Did 49 mph on my V2 recumbent and glanced down to see my speed nudging the 
bars slightly which moved me ten feet towards the center of a two lane 
highway. Glad there were no cars coming up behind me at 60mph. Also did an 
estimated 50-55 mph on a long steep downhill and a truck pulled out at the 
base of said hill, forcing me to brake........ye olde rim brakes faded into 
nothingness causing my life to flash before me.......I cleared his back 
bumper just in time going about 30 mph and resolved to be more conservative 
from then on. Most hills are under 40 mph (coasting) and more like 30 mph 
max. Still the thought of hitting chip seal with a t-shirt and shorts at 
that speed is pretty grim....older, wiser I'd say.

On Friday, July 13, 2012 7:53:40 AM UTC-7, Michael Hechmer wrote:
>
> I'm not a particularly anxious person, although I do get anxious when 
> someone compliments my courage!  I regularly downhill at 40+ mph and have 
> hit 50 on good pavement and reasonably straight mountain descents without 
> too much anxiety, but one hill this year has me spooked.
>
> One of my favorite routes is a 23 mile ride with 1400 feet of climbing 
> that is equally divided among lightly traveled & good dirt roads, mostly 
> descent chip & seal town roads, and a third of moderately traveled state 
> roads.  It provides beautiful pastoral scenery, a good view of the whole of 
> the Mt. Mansfield ridge line, and a stretch along the Lamoille River, 
> including the impressive Fairfax Falls. In the past I have always ridden it 
> counter clockwise, which includes a beast of a 3K climb, including a K of 
> 20%+ grade right in the middle.  This year I reversed direction and have 
> been riding it clockwise on my Rambouillet, with a very nice set of Grand 
> Bois Cerf tires.  The first time down it I discovered the pavement on the 
> steepest section was not in good condition, no pot holes or heaves, just 
> lots of broken chip and seal.  The bumping was quite dramatic and I felt 
> like one good hole could toss me over the handle bars.  Garmin was showing 
> 47.5 when I lightly squeezed the rear brake.  Fortunately the Paul's Racers 
> have excellent modulation and I safely slowed enough to feel OK.
>
> But when I got to the bottom I asked myself why I chickened out, since I 
> was just fine, and thought that the next time I would lay off the brakes. 
>  But this hasn't happened.  Instead each time I have gone down it, I have 
> gone slower and slower.  Today I took out my Trek, which has 32 mm TServes 
> to see if I would feel more comfortable at higher speeds with the softer 
> tire.  But when I got to the top of the hill I realized I had no real taste 
> for the experiment.  I went down at 25, until I could see the good pavement 
> at the bottom and then I let it roll out to 39.
>
> So I ask myself, is this wisdom, or just yielding to irrational anxiety.
>
> Michael
> Westford, VT
>

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