Good morning Leah, I’m not sure where I read it but apparently Grant had at one point been a fan of Mercians. A few years after I bought and built up my 650B Homer I found a used Mercian KOM on Craigslist. I’ve since picked up another off the list and had one purpose built for me. Very comfortable and fast. Some thing to consider.
Cheers, David > On Apr 21, 2024, at 12:17 AM, Josiah Anderson <andersonjosi...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Hi Leah, > > I'm also excited to hear about your journey towards a road bike; you probably > don't know it but your writing on this list was one of my main influences > towards ending up with a Riv. Drop bars and pavement are very familiar, > comfortable territory for me, and – like others have said here – I still > enjoy that type of riding at times. > > You're probably already familiar with him, but if not, I'd recommend checking > out some of Jan Heine's work – Bicycle Quarterly, The All-Road Bike > Revolution, his blog, etc. Bicycle Quarterly was my point of departure from > "mainstream" bike culture, and I came around to appreciating Riv a bit later > and now enjoy both approaches for different rides. Jan is much more focused > on speed than Grant is, but in what feels to me like a healthy way. This is > an old blog post that I think may be worth a read, as it's an articulation of > the same sort of perspective you seem to be arriving at: > https://www.renehersecycles.com/riding-fast-is-fun/ > <https://www.renehersecycles.com/riding-fast-is-fun/>. Jan also wrote > somewhere (can't find it right now) about how he and Grant are good friends, > and he wanted to make it clear he's not dissing Riv by promoting what he > likes. > > I currently have two of what I'd call "really nice" bikes, a Gus > Boots-Willsen and a Crust Lightning Bolt (alongside moderately nice bikes > like a Bridgestone MB-3 and a dumpster-find Bianchi Volpe). The Gus is > "full-Riv" – friction shifting, Carradice saddlebag, weird bar wrap, etc – > and the Crust is full Bicycle Quarterly, with 42mm extralight tires, > low-trail geometry, Gilles Berthoud handlebar bag, and all that. (Jan is not > affiliated with Crust, but Crust designed the Lightning Bolt with his > preferences in mind). The two bikes are a perfect combination for my current > riding: there is enough crossover that both work great for doubletrack rides, > and the Gus is ideal for riding singletrack while the Crust excels at long, > fast road and gravel rides. Rivendell doesn't make randonneur bikes like my > Crust, as it sounds to me like they don't like the lighter-gauge tubing and > the handling optimized for drop bars and moderate front loads, but Grant has > written (quoting from memory, so hopefully I'm pretty close here) that he's > glad companies like Crust exist and do different stuff from Riv. I don't feel > like riding my Crust is an insult to Rivendell, just an expression of the > fact that my riding conditions are a bit different from theirs, though I > totally get it if that's how it feels to you. > > I've never ridden a Roadeo or Roadini, but I've ridden a LOT of road race and > "sport-touring" bikes from the 1960s through 2000s, many of which (like early > 80s Trek sport tourers, one of my main rides for a long time) have a lot of > similarities to the Roadeo. I prefer my Crust for several reasons: it's > designed for bigger tires, which when they're René Herse Extralights are just > as fast as 23mm tubulars and far more versatile; it can carry a big handlebar > bag for long rides without compromising handling at all; and it feels more > "alternative" when showing up to group rides, a feeling we're all used to > with Rivendells - but it's still just as fast as the carbon bikes, unlike my > Gus. And the biggest factor is that it's made of superlight steel tubing, > which I like not for the weight savings (less than a water bottle) but for > the flex characteristics – it flexes with each pedal stroke and feeds it back > into the drivetrain, taking away the pushing-against-a-brick-wall feeling of > hammering up a hill on a stiff bike. Jan calls this "planing," and it's > pretty controversial, and others call it a lively frame, a somewhat less > controversial term. My personal experience says it works – take that however > you want. I do not believe the Roadini would "plane" or be particularly > "lively," based on what I've heard, and the slightly lighter Roadeo might or > might not depending on how much power you're putting down. > > A classic road bike like the Roadeo is also an aesthetic choice, though, not > just a practical one, and if that's the sort of bike you want, I don't want > to be the one to argue against that! Those sorts of bikes are very > well-proven for many use cases, and fast-paced, shortish (~30 mile) group > rides are certainly one of those. > > Basically what I'm hoping to say here is that "road bike" can mean many > things, and that Jan Heine's writing has been a huge positive influence on my > riding and maybe could be for you too. Best of luck with the process of > contemplation and decision! > > Josiah Anderson > Missoula MT > > Le sam. 20 avr. 2024 à 13:33, Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! > <jonasandle...@gmail.com <mailto:jonasandle...@gmail.com>> a écrit : > I’m starting to wonder about a roadbike. But it has to be a Rivendell > roadbike because I’m loyal and all that. Anyway, I don’t know that the > Roadini really offers enough of a change for me. I have no idea what is going > on with the Gallup. Then there’s the Roadeo - that one looks great but > there’s a 2 year wait, unless I can find one used. Which would be ideal. > > Who rides their Rivbike in club rides and what do you ride? Who has a Roadeo > that never gets ridden and wants to sell it? I don’t even know what size I’d > be but I’m an 81 PBH. Must I ride drop bars? I never have before. I know > nothing about any of this. Clearly. > > Note: I still like my raspberry Platypus for club riding but it does take a > toll on me in wind. I recently got a shorter-height, longer-reach stem which > marginally helped, but our high spring winds are taking it out of me. I did a > club ride yesterday with my women’s group and my heart rate was in the 170s > the whole 26.3 miles. It was brutal. Everyone else agreed it was a hard ride, > but I felt like it was harder on me than them, and I’m the youngest and > probably the most fit. > > Leah > > -- > 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 > <mailto:rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com>. > To view this discussion on the web visit > https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/fab5132f-e8ca-4a76-842d-9b994853e099n%40googlegroups.com > > <https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/fab5132f-e8ca-4a76-842d-9b994853e099n%40googlegroups.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>. > > -- > 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 > <mailto:rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com>. > To view this discussion on the web visit > https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/CADqZWjNYi_kUNDFPDz6S9m8NuJBdBs_jJK3J4pTskW3fggiEWA%40mail.gmail.com > > <https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/CADqZWjNYi_kUNDFPDz6S9m8NuJBdBs_jJK3J4pTskW3fggiEWA%40mail.gmail.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. 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