Thanks.  There's a photo of me and the bike taken immediately after it happened 
on my flickr site.  I was very lucky - not only didn't I get hurt, my tumbling 
roll stopped about a foot short of a huge pile of dog shit.  It must have 
looked horrible: people behind me on the ride thought I'd be dead for sure.

Actually, one of the weirdest failures I've ever encountered happened as a 
result of that crash.  After I had the bike fixed, Tom, Joan and I went for a 
ride to the National Arboretum.  (Joan took some photos of the old Capitol 
columns which I converted to B&W; they're on my flickr site as well.)  After we 
saw the columns, we went on to an overlook.  I stopped, looked back wondering 
where Joan went, and discovered my front brake was locked on.  Couldn't get the 
lever to move, couldn't get any slack into the cable.  When Joan arrived the 
two of us spent around 10 min futzing with the cable adjuster to get enough 
slack in the brake that I could ride.

Over the course of the next half hour, the brake slowly, miraculously, healed 
itself.  

When I took the bike to the LBS they disassembled the brake lever and found 
inside the lever were to small pebbles that had gotten there when the bike 
crashed.  They'd migrated to a position that jammed the brake lever, and then 
as the ride went on, rolled a little and got out of the way again.

But looking at the dates of this message and the originals you're replying to 
-- have you gotten really backed up, or has this message been circling the 
Beltway somewhere since January?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Montclair BobbyB" <montclairbob...@gmail.com>
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, July 5, 2013 9:52:44 AM
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: 1 bike? Could you do it?

Steve: 


GLAD YOU WEREN'T INJURED!!!! You're irreplaceable. BB 

On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 11:06:41 AM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote: 

On Wed, 2013-01-23 at 07:33 -0800, Jan Heine wrote: 
> 
> I find that with fewer bikes, it's easier to keep them in top shape. 
> For many years, I raced and trained 12,000 miles a year and had a 
> single bike, without ever missing a ride or race due to the bike not 
> being rideable. 

I recently had a bottom bracket spindle break on my George Longstaff 
Audax. It took 10 days for the LBS to get the part and replace it. 


I crashed. I walked away from it, and aside from the broken spindle, 
the only damage was a slightly bent front derailleur that no longer 
shifted well; getting that fixed only blew a day and a half. But bikes 
often do get damaged in crashes, and sometimes in ways that can't be 
fixed with a simple tweak (like a bent derailleur hanger). Forks bend. 
Sometimes frames crack (I know a few people who have had to replace 
carbon frames because they cracked when they fell over with two full 
water bottles) and have to be replaced. 

If I had to replace the fork on the Longstaff (assuming I could actually 
even do that, the builder having been dead since 2003) it would take 
months. Frame replacements can weeks, if it's a broken Cannondale or 
Trek, or maybe years if it's something like Jan's Rene Herse. 

Back in 2012, on the Longstaff, I discovered a cracked rear rim (Mavic 
MA3) on Aug 13. I had the wheel rebuilt with an Open Pro at the LBS. 
The new wheel was delivered Sept. 13. Almost all that time was 
obtaining the rim, which was out of stock for about 3 weeks; the rest of 
the time was the build itself. 

Also in 2012, I had a cracked rear rim (this time, a Velocity Synergy). 
Velocity replaced the rim and rebuilt the wheel under warranty. Bike 
(this time, the MAP) was out of service from Feb 24 - March 2. 

Besides extended deadlines waiting for parts or frame repairs, there's 
another type of failure that Jan might not encounter. If you commute to 
work and have to be there at a given time (yes, flex time is wonderful 
but not everybody has flexible working hours) or if you are driving 
30-90 minutes to the start of a club ride, finding the bike you intended 
to ride with a flat tire first thing in the morning could be a major 
problem. 

While it can be a 10 minute job to fix a flat, it can also sometimes 
turn into a 30 minute job. After all, you first have to find what 
caused the flat, and sometimes that's not so easy to do (especially if 
you're far sighted). And 30 minutes' late start on a 60 minute drive to 
a ride start is almost certainly going to mean you'll miss the ride 
start. 

Maybe not a problem if you're fast (like Jan) and also have the cue 
sheets, GPS data, etc., in advance (as is typical of a brevet;) but for 
an ordinary bike club ride, where you only get the cue sheet when you 
sign in, showing up late often means you miss the ride completely. 

It's awfully nice in that event to have another bike you can grab, 
that's ready to go except that it might need a few pounds of air in the 
tires and a swap of gear into a different bike bag. That's a 3 minute 
job, and it means you won't be late for work and won't have to take 
annual leave and get a scolding from a supervisor, or won't miss the 
ride. 






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