Wow! I like this idea, especially since it would be different from
other Rivendells and other bikes. I hope they do it. I wonder if
they'll do the same for the smaller sizes.
On Apr 5, 9:01 am, William wrote:
> No choice Grant and Keven make is going to make everybody happy.
>
> On Apr 5, 8:27
Its on the Seattle CL site.
But that sharp bike is in Portland right now although I will be up
north again this week
and it deserves the widest audience possible.
Beth H. has not seen this ride in person, but I would like to thank
her for some guidance she gave over the phone.
So would someone p
On Apr 5, 2010, at 10:27 PM, doug peterson wrote:
> Paper is good. It's wonderful to find BQ drop thru the mail slot, a
> bit like Christmas but 4X per year. An e-mail notice that "your new
> BQ is now available in PDF" wouldn't be the same. Your current mix
> and balance of topics suits m
Details posted on the Flickr site:
http://tinyurl.com/yfqjuj9
And for those of you who don't like to click links, you will find the
details below:
OK, this is it folks, the rough riders ride to equal if not beat the best of
the best. You will not be sorry, unless you don't come.
We're going t
I also love the charm of getting a BQ in the mail but I still have to
disagree. Bike porn is better in color. In particular, I saw color
pictures online of the Toei that was reviewed in BQ and I felt that
the printed black and white photos really failed to convey the
loveliness of the bike.
On the
Awesome video. I've shown this to a handful of people and they said
they could related.
On Apr 5, 3:15 am, EricP wrote:
> Well, the video does make one think. And it does make me question
> some fundamental values I hold dear (which is very good).
>
> Eric Platt
> St. Paul, MN
>
> On Apr 4, 11:1
Or you could wait till Rivendell finishes their panniers. Check out
the new post
http://www.rivbike.com/blogs/knothole_post/225
-Manny
On Apr 5, 9:29 pm, happyriding wrote:
> Thanks for the recommendations.
>
> It looks like Arkel's GT-54 panniers offer the best of both worlds:
> they have a dry
Eric-- I say good move and I think most people (including the people
at Riv (warning: speculation)) would do the same thing and that most,
good, honest businesses would WANT to give you your money back. There
is no blame here-- you ordered something and it changed and you no
longer wanted it. That
Thanks for the recommendations.
It looks like Arkel's GT-54 panniers offer the best of both worlds:
they have a dry sack integrated into the main compartment, which you
can either use or roll up so it is out of the way. But they are
extremely expensive at $380. I guess you could just buy a dry b
Paper is good. It's wonderful to find BQ drop thru the mail slot, a
bit like Christmas but 4X per year. An e-mail notice that "your new
BQ is now available in PDF" wouldn't be the same. Your current mix
and balance of topics suits me. I've learned a lot of interesting
stuff reading BQ.
dougP
Serious promotion! The pressure's on, Esteban!
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 12:55 PM, doug peterson wrote:
> With that listing, the turnout may exceed last years.by a lot!
> Next thing we'll need are route slips. See you Sunday.
> Hey, this will be 3 Riv rides in 3 weeks - cool!
>
> dougP
>
> On
Yes, point taken. :-)
Looks like most of the damage in Mexicali (got the blues). That's just
across the border from Calexico, which could be a pretty cool case study.
TJ seems to have came out ok, and they've got some serious shantitowns on
the hillsides there.
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 4:33 AM, Se
I know, I know... tough one to miss. Looked & sounded GREAT from all the
pics and write ups.
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 1:10 PM, doug peterson wrote:
> Rob:
>
> Thanks again for organizing this ride. After all the rain, those
> hills probably look better than they have in years. We chatted
> bri
You're awesome! All bikes deserve a good home!
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 7:23 PM, Dan Abelson wrote:
> I am the buyer of the Hilsen. I can't wait to get it and I owe a big thank
> you to my wife for giving me her blessing. Now time to get my Gunnar ready
> for sale.
>
> Dan Abelson
> St. Paul, M
Dang, one size too big for me!
http://seattle.craigslist.org/see/bik/1678190892.html
Ryan
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To unsubscribe from this gro
completely agree. the B&W is part of the "charm" to me. Great
magazine!!
