By cutting off the stem...

OK, my two cents for Tim:
If you really,  really like the occasional fast club ride, get a bike just 
for that.  Life's short, and racing bikes are fun.  There are plenty of 
them out there.  If that's what you want don't let Grant or anyone else 
persuade you otherwise.  Have some fun, go test ride whatever in available 
in your area.  See what fits, what feels fast, what looks good to you.  If 
something speaks to you, there's your new go-fast.  If that happens to be a 
Roadeo, cool.  If not, that's cool too.  If cost is a factor, figure out 
what fits and start trolling ebay and Craigslist.  Sooner or later 
something will turn up.  In my case it could have been something titanium 
or steel, but a Calfee Tetra turned up in my size for 1/3 the cost of a new 
one.  I keep it only for club/training rides and love riding it.  I have 
other bikes ('95 Riv Road, Rawland Sogn) with a more upright position for 
riding solo, doing centuries or just cruising along.  Sell the Cannondale, 
if it doesn't fit it's just taking up space.  

So then what to do about touring and off-roading?  Well, the Homer may not 
be a dedicated tourer, but a lot of folks have toured on lesser bikes.  I 
knew someone who went coast to coast and Canada to Mexico on a Vitus 989 
with panniers and Homer should be way better than that.  With the right 
loading I'd bet the Homer could handle your 'lightly loaded' touring just 
fine with the right wheels and gears.  I'd probably use panniers on a 
low-rider, a Carradice Camper and some form of handlebar or rando bag as a 
first shot and see if that was enough capacity.  Your needs may vary.  At 
least try it, load up the Homer with the weight you'd expect to have on 
tour and take it for a ride.  If you're happy with it, you're set.  If not, 
than you really needed two bikes all along, one for speed and one for a 
load.  

A Hunq (or Bomba) might keep you happy for touring and singletrack, or you 
might decide your over-fifty body needs more cushion off road.  I'm 53 
myself, I understand that.  If Homer stays as a tourer, sell off the Hopper 
and find something that fits you for singletrack.  

Whatever you do, keep that stem greased this time!

Bill

On Thursday, May 10, 2012 4:56:24 AM UTC-7, newenglandbike wrote:
>
>
>
> *My question is:  how did you send just the fork to waterford if the stem 
> is stuck?
>
>

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