I was sitting cross-legged, waiting for the boys to be dismissed from school. Imagine my shock. The first photo shows the deceptive angle in which I thought all was well. The second reveals the painful truth. It would be a looonnngggg trek pushing that bike uphill loaded with school stuff. To the bike shop I go, in the morning!
Pano Gianniotis in Wash. DC
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I am no bike mechanic, as the following photos will prove. But I do check things out and (mostly) notice when things are wrong, honest! I bought my bike in late 2012 from RBW headquarters, and I don't get to ride as much as a lot of you folks, so I thought I was doing alright with the tire tread. I have a fendered bike, and I now know that YOU MUST NOT EVALUATE YOUR BACK TIRE SOLELY BY LOOKING AT YOUR FRONT TIRE.
I was sitting cross-legged, waiting for the boys to be dismissed from school. Imagine my shock. The first photo shows the deceptive angle in which I thought all was well. The second reveals the painful truth. It would be a looonnngggg trek pushing that bike uphill loaded with school stuff. To the bike shop I go, in the morning!
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Stat crux dum volvitur orbis. (The cross stands motionless while the world revolves.) Carthusian motto
It is we who change; He remains the same. Eckhart
Kinei hos eromenon. (It moves [all things] as the beloved.) Aristotle
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Sheldon recommends exactly what Patrick Moore described.
Well-meaning cyclists, even some mechanics who don't know any better, sometimes try to deal with this by swapping tires, putting the less worn front tire on the back wheel, and moving the worn-but-usable rear tire to the front. The idea is to equalize the wear on the two tires, but this is a serious mistake, don't do it!
The only time tire rotation is appropriate on a bicycle is when you are replacing the rear tire. If you feel like taking the trouble, and use the same type of tire front and rear, you should move the front tire to the rear wheel, and install the new tire in front.
The reason for this is that the front tire is much more critical for safety than the rear, so you should have the more reliable tire on the front.
If you have a blowout, if it is on the rear tire, you have a very good chance of bringing the bike to a controlled stop. If your front tire blows, you can lose steering control, and a crash is a real possibility.
[...]
Ah, now the Hotrock. [...] That bike, can you believe this, has lasted from Easter of 1st grade to present day 5th grade. We bought it too big, but E grew into it and has put countless miles on it ever since.
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Sheldon recommends exactly what Patrick Moore described.
Well-meaning cyclists, even some mechanics who don't know any better, sometimes try to deal with this by swapping tires, putting the less worn front tire on the back wheel, and moving the worn-but-usable rear tire to the front. The idea is to equalize the wear on the two tires, but this is a serious mistake, don't do it!
The only time tire rotation is appropriate on a bicycle is when you are replacing the rear tire. If you feel like taking the trouble, and use the same type of tire front and rear, you should move the front tire to the rear wheel, and install the new tire in front.
The reason for this is that the front tire is much more critical for safety than the rear, so you should have the more reliable tire on the front.
If you have a blowout, if it is on the rear tire, you have a very good chance of bringing the bike to a controlled stop. If your front tire blows, you can lose steering control, and a crash is a real possibility.
On 02/15/2017 01:31 PM, Eric Norris wrote:
The great Sheldon Brown recommends rotating tires when the rear tire is replaced:
On Feb 15, 2017, at 8:59 AM, Patrick Moore <bert...@gmail.com> wrote:
Time for a new one! One recommended practice is to rotate the relatively fresh front tire to the rear, and put the new one on the front, thus ensuring that the tire whose condition is most important to safety is always at the front.
But good for you for getting in all those miles!
On Tue, Feb 14, 2017 at 5:00 PM, LeahFoy <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:
I am no bike mechanic, as the following photos will prove. But I do check things out and (mostly) notice when things are wrong, honest! I bought my bike in late 2012 from RBW headquarters, and I don't get to ride as much as a lot of you folks, so I thought I was doing alright with the tire tread. I have a fendered bike, and I now know that YOU MUST NOT EVALUATE YOUR BACK TIRE SOLELY BY LOOKING AT YOUR FRONT TIRE.
I was sitting cross-legged, waiting for the boys to be dismissed from school. Imagine my shock. The first photo shows the deceptive angle in which I thought all was well. The second reveals the painful truth. It would be a looonnngggg trek pushing that bike uphill loaded with school stuff. To the bike shop I go, in the morning!
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... I've had several HOLY MOLY!! moments when I made a 90 degree turn not realizing my front tire had lost half its pressure due to a small pinhole puncture -
Regarding replacement tires, Schwalbe's with puncture protection are great for durability. However, if you want your Betty to feel better than could ever imagine, Compass extralights. They may not be as durable (although mine are holding up well), but they are heavenly. The folks here talked me into their Barlow Pass extralights and it may have been the best bike advice I've ever received. You may want to talk to Jan to see how they'll hold up in hotter climates.
As for the kid's bike, I was at Riv tuesday and Vince had to move their Roscoe Bubbe kid's bike out of the way for my bike. I think it was Hunquapillar green and very cool.
John
Wow, you wore out the entire rear wheel. Now that's impressive! (And, dare I say, totally daredevil?) You should treat yourself to one of Rich's handbuilt wheels. Sounds like you've earned it.
Regarding replacement tires, Schwalbe's with puncture protection are great for durability. However, if you want your Betty to feel better than could ever imagine, Compass extralights. They may not be as durable (although mine are holding up well), but they are heavenly. The folks here talked me into their Barlow Pass extralights and it may have been the best bike advice I've ever received. You may want to talk to Jan to see how they'll hold up in hotter climates.