On Apr 5, 7:38 pm, Tim McNamara wrote:
> On Apr 5, 2010, at 4:54 PM, jan_heine wrote:
>
> > Color would be nice, but it's terribly expensive. We offer color in
> > our books, which can be sold over a longer period of time, a
On Apr 5, 2010, at 4:54 PM, jan_heine wrote:
Color would be nice, but it's terribly expensive. We offer color in
our books, which can be sold over a longer period of time, and thus
amortize the cost.
IMHO the B&W has a certain niftiness that color just doesn't have.
Don't sweat it.
--
Yo
I am the buyer of the Hilsen. I can't wait to get it and I owe a big thank
you to my wife for giving me her blessing. Now time to get my Gunnar ready
for sale.
Dan Abelson
St. Paul, MN
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 9:18 PM, cyclotourist wrote:
> Er, Hilsen that is.
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 7:18
Er, Hilsen that is.
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 7:18 PM, cyclotourist wrote:
> Two nice bikes sold today... Bomba and a Ram.
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 6:25 PM, jinxed wrote:
>
>> Thanks (again) Andrew! :)
>>
>> --
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
>> "RB
Two nice bikes sold today... Bomba and a Ram.
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 6:25 PM, jinxed wrote:
> Thanks (again) Andrew! :)
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "RBW Owners Bunch" group.
> To post to this group, send email to rbw-owners-bu...@googlegro
On Apr 5, 5:21 pm, Eric Norris wrote:
> I had the same problem with mine. Definitely suggest wrapping some cloth bar
> tape around the stays before mounting the Hupe.
>
> --Eric
cloth,even shellacked, will not offer full protection from a silver
hupe. I know from experience. Maybe a few laye
OK, trying to get an updated list together... Conquest is still left; I'm
surprised! I'll throw in the 22T chainring or the Shimano freewheel in with
the saddle! I'll be boxing up stuff tonight, and can hopefully get some
more pics of the Trek tomorrow. It has clearance for 35mm tires for sure o
Yes. Well, I suppose it¹s all for the best. Congratulations, Andrew.
--
Jon ³Papa² Grant
Illustration + Information Graphics
Austin, Texas
jgr...@papagrant.com
512-284-9599
From: jinxed
Reply-To:
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2010 18:25:25 -0700 (PDT)
To: RBW Owners Bunch
Subject: [RBW] 52cm Bombadil fo
spoken for, thanks for the interest!
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 6:28 PM, Corwin wrote:
> Hi David -
>
> I will take the Jaguar it it's still unclaimed.
>
> Thanks,
>
>
> Corwin
>
> On Apr 4, 10:49 pm, cyclotourist wrote:
> > Updated showing items still available, thanks for the interest!
> >
> > $5
Hi David -
I will take the Jaguar it it's still unclaimed.
Thanks,
Corwin
On Apr 4, 10:49 pm, cyclotourist wrote:
> Updated showing items still available, thanks for the interest!
>
> $5 shipping any one item. Saddles are $10 shipping. Two or more items get
> *FREE *shipping thrown in. Can
spoken for, thanks
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 3:37 AM, hobie wrote:
> I'll take the noodle bars.James
>
> On Apr 5, 1:49 am, cyclotourist wrote:
> > Updated showing items still available, thanks for the interest!
> >
> > $5 shipping any one item. Saddles are $10 shipping. Two or more items
> get
Thanks (again) Andrew! :)
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F
Eric
I don't think anyone should or would fault you for not wanting to
follow through on buying a bike that changed into something you don't
like.
Personally, the only thing you said that I thought was a bit unfair
was the statement that the bike seemed like a 'half-hearted copy' of
another bike.
I don't like it. I view the functionality of any bike that I can't
throw over my shoulder and run with, or climb up and down stairs
easily, as pretty limited. This has a direct correlation with the
places I go and where I live though.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to t
I'm owning up. It's me that has the refund. Mainly due to the
thought that this is not the bike I pre-ordered. It may be good, but
not what I was lead to expect from the inital .pdf. The new bike is
also too jarring to me visually.
