In my opinion, if you swapped your build kit from a Roadini to a Homer, the 
only parts that would have to change would be the rear hub and the brake 
calipers.  If that's the only things that changed, the resulting complete 
bike would be within a pound.  In my opinion, that build would feel just as 
light and fast.  

If instead you used your Homer platform as an excuse to add wider knobby 
tires, plus fenders, plus front and rear racks, and bags, and used wider 
rims because of the wider tires and necessary rear hub change, and added 
dynamo lighting because you're already buying a wheelset, then that build 
would not be within a pound.  It could easily be 10 pounds heavier or more, 
and that bike may not feel as light and fast as your stripped down Roadini 
did.  

Echoing Max it's all about the build.  In my stable, I like having at least 
one super stripped down road bike.  Mine is a Roadeo.  I also like having 
at least one All Road bike.  I have several bikes that fit in that All Road 
slot, including a Hillborne and an Ebisu.  I'd hate to pare that down.  
Maybe an excuse would be to buy a Homer, and move your Roadini to a 
vacation bike role.  Like if you have a relative that you visit often, park 
the Roadini there.  You may find value in keeping both.  Once you have 
both, you may find you can live without one.  My Hillborne lives at my 
office in Michigan, and my Ebisu lives at my home in El Cerrito.  

Bill Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA

On Thursday, September 23, 2021 at 7:38:52 AM UTC-7 Bones wrote:

> I know these comparisons have come up frequently, but here is my 
> particular situation:
>
> I had a 62 Hillborne. It felt too similar to my Appaloosa, so I got a 61 
> Roadini. I've been riding that for a year and a half and I love it. It 
> serves the purpose the Hillborne was meant to serve (the Hillborne always 
> felt a bit too bulky for my intended purpose... which is primarily riding 
> on roads with light loads). 
>
> Sometimes I feel like I overshot with the Roadini though, and the Homer 
> would be the best choice. I sometimes wish I could put fenders on it, 
> without having to go with a smaller tire (currently running Barlows on 
> Quills --> ~41mm). I sometimes wish I could add a small front rack without 
> using P-clamps.
>
> Being a tall and slender fella, pretty much every Rivendell is overbuilt 
> for me for any of their stated purposes. What I am getting at is would I be 
> losing anything if I swapped the Roadini for a Homer? Clearly I would gain 
> in functionality. I am indifferent with respect to the chainstay lengths. I 
> just want to be sure that the bike would have the same lighter feel that I 
> experience with the Roadini.
>
> Any insight is much appreciated!
>
> Bones
>

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