John, I covet that baby Roscoe! You are correct: I totally deserve a Rich wheel, this is what we would tell my husband. But alas, I'm committed to whatever the shop puts on there, I guess. I wish I lived closer to Rivendell HQ and could have them revitalize TBBITW.
Ryan: TBBITW = The Best Bike in the World which is my Betty, of course. Another BBITW is Best Bike in the World = a new Rivendell mixte!
Deacon Patrick, yes, I should totally emulate you!!!!!
Set them up a bit differently.
I'm setting up my Roscoe to be a bit more of a workhorse than other bikes.
Like a good attorney, you will slowly develop your case so that it becomes so logical and makes such perfect sense that anyone would see how obvious it is that you need another bike.
Ray
Vallejo CA
Sometimes a pinched rim could be repaired using one of these http://t.harborfreight.com/6-inch-jaw-straight-sheet-metal-seamer-98728.html?utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2F and a sanding block afterwards. Do not try it with regular pliers; they got to have long straight jaws so they are guided by the undamaged rim flange. Done it with Velocity DV after a similar encounter with a pothole like the one you described. Both of the flanges were severely creased from the impact.
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I am no bike mechanic, as the following photos will prove. But I do check things out and (mostly) notice when things are wrong, honest! I bought my bike in late 2012 from RBW headquarters, and I don't get to ride as much as a lot of you folks, so I thought I was doing alright with the tire tread. I have a fendered bike, and I now know that YOU MUST NOT EVALUATE YOUR BACK TIRE SOLELY BY LOOKING AT YOUR FRONT TIRE.
I was sitting cross-legged, waiting for the boys to be dismissed from school. Imagine my shock. The first photo shows the deceptive angle in which I thought all was well. The second reveals the painful truth. It would be a looonnngggg trek pushing that bike uphill loaded with school stuff. To the bike shop I go, in the morning!
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+albatross bars+decent saddle+decent tiresStill, way cheaper than a new bike.
On Tue, Feb 21, 2017 at 12:06 PM, Edwin W <dween...@hotmail.com> wrote:
Didn't you say you were near Las Vegas?For $100 you can have a spare bike:Edwin
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Ray
Vallejo CA

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Stat crux dum volvitur orbis. (The cross stands motionless while the world revolves.) Carthusian motto
It is we who change; He remains the same. Eckhart
Kinei hos eromenon. (It moves [all things] as the beloved.) Aristotle
Your encounter with the fellow at the bike shop made for an interesting juxtaposition. Even when I rode 300 miles a week, I never thought it was expensive
I must have been doing it wrong.
Cycling is a big tent and there are no wrong ways to enjoy it.
Attempting to instill our personal dogma on others...that gets a little crunchy.
Good for you for knowing what works for you.
Ray
Vallejo CA
IanA
over comfort go with the Schwalbe tires.
Like others I question putting bmx tires on your bike.I'd ask them why they chose those tires???Almost like they were taking advantage of you.
Good luck.
Jon
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PS: I agree with the other posters about the sand spray dying down after a few more miles.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0035Y3HP8/ref=twister_dp_update?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
And you also need to contact Velocity regarding that cracking
rear rim. I'm not sure what they're replacing them with now,
since the Synergy is no longer available, but they replaced
several, completely rebuilding the wheel at no charge, for me in
the past.
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If the spokes bulging and the eyelets pulling are an indication of too much tension or a defective rim then a message to the manufacturer might be in order.
Rims are consumable and it's possible it lived a useful life. Several years of hard braking on downhills seems pretty reasonable.
If it was a new wheel and this happened in the first year of use then that would seem premature.
Using a bike for everyday transportation assumes some level of maintenance and replacement of consumables.
Ray
Vallejo CA
If Velocity is acknowledging a problem with the Synergy rims cracking, then it seems settled that this is not normal or expected wear. Too bad Leah did not kn ow about this before paying for a new wheel. Otherwise, I think a free replacement rim, including new spokes, and the labor for lacing it up to the old hub would have been the decent thing for Velocity to offer.
On Tuesday, February 28, 2017 at 12:21:11 PM UTC-5, Garth wrote:Ryan, rims cracking like that is not "normal" by any means. Add to this the fact the Velocity acknowledges the Synergies cracking and offers replacements and why the are no longer made.
On Tuesday, February 28, 2017 at 11:30:06 AM UTC-5, Ryan Fleming wrote:I think Leah mentioned that the photo was of the old rim....which is a consumable in my opinion. They can crack at the spokes and the braking surface can erode. Not Velocity's fault here
I've already mentioned the Velocity Synergies that cracked at the spoke holes. Here's what they look like:

But that's not the only rim I've had that's cracked. Back in the
day I had MA40s on my Spectrum. They cracked and the shop gave me
a big song and dance that I was the only person in the entire
universe who ever had one of those rims crack blah blah and
surprise, when the internet came along I searched and found MA40
rim cracking was a very popular subject of discussion, general
consensus being it was the hard anodizing that was at fault
because the rim without it, MA2, was generally considered at the
time to be the most perfect rim ever created by the hand of Man or
God. And I also had a MA3 crack the same way, probably for the
same reason. None of these cracked rims was seriously worn.
Maybe I'm harder on stuff than you guys are. I remember you all being confused that I had bent a Wald basket, but it is indeed good and bent. And then there's the shifter I also seem to have worn out. Oh, and maybe I had it coming with the broken wheel. I get a kick out of crashing over bumps without rising out of the saddle. There's something amusing about it. You should try it. But maybe not on Velocity rims.
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Regards,
Richard