Sorry to the list if I've made too much and lead to discord.
My copies are in tatters from multiple reads.
On Apr 5, 5:54 pm, jan_heine wrote:
> Color would be nice, but it's terribly expensive. We offer color in
> our books, which can be sold over a longer period of time, and thus
> amortize the cost. We also have color photos of almost all bikes
> featur
Color would be nice, but it's terribly expensive. We offer color in
our books, which can be sold over a longer period of time, and thus
amortize the cost. We also have color photos of almost all bikes
featured in BQ at
http://www.vintagebicyclepress.com/image-archive.html
More ride reports: Every
If I had a deposit, I'd keep it in there until one of these comes off
the boat. I'll bet they'll look pretty awesome. Having ridden the
prototypes, I'll say that they are SOLID. This diagonal-fest will
only make them more solid. And more awesome.
And these were never svelte bikes. They are in
Man...it sure must be nice to have a PBH above 75. All the choices you
75+ PBHers have in bike frames makes me delirious and jealous and
still not tall.
Meanwhile, on back on the little ol' Betty (whichfunny isn't
it..the Hunq is beginning to ever-so-slightly
resemble...muhuhuwahahaha.)
O
I think it's a waste of energy to get upset about something like
this. First, it's a bicycle. Bicycles are fun. Second, if you're
upset about it, give it a few days and see if you still feel the same
way. It's going to be a nice bike.
On Apr 5, 1:50 pm, happyriding wrote:
> Just read that mys
i hope there's no serious hard feeligns..
the new design is just that, a new design. it's different than what
was initially shown during the presale and all the here's da hunka
stuff. If someone doesn't like the changes ( i haven't made up my mind
yet ), I don't see anything wrong with them asking
Just read that myself. It seems like some hard feelings are being
formed.
On Apr 5, 3:28 pm, William wrote:
> .and Grant posted about the various opinions, and indicated that
> one refund was given already. I think that's too bad, but nobody
> should buy a bike that they cannot like.
>
>
Hi gang:
Check out "Fat Terrain on Skinny Tires" on the Adventure Cycling Blog:
http://blog.adventurecycling.org/2010/04/fat-terrain-on-skinny-tires.html
I'm so excited about the momentum we're building!
- Chris Kostman
La Jolla, CA
http://www.XO-1.org
--
You received this message because you
True, dat...
On Apr 5, 1:56 pm, Steve Palincsar wrote:
> On Mon, 2010-04-05 at 13:45 -0700, Me wrote:
> > This thing is like inviting heartbreak purposely into one's life.
>
> At least it's cheaper than buying a French car.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google G
It's the rubber coated metal ends, that poke through the rubber, that
take the fun out of installation [and the paint/primer/and steel too].
On Apr 5, 2:15 pm, happyriding wrote:
> On Apr 5, 2:45 pm, Me wrote:
>
> > This thing is like inviting heartbreak purposely into one's life.
>
> > Bought o
.and Grant posted about the various opinions, and indicated that
one refund was given already. I think that's too bad, but nobody
should buy a bike that they cannot like.
On Apr 5, 8:27 am, Dan Abelson wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:23 AM, EricP wrote:
> > Having looked at the first moc
I had the same problem with mine. Definitely suggest wrapping some cloth bar
tape around the stays before mounting the Hupe.
--Eric
campyonly...@me.com
www.campyonly.com
Sent from my iPad
On Apr 5, 2010, at 2:15 PM, happyriding wrote:
> On Apr 5, 2:45 pm, Me wrote:
>> This thing is like inv
On Apr 5, 2:45 pm, Me wrote:
> This thing is like inviting heartbreak purposely into one's life.
>
> Bought one 3 years ago, never used/never had a use for it... until
> late.
>
> And after three tries, and the resulting 6 [3 per seatstay] deep -
> through paint/primer & into the actual steel deep
Yes, Riv likes beausage, but it's possible that it may have something to do
with selling items that do this to your bike.
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2010 14:09:49 -0700
From: fullylug...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Silver Hupe of Death
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
They do suck royally. (Hupe
They do suck royally. (Hupes and old French cars) I took a metal file to the
ends of mine and it has been serviceable.
