https://hiplok.com/product/hiplok-d1000/?utm_source=Google+Shopping&utm_campaign=US+Google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=40860&currency=USD&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjw6c63BhAiEiwAF0EH1KK-KrJnR8sg3CoUqpz82OAPWGMmpQ1wgwSm31zqBFSmh-lbEfd5ExoCHt8QAvD_BwE

and 

https://www.pitlock.de/en/

and 

https://www.urbanbiketech.com/installation-guides/pitlock-hex-bolt-security/

a rivendell is well deserving of a hiplok. if i wasn't so cheap i'd have 
one by now. (i lock my riv up all the time, albeit not for prolonged 
periods of time in a scheduled way like work or a class)

pitlocks also allow for needling less things like extra locks and cables.

pitstoppers help with the smaller bits on your bike. 



On Wednesday, September 25, 2024 at 6:33:07 PM UTC-4 Ryan wrote:

> Well Patrick, in reality, my X0-1 and SS PX10 made fine daily riders...so 
> I think that mine was a Solomon-like solution.Daily commuting should be 
> pleasurable and I also didn't have the cognitive burden of worrying about a 
> custom and the X0-1 and PX10 are still here....now if I'd been occupying 
> the corner office, I wouldn't think twice about trotting out the Rivs. In 
> your earlier post you did mention secure office space, so totally makes 
> sense to ride one of your lovely customs. 
>
> Again, in my case a totally moot point. 
>
> On Wednesday, September 25, 2024 at 4:39:57 PM UTC-5 Patrick Moore wrote:
>
>> Josh makes a very good point. What's the point of using a less 
>> satisfactory bike for most of your riding?
>>
>> Still, the dangers of locking up do argue for a second, more disposable, 
>> if not completely throw-away bike. Others describe buying Clems for this 
>> purpose, and I've been toying with the idea of doing that myself; the price 
>> for a full Clem is pretty darn reasonable.
>>
>> Long ago my latest custom Riv Road was hanging on the wall gathering dust 
>> while most of my riding was a long commute to and from work on various 
>> beaters (*). After a couple of years of this I had a local builder turn it 
>> into a fixed gear and enjoyed it immensely and much more often over 14 more 
>> years of errand and commuting riding until I replaced it in 2020.
>>
>> (*) Tho' I have to say that 2 of those beaters were bikes I wish I'd 
>> kept: ~ top-end 1990 Diamond Back Axis/Access/Axes Team with ENO fixed hub 
>> and 60 mm Big Apples and a 64" fixed gear, and a late '80s (I think; at any 
>> rate, an early model) Raleigh Technium flexy flyer 
>> alum-tubes-glued-into-plumbing-pipe-steel-lugs + steel fork sports tourer, 
>> also set up as a fixed gear. The DB exhibited perfectly neutral handling -- 
>> IMO the high point of NORBA geometry, the Noodle was high enough thanks to 
>> a 10 cm Dirt Drop stem with rise to spare, and the high bb let me pedal 
>> merrily around corners. The Raleigh with then (circa 2002-2005) fat 
>> Vittoria 32s and the long stays and flexy frame made it ride like an old 
>> Cadillac; not fast but certainly plush. So sometimes there are good beater 
>> options. Still, the matter is one of inherent tension: between riding a 
>> much-loved bike as much as possible and putting it at risk of theft.
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 25, 2024 at 6:40 AM Josh C <getjosh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I posted a similar thread about a year ago, asking about commuting on a 
>>> Riv, as I also had reservations. The thing for me is that my commuter ends 
>>> up being the bike I ride the most often. I may ride more miles on my 
>>> road-ish bikes but the daily gets the most use. I'll take it to run 
>>> errands, go to work, go out for dinner/drinks, etc. To me, the purest form 
>>> of cycling is the commuter/townie rides, where the bike is replacing other 
>>> forms of transportation. I've since started taking my Rivs everywhere. I'll 
>>> lock up my Atlantis outside of a restaurant, Hunq outside of a bar, and so 
>>> on. I own several bikes but to justify buying a Clem recently, I've decided 
>>> that it'll be my daily driver and just ordered new wheels for it. I'll 
>>> fender, dynamo, front/rear light the thing and lock it everywhere. That 
>>> bike will be locked up in public parking garages, in downtown Indianapolis 
>>> for 13 hours at a time, several days per week. I lock them well with 
>>> U-locks and a cable through the front wheel. I don't want to lose any of 
>>> them, but I'm trying not to let the fear of getting one stolen keep me from 
>>> using them. What's a garage full of cool bikes if you only take a junk bike 
>>> every time you leave? That's my mindset. Folks in other areas may have 
>>> different crime rates related to bikes but I'd guess most people think your 
>>> homer is some type of old-fashioned retro bike anyway. Go steal an e-bike 
>>> and leave me alone!
>>>
>>
>>

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