Congratulation, Alan! First, for perspective on the numbers I’m about to give you, read my review of my QB (pre-fixed though it is).
http://thegrid.ai/withabandon/quickbeam-sightings/
How, a few details and thoughts, recomendations:
1. Ride what you have. Learn. It will be hard, no matter what the gearing is. You’re learning to use one gear instead of 20+.
2. Ride one gear only and you will learn even more. Do this for three months.
3. Ride till you can’t, walk till you can.
4. You are always in the right gear. This is just as true as you are always in the wrong gear. But the countanance of joy from always being in the right gear greatly exceeds that of always being in the wrong gear.
5. Your 4 tooth dingle cog will give you a reasonable drop in gear. That’s all I use on my QB (44 x 17/22) and I ride asphalt, dirt roads, trails, rocks, roots, hills. My high is 71”, my low is 57”.
6. My Hunqapillar gearing will have greater range because I will have a double chainring and 5t spread in the rear. 34/38 x 17/22 (via a flipflop hub). This will give me three ridable gears for loaded bikepacking and errands of: 61”, 47”, and 42”
7. Try fixed. Try it for a week or two. You’ll love it or hate it, but you’ll learn. A lot.
8. Learn to climb in slow cadance without going anaerobic. This takes time, but basically I view each pedal stroke as a squat. I don’t do power/speed squats, I do slow squats.
9. You’ll be amazed how much stronger your riding gets (on any bike) with consistant ss riding, and if you only ride ss for a few weeks, just how fast your get stronger.
10. LCG. Lowest Common Gear. Comes with every bike, standard. It is also biking, never failure.
Enjoy!
With abandon,
Patrick