Remember Riv LIKES "beausage" your gouges are proof of the authenticity of your
zeitgeist..
From: Steve Palincsar
To: rbw-owners-bunch@goo
On Mon, 2010-04-05 at 13:45 -0700, Me wrote:
> This thing is like inviting heartbreak purposely into one's life.
At least it's cheaper than buying a French car.
--
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Owners Bunch" group.
To post to this group, send e
This thing is like inviting heartbreak purposely into one's life.
Bought one 3 years ago, never used/never had a use for it... until
late.
And after three tries, and the resulting 6 [3 per seatstay] deep -
through paint/primer & into the actual steel deep- hanks into my Bob
Brown custom, I can of
Rob:
Thanks again for organizing this ride. After all the rain, those
hills probably look better than they have in years. We chatted
briefly with a rancher on horseback with 2 dogs (1 shepherd & 1 pit
bull) who was really friendly. Said the horse was still getting used
to bikes. The Atlantis w
Patrick, when you decide to "pull the trigger", you're on full auto!
dougP
On Apr 4, 5:50 pm, Justin August wrote:
> I love those Linus bags. I might buy some for commuting. Fits the
> aesthetic of a teacher pretty well...
>
> On Apr 3, 10:00 pm, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
>
>
>
> > I finally decided
Nice color match.
On Apr 5, 8:18 am, "Frederick, Steve"
wrote:
> Very nice but I find those thin-wall models very prone to cracking...
>
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
>
> [mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com]on Behalf Of James Warren
> Sent: Sunda
With that listing, the turnout may exceed last years.by a lot!
Next thing we'll need are route slips. See you Sunday.
Hey, this will be 3 Riv rides in 3 weeks - cool!
dougP
On Apr 5, 10:38 am, Esteban wrote:
> Our ride is onvthe show website!
>
> http://www.sandiegocustombicycleshow.com/
>
All major purchase decisions we make involve some form of value
analysis. Since everyone's values differ, there's more to life than
unit prices. I have a couple of friends who won't own anything but a
over-priced (to me) German sports sedan, yet gasp at the notion of a
bicycle costing $2,000. Be
On Apr 5, 1:06 pm, William wrote:
> And here's the fantasy decal for the Diagonpillar:
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/45758...@n04/4494550338/
>
Ha ha ha!
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And here's the fantasy decal for the Diagonpillar:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/45758...@n04/4494550338/
On Apr 5, 11:52 am, Esteban wrote:
> I like all of the tt configurations imagined here, far better than the
> parallel... This bike is meant to be a beast! The extra structure is
> intere
On Apr 5, 12:08 pm, james black wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:48, happyriding wrote:
> > Oh, yeah. Here is james black's suggested tube orientation--the two
> > triangles are better than one geometry:
> >http://www.flickr.com/photos/49416...@n00/4494282750/
>
> Thanks for mocking that up! I
My SO has three fat-chances, all of them well-ridden too. They are
cool bikes.
On Apr 5, 1:43 pm, Buck wrote:
> Exactly. It's them nuances and the effect they have on our lives. And
> actually the same friend who has the boat (which I don't understand
> either) says it best... "there's an ass
I like all of the tt configurations imagined here, far better than the
parallel... This bike is meant to be a beast! The extra structure is
interesting and functional. Cool like interesting duthh bikes.
Unique l! Diagonal-ize!
On Apr 5, 11:08 am, james black wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10
Danged! If that diagonal tube had been on the docket last week during
the pre-deal, it might well have pushed me over the edge!
FWIW, I saw a campeur in a (cool) shop in Paris last year - Rando Cycles
http://www.flickr.com/photos/66275...@n00/4494454218/
... I think it was the owner's bike. Big/ta
Amen to that. And when will we get some more ride reports as in the earlier
issues, as the PBP tandem story?
It has too much technical esoterica for my taste.
FWIW.
Not much, no doubt.
PAM
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:33 AM, wrote:
> When will we get an electronic version?
