If I had much more money than I do, the one Rivendell I'd buy in a snap
would be a Roadeo.

(Tho' I'd love a Hunq and an Atlantis too. And a Legolas. But the Roadeo
would top the list.)

Thanks for the descriptions of handling.

On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 10:18 AM, RJM <crccpadu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Yeah, these Roadeos make great road bikes. I have the saddle on mine about
> even with the stem, which I find comfortable and I can still use the drops
> on my Mark's bar fine.
>
> I'm generally passing people while decending and this bike gives me total
> confidence while doing so, even when the road twists and turns. I did a
> rather difficult 62 mile charity ride on this past Saturday that was hilly
> and ridiculously windy (no tailwinds either because it just turned out that
> way) and the bike was fine. I was tired afterwards, but never once
> uncomfortable. This specific route had some truly terrible roads on it,
> something which I actually brought up with the organizer. One downhill was
> just destroyed and had that gravelly (sp?) loose chip stuff all over it;
> apparently this was a failed attempt to fix the various potholes and
> irregularities. I was glad I had the Roadeo on that one and other riders
> were complaining up a storm afterwards because of the condition and how
> they had to slow way down. I didn't slow down because the bike can handle
> that stuff fine.
>
>
> On Tuesday, September 15, 2015 at 10:26:02 PM UTC-5, Don Compton wrote:
>
>> After someone had questions about Roadeos on the IBOB group, I thought I
>> would give and update.
>> Over the years ( 63 yo) I have had so many bikes. I never raced, just was
>> an active club rider. A few centuries a year and mostly 35-50 mile rides.
>> Okay I am an old fart, but the stability of Grant's handling dynamics
>> makes for a wonderful bike on long rides, especially hilly ones. There's
>> just something special about cruising down a hill at above 30 and floating
>>  over the marginal bumps and feeling confident missing the potholes from
>> hell. And to top it off, The frames are works of art.
>> And then there's the fit. I need my bars high. I run my bars <1cm below
>> my saddle. It allows me to have a proper tilt on my saddle and less hands
>> problems on long rides.
>> Don Compton
>>
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