pedal blocks that would fit PDM-959 SPDs. ;-)
René
Sent from my iPad
On Oct 19, 2011, at 7:11 PM, Jan Heine <hei...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> You see that they have 25 mm tires on
> there, so the first thing you can do for them is fit wider tires to
> add pneumatic trail.
>
> Jan Heine
> Editor
> Bicycle Quarterly
> http://www.bikequarterly.com
>
> Follow our blog at http://janheine.wordpress.com/
>
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Sent from my iPad
This is why I really miss Alex Wetmore's contributions as a BQ
tester/reviewer. I think he just got too busy with other things to
put in the (considerable) time. I'd love to see BQ expand in this
direction with average but enthusiastic rider/testers in addition to
the usual suspects Jan/Hahn/Mark VdK. It would be fascinating to test
whether the handling and performance traits that superfit & skilled
riders prefer are also preferred by us mortals. Alex seems to agree
with most of Jan's preferences (low trail, light tubing, front
loading) despite his different build and riding style. He was always
at a disadvantage in the blind tests, though, because he didn't have a
similar riding partner to serve as comparison.
As an example, I feel like BQ's city/utility bike reviews have fallen
flat, even though I appreciate them. They read a little like an F1
driver testing a minivan. It would be great to get a "second take" in
these cases from a daily non-sport rider (maybe there was one in the
Big Dummy review. I can't remember all of a sudden). I think such a
rider might actually be more attuned to certain features of non-sport
bikes, just as Jan et al. are more attuned to high performance bikes.
At least in Portland, I've met a substantial number of riders who are
very interested in bike design, ride a lot, but rarely if ever ride
for sport. In fact, I find myself drifting toward that end of the
spectrum.
BQ is by far the most interesting bike pub since the Riv Reader,
though. I've learned a lot, rethought a lot, and thoroughly enjoyed
it. My cycling's the richer for Jan's efforts!
Best,
joe broach
portland, or
On Oct 19, 2011, at 10:16 PM, René Sterental wrote:
> Scratching my head at the first one and laughing hard at the last
> one... Am I a pneumatic cyclist?
>
> Even a "weak" issue
> of BQ is better than the typical issue of Bicycling Magazine (hmm, is
> it a coincidence that the initials are BM?) with its typical series of
> articles on How to Train for a Century, How to Lose Another Five
> Pounds, Adventures of Someone Who Doesn't Ride a Bike Very Much, and
> Reviews of Another Five Carbon Fiber Wonderbikes and the Latest N-
> Speed Drivetrain.
There's a difference in mission there. BQ is driven by Jan's interest in certain kinds of bikes and certain kinds of bike riding. Bicycling Magazine is driven to sell advertising.
The speed wobble went away after I made some position changes, but on
fast descents it always felt like sliding down the razor blade of life.
It was a bit small for me -- was meant to be a 23", which itself is a
bit small for one who now takes 59-60cm frames, but they checked the
wrong box: 22" instead of 23" by accident, and then told me about how it
was always best to ride the smallest size frame you could possibly fit
on, that's what the racers did, blah blah blah all of which really meant
in 1971-1972 demand was far higher than production capacity and I'd
waited 6 months for this bike and there was no way they could possibly
get me the correct size that year.
It's funny, when I ordered the Spectrum Ti which in about 7 weeks will
be 20 years old I got it without fender clearance because I said I had
the Paramount which readily fit them, I'd use that whenever I needed
fenders. I rode the Spectrum twice and realized, there was no way I
could possibly ever ride the Paramount again, the fit was so very bad
for me.
I'm still mad as hell it was stolen, though.