> Paper is SO 2nd cen
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:48, happyriding wrote:
> Oh, yeah. Here is james black's suggested tube orientation--the two
> triangles are better than one geometry:
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/49416...@n00/4494282750/
Thanks for mocking that up! It doesn't look as good as I had imagined
when I de
So... that's all I was noodling on. I couldn't rationally explain the
extra $2500 I spent, but I just knew that I couldn't be happier having
done it. OK, time to stop typing and go out riding.
Hell, you got off lightly. I've had 3 customs and I ride 4K miles in a good
year (usually closer to 3K).
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 9:24 AM, Dave Craig wrote:
>
>
> In my experience with my 60 cm Bombadil, I found the center Esge 2 leg
> stand to be unstable on anything but dead flat, hard ground. I mention
> the size of the bike because I wondered whether the height provided a
> greater lever for desta
Personally I like all the options shown better than two parallel toptubes.
They all look like reinforcing structures to me whereas the paralle TT's just
look redundant...what's that thing that's in the eye of the be-whatsits?
Steve
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups
UPDATE:
SOLD
- 55cm A Homer Hilsen
- track cogs
- front brake
STILL AVAILABLE:
- Ritchey Speedmax Cross Comp 700x40 tires - maybe 50 miles on these
$35/pair
- PrincetonTec Switchback 3 light with all accessories in box $95
- cork Grips, new $6
- clothe tape, new: 2 rolls dark blue $5, 2 rolls aqu
On Apr 5, 9:51 am, Garth wrote:
> Eric,
>
> Riv isn't going to make any drastic changes to the Hunq, or else
> they'd have to call it something else.
>
> What you see here is pure fantasy. One thought about TT's not being
> parallel and all of the sudden we have a whole new frame?
> Nah.
Did you
Exactly. It's them nuances and the effect they have on our lives. And
actually the same friend who has the boat (which I don't understand
either) says it best... "there's an ass for every seat".
I was thinking just the other day how when I was growing up I had an
old Raleigh 3-speed with a Brooks
Our ride is onvthe show website!
http://www.sandiegocustombicycleshow.com/
Esteban
Sam Diego, Calif.
On Apr 5, 7:44 am, EricP wrote:
> Well, yeah. That too. Most of my rides were early in the morning, so
> that wasn't as much a distraction.
>
> Also had a fun time watching some dolphins play
Eric,
Riv isn't going to make any drastic changes to the Hunq, or else
they'd have to call it something else.
What you see here is pure fantasy. One thought about TT's not being
parallel and all of the sudden we have a whole new frame?
Nah.
--
You received this message because you are subscrib
Luggage style makes sense in that scenario, no matter the weight -
having a bike swinging around near head height in crowds might make
people nervous :-)
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 12:27 PM, William wrote:
> Bill
>
> Yeah, luggage style. My BART bike tends to be in the 45-50lb range
> loaded with a
On Apr 5, 11:14 am, Bill Connell wrote:
> In my case, there are at
> least a couple of places around town where trail access involves a
> long staircase or (on one offroad trail) a long log crossing, so i
> shoulder the bike, cyclocross-style. I don't use a tt-mounted pump on
> most bikes for this
Bill
Yeah, luggage style. My BART bike tends to be in the 45-50lb range
loaded with all my work related stuff. My shoulder couldn't take
that.
other Bill
On Apr 5, 10:14 am, Bill Connell wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 11:48 AM, William wrote:
> > When I portage my Hillborne up and down the
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 11:48 AM, William wrote:
> When I portage my Hillborne up and down the long steps of the South
> Hayward Bart station, I grab it hard on the seat tube and loop my
> thumb into the top loop of the King cage that is bolted to the seat
> tube. If I'm wearing knit gloves, it's
Wow-- great mock up! I'll admit that it is much better than I expected
it to look, but i still don't get it. I am sure it is stronger, but
how much and is it necessary and isn't the Bomba pretty darn strong
with the parallel tt's? There are definite disadvantages to the
design, including bottle pla
How about this:
-52cm raw clear Frame / Fork with Headset
-Rich built LX/Synergy wheels with Pacenti Quasi-moto 2.1's
-XT shadow rear derailleur
-XT (newer style) Crankset/BB
-XTR front derailleur
-Shimano slr canti brakes
-Nitto seatpost
1850 shipped within the US
Thanks
Brad
hbclick at yahoo
speaking as a person who did/does not like the original design, either
of the "Marty Photoshop" designs are way better and lend a unique
quaulity to the bike. Just sayin".
