The most important info from that post: Clems are arriving on time!
I bought a frameset and put collecting parts on the backburner. Looks like 
I need to speed up my parts searches and figure out what my Clem will be in 
it's first build.
David
Chicago

On Tuesday, September 15, 2015 at 8:34:16 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
>
> A new Reader! Frankly, as much as I like Bicycle Quarterly, I like the 
> Reader better, at least, as long as it has at least 30 pages. I look 
> forward to this!
>
> The word is duesy, from Duesenberg, at one point the *ne plus ultra* of 
> American automobiles.
>
> Reader 44 might/should actually appear this year. Two years ago it would 
> have been back by popular demand, but by now it’s mostly been forgotten, so 
> we’re going to try to make it a     doosie? Deusie? Deusy?
>
> SILVER SHIFTER
>
> The magic of the Silver shifter is a pawl-and-ratchet, kind of like what a 
> freewheel or cassette has, and yes it’s a bit of hidden complication, but 
> the benefits are worth going to hell for, for…relying on hidden 
> oomplication. It is magnificent, and you can sing your dirge to the old 
> Simplex retrofriction shifters all you want, loving them more and more as 
> their years of unavailability are piling up and now approaching something 
> like 30. But they had their hidden complication, too,  and most people 
> who’ve used them long have broken them. 
> IME, having used many different kinds of bar end shifters, the Silver 
> beats the Simplex easily. It is better than the Retrofriction, the 
> PowerRatchet, any other SunTour, the original Dura Ace, and all the indexed 
> Shimano ones up at least to 8 speed-- I've not tried later ones. FWIW: I 
> got my Nashbar Microshift road rd caught in the spokes of my Fargo, and it 
> violated things so much that the der cage snapped, and the chain pulled the 
> hangar up tight against the outer cog. I replaced the Microshift with an 
> old 7400 Dura Ace and, for symmetry and aethetics, replaced the LX FD with 
> a 7400 fd. The shop refused to install the 7400, saying they could not get 
> it low enough and still have it clear the chainstay; the lower st bottle 
> cage boss interferes. I installed it anyway, and the cage is at its closest 
> 1.5 cm from the 38 t big ring, installed in the middle position, with a 
> guard on the outside. It shifts fine; perhaps the Silver BES helps.
>
> As to the jerk who sent a corroded Silver back with the instructions, 
> "Replace it," I'd tell him to take a running jump; or, even better, to go 
> f*** himself. And put it on official company stationary, signed by all the 
> officers of the corporation.
>
> Does anyone know what these Grant Designed, Nitto Built frames are to be?
> -- 
> Resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, and letters that get interviews.
> By-the-hour resume and LinkedIn coaching.
> Other professional writing services.
> http://www.resumespecialties.com/
> www.linkedin.com/in/patrickmooreresumespec/
> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nouvelle Mexique,  Vereinigte Staaten
>
> *************************************
> *The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a 
> circumference on the rim of which all conditions, distinctions, and 
> individualities revolve. *Chuang Tzu
>
> *Stat crux dum volvitur orbis.* Carthusian motto
>  
>

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