I think your best opportunity there are wheels and saddle.  Is it worth 
asking if the dynamo and lights get used enough to be worth the weight 
penalty? If you want lighter touring, maybe frame bags might save some 
weight over racks and panniers. I don't know that you're going to shave a 
bunch of weight off.  

Will
On Thursday, July 25, 2024 at 8:34:49 AM UTC-4 ascpgh wrote:

> You've validated many of your specs, most not being of the path of least 
> resistance monetarily. You had to pause and consider each of those. 
>
> On one of my favorite 80 mile rides knowing the route lets me carry less 
> water and make it a point to stop and refill where I know I can. An extra 
> 28 ounces is almost 2 pounds. The stops also break up the terminal grind 
> that sets in on long pulls between breaks. Those grinds get a steeper 
> decline as the day goes on. Blame it on the effort required to move you, 
> your bike and its load across the terrain or yourself for being less 
> genetically like one of the noteworthy pros. I ride for fun and 
> exhilaration of being outside, it keeps me fit. No one goes to the gym and 
> brags about how little they lift in the rep sets.  
>
> I'm no randonneur and never raced so I can go about my riding without 
> worrying that my bike is too heavy. I stayed with the lead bunch on a group 
> ride Tuesday, my Rambouillet was no excuse for how I felt afterward. I was 
> the performance limitation despite the commentary by those who now do not 
> even have memory of metal framed bikes and think of them as antiquities. Two 
> Spaniards here for school were particularly surprised by my bike. The one 
> from Girona needed more gears (or legs) on his Colnago for the hot and 
> humid climbing, the one from Barcelona ate his superbike's rear derailleur 
> trying to shift on the steepest climb bending it and his dropout, tangling 
> in his (eight?) DS spokes. 
>
> Carefully selected tools may best do a particular job but are also the 
> least used because their specificity has little tolerance for widened use, 
> often with costly consequences. I went light on my rear wheel hub for my 
> custom 650B the other year with a Suzue Classica high flange (2 pawl) 
> cassette hub. The aluminum cassette body has become chewed by the cogs by 
> my riding, loads and hills, now creaking annoyingly when pedal load is 
> reduced, every stroke. It's the only adventitious sound on my bike and 
> impetus for getting a Silver cassette hub with six pawls and a steel body 
> built on a matching rim by Rich at RWB which just arrived and is lovely. 
>
> I have a 3/4" rabbet plane (blade goes edge to edge across the width of 
> its open sided block). I got it to level the door stop on several very 
> large doors I had made pre-hung (with three sides of jamb and installed 
> stop). The installed stop didn't have consistent contact with the closed 
> door due to the nature of wood, it got some waviness when drying after 
> milling that prevents evenly seating against them when closed. The plane 
> let me address the issue of the high spots effectively and directly as a 
> cost, labor and material conservative option. An unbelievably effective 
> tool that I have used very little since then, its cost more than justified, 
>  but there it sits. I don't have the room for bikes of that sort of 
> specificity. 
>
> Ride. What you've got.
>
> Andy Cheatham
> Pittsburgh
>
> On Wednesday, July 24, 2024 at 7:40:12 PM UTC-4 Bob Warner wrote:
>
>> Would be grateful for reasonable/cost conscious suggestions for how to 
>> shed some weight from my Sam; which is currently is weighing in at 31.3# 
>> with the following configuration:
>>
>>    - Velocity Dyad 36 / Ultegra 6500 rear with Ultegra 6700 12-30 
>>    cassette; Velocity Dyad 32 with SP Dynamo & BM IQ-X
>>    - Nitto 135mm Faceplater stem + Nitto Billie Bars; Newbaums & Oury 
>>    grips
>>    - Sugino XD-2 crank
>>    - Paul Racer brakes & Paul Levers
>>    - Brooks B17 Special
>>    - Nitto S-83 seatpost
>>    - IRD QB-95 BB
>>    - Shimano 105 5701 long cage RD
>>    - Shimano 6500 FD
>>    - Tubus rear rack, Nitto M18 front rack
>>    - Blackburn SS cages
>>    - Berthoud SS fenders & RH Barlow Pass tires
>>
>> I went on my first overnight bike tour and boy was my rig heavy. It was a 
>> big adjustment for me pushing all that weight for 80 miles!!  My camping 
>> gear is pretty lightweight stuff for backpacking, so curious if there are 
>> any reasonable priced alternatives to lighten up the bike.  Many thanks in 
>> advance!!  ~Bob
>> [image: SamH.jpeg]
>>  
>>
>

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