"the stock 38/16 ratio at 62" way too spinny"

That must be on a 650B RoadUno.  That same gear is 66 inches on a 700c 
RoadUno.  

BL in EC

On Thursday, December 19, 2024 at 7:41:57 AM UTC-8 tio ryan wrote:

> In mostly flat NYC, I found the stock 38/16 ratio at 62" way too spinny. 
> I’ve settled on a 42/16 setup at 69", which feels just right. I also tried 
> a 49/18 combo at 72", but it was a noticeable jump that made the bike less 
> enjoyable for stop-and-go commuting.
>
> -tio "you only need one" ryan 
> On Thursday, December 19, 2024 at 9:30:31 AM UTC-5 Bill Lindsay wrote:
>
>> "I was trying to think about how to better quantify it but I was not sure 
>> how to. I would like it a little easier but don't want to be spinning too 
>> hard!"
>>
>> The way I do exactly this is I decide what my comfort-range is for pedal 
>> RPM.  I've ridden enough miles with a cadence RPM cyclometer that I know 
>> this range pretty well.  I have a MAX and MIN comfortable RPM in my pocket. 
>>  So, for a particular gear, I calculate how fast I'm going at my MIN and at 
>> my MAX RPM and if that range of speed makes sense, that's a decent gear. 
>>  For some environments, maybe 8-14 MPH would be a decent range.  For other 
>> environments, maybe 13-22 MPH might be a more appropriate target.  
>>
>> Let's say for example you decided your comfortable RPM range was 
>> 60-120RPM.  At 60RPM in a 70.5 inch gear, you would be traveling 13,300 
>> inches per minute or about 12.5MPH.  That means you NEVER plan to ride 
>> comfortably below 12.5MPH.  At 120RPM you are going 25MPH.  That means you 
>> expect to spend a significant amount of time cruising along at 25MPH.  If 
>> those were my numbers for my RoadUno, I'd want to shift them way down.  I'm 
>> never comfortably cruising at 25MPH on my RoadUno.  I go 25MPH on my fixed 
>> gear in Michigan but only on the downhill side of an undulation, and that's 
>> just for a moment at WAY over my max comfortable RPM.  For something like a 
>> city-bike application I may shoot for 9-18MPH which is a gear in the low 
>> 50s.  A gear around 60 inches would be more like that 11MPH to 22MPH range. 
>>  
>>
>> FWIW, my RoadUno is a two-speed drivetrain with a 38/26 in front and a 
>> 16T freewheel, giving me a "high" gear of 66 inches and a "low" of 45.  
>>
>> Your comfortable RPM range depends entirely on you.  I know some mashers 
>> that are perfectly content at 30RPM for long periods.  Some spinners can 
>> easily spin up to 140RPM and maintain it.  
>>
>> Bill Lindsay
>> El Cerrito, CA
>> On Wednesday, December 18, 2024 at 3:16:05 PM UTC-8 Edwin W wrote:
>>
>>> I am running my Roaduno with 49/19, 40mm (or so) tires, 165mm crank, 
>>> which works out to 70.5 (fixed) gear inches. 
>>>
>>> I was thinking of making it a slightly easier gear. For those that have 
>>> experience in small changes in fixed gear gearing:
>>>
>>> I would love to hear about your experiences in changing gearing. How 
>>> "big" is a jump from 70.5 to 69 (48 tooth)? to 67.6 (47 tooth)?
>>> Or to 66.9 (20 tooth rear cog) or 63.7 (21 tooth cog)?
>>>
>>> I know these are subjective differences,. I was trying to think about 
>>> how to better quantify it but I was not sure how to. I would like it a 
>>> little easier but don't want to be spinning too hard!
>>>
>>> Let me know what you think,
>>>
>>> Edwin
>>>
>>

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