On 07/24/2018 06:25 PM, 'Clayton' via RBW Owners Bunch wrote:
Stems. Threadless is a lighter system by quite a bit. Two things it lacks is
adjustability and comfort. My long quill stem and the one inch steerer flex
quite comfortably. I think it is one of the secrets to the Atlantis’s
adoration. It is far easier to raise and lower your handlebars too, but that
matters when? Just once usually. Not really an issue.
Not really true, especially if you keep the bike for a long time. Bodies
change, and the three or four inches of bar drop that were fine when you
were in your late 40s may be impossible to live with by the time you're
60. I'm speaking here from personal experience. And consider the
context for a minute: this is the RBW and we're not talking about
disposable bikes here. The bike I rode last, before the current round
of endless rain began again, was made 55 years ago. Rivendells are made
as well as Jack Taylors were, and should last as well.
Even changing your handlebar may end up requiring you to raise the bar a
bot -- not a big problem, of course, unless you're maxed out already.
But most of the time the bike already comes with an upsloping stem and
the shops cut the steerer to height leaving no extra room for further
upward movement. Oops.
Aesthetically I think quill wins.
I was hoping for a lugged plus frame but fillet sounds pretty cool too, like
the old high end Ritchey and Fisher frames from back in the day.
I’d like a thread-less stem as this could be my next bike packing bike and
‘car’ ( I bought a Crust LD stem to build a bike around 😏) and it’s a lighter
system.
Does the difference in weight between a quill stem and a threadless stem
matter with a bike-packing bike? Bike packing is, after all, load
carrying. You really think you're going to notice a few ounces weight
difference on a bike like this?
Image result for bikepacking
Just how much weight difference do you think we're talking about,
anyway? As much as a Swiss Army knife? I doubt it.
I’d like discs but am fine with rim brakes. Kind of. They suck in the winter in the ice and snow and snow plow grit eats up rims. Discs are quicker, cheaper and easier to replace. I hope that Paul’s V-brakes clear a 2.8’ tire. Looking at my bike with 2.35’ tires, I’m not sure...
I have more chainring clearance over rocks and drops since I changed my
transmission over to SRAM XX1 on my Atlantis, so I don’t think the new bike is
worth me swapping to at this point. Ground clearance was my only real issue
with the single track capability of the Atlantis.
The new bike isn’t lugged. 😩 Sob..sob...
I could change my mind in a minute if it has cool colors and a stellar name...😉
Clayton
#DirtDanceDesigns
--
Steve Palincsar
Alexandria, Virginia
USA
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email
to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.