Steve asked for my reasoning. 1. The front extension length was too long because the UNSUPPORTED front extension vibrated and flexed enough to make objectionable noises. That's an objective fact that we both agree on 2. The front extension length was longer than necessary because it is not and never will be required to protect the underside of a traditional handlebar bag or basket. That is a judgement call by me that I think you can provisionally support 3. The front extension length was longer than necessary because it was much longer than SKS P45s, which I have used for thousands of miles and have never felt my body was insufficiently protected from spray off the tops of my tires. That is a judgement call by me that you've shared you are pretty sure you disagree with. Fair enough 4. The lower SPAN between the fork crown and the stay was too long because my physical sideways manipulation of the fender at the midpoint of that span showed me the fender was objectionably flexy. This model of fender is also too skinny in cross section. A wider fender cross section would be stiffer laterally and could handle that span-length better. This is a judgement call by me. 5. The lower extension was both too short and too long, because it wasn't long enough to protect my feet optimally, and wasn't short enough to add a flap to protect my feet. This is a judgement call by me.
Given those judgments, I needed to do one of three things A. Add a stay to the front to address 1. Reposition the existing stay to address 4. Cut the trailing edge to address 5. Leave the front longer than necessary (2,3) because it looks cool B. Rotate the whole fender backwards to address 1, 2, 3 and 5. Redrill everything to reposition everything, addressing 4. C. Cut the trailing edge and add a flap, and rotate the remaining fender back. Reposition the existing stay, addressing 1-5. I went with C because it maintains my ability to put the bike on my Yakima fork mount roof rack. A full-length front fender makes that impractical, as you know. Bill On Thursday, December 20, 2018 at 8:43:50 AM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote: > > > On 12/19/18 10:45 PM, Bill Lindsay wrote: > > Steve P asked why I did things my way instead of his way. > > > > I decided to cut the fender off because I decided the front fender was > too long for my use on this bike. If I decided to leave the fender too long > for my liking on this bike, I would have run another stay. > > > Fair enough, but how did you determine that its length was too long? > Curious to understand your reasoning. > > > -- > 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 [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