~Mike~
On Apr 5, 9:48 am, William wrote:
> When I portage my Hillborne up and down the long steps of the South
> Hayward Bar
I agree, great job marty!
I'm also with Matt on this for those who pre-ordered, and I'm one of
them. It would be a substantial change to the design that was
presented to early adopters and therefore if they're going to go
through with this they need to contact each of those people. It sounds
like
When I portage my Hillborne up and down the long steps of the South
Hayward Bart station, I grab it hard on the seat tube and loop my
thumb into the top loop of the King cage that is bolted to the seat
tube. If I'm wearing knit gloves, it's hard to get a good grip. More
than once I've thought tha
I may have missed this earlier in the discusion, but I assume that the 54 would
still have only one top tube. Is that the current understanding as far as we
know?Jim D Massachusetts
--- On Mon, 4/5/10, Bill Connell wrote:
From: Bill Connell
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Diagonapillar
When will we get an electronic version?
Paper is SO 2nd century!
On Apr 5, 2010, at 9:00 AM, jan_heine wrote:
>> I know a lot of folks here read Vintage Bicycle Quarterly. A friend
>> received the latest issue on 04/03. I imagine mine should arrive
>> today. Beth H's Rivendell is featured in t
I don't post very often (Jim pointed out there's an endless footer attached to
my messages when I do!), but let me offer the opinion of an Atlantis and
Bombadil owner (which means that I ain't buying one no matter what the decision
is): I think the diagonal 2tt (the Campeur approach) is extreme
I appreciate BQ, extremely well done. I just gave a gift subscription
to a friend who I think will enjoy it as much as I, but hasn't drunk
the Koolaid.
On Apr 5, 9:00 am, jan_heine wrote:
> > I know a lot of folks here read Vintage Bicycle Quarterly. A friend
> > received the latest issue on 04/0
Subject corrected. Sorry about that Jan. I think it's probably been BQ
as long as I've been reading it (3yrs) and just didn't notice that.
I'm hoping mine will arrive today, give me something to read on this
rainy day.
--mike
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Can't decide if I have a preference between the parallel vs. the
diagonal 2nd top tube. Aesthetically, I didn't like the 2nd top tube
at all when the first Bombadil pictures "dropped". Now I don't mind
it. In fact I kind of like how it looks. I kind of think that the
diagonal 2tt might grow on me i
Just an opinion, and not meant to insult anyone...but that is the
ugliest bike I've ever seen. Sorry. Just one opinion.
I suspect one reason Rivendell might like to do the diagonal 2tt is
marketing: it helps differentiate the Hunaqpillar from the Bombadil--
even if it doesn't improve on it. B
No choice Grant and Keven make is going to make everybody happy.
On Apr 5, 8:27 am, Dan Abelson wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:23 AM, EricP wrote:
> > Having looked at the first mockup, I'm not convinced. Jars my view
> > too much. Also makes it look like it's a "fatty" bike. Fine. I'm
>
I received the latest issue on Friday. I live in Seattle, so I have
an advantage :-). I've read it cover to cover and am ready to
re-read. It's another great one, as usual. Everyone has some good
reading to look forward to as spring is finally coming on!
Great job again Jan Heine and all contr
I was just re-reading some back issues of Bicycle Quarterly last
night. I really enjoy this magazine. It is beyond comparison to any
other bicycling magazine I've ever seen. Packed with great
information- from real-world aerodynamic testing, comfort & the flex
of fork-blades, issues of fork
On Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 10:23 AM, EricP wrote:
> Having looked at the first mockup, I'm not convinced. Jars my view
> too much. Also makes it look like it's a "fatty" bike. Fine. I'm
> fat. That's been established. Don't like the idea that I'm stuck
> riding a "special" bike.
>
> With full-l
Steve,
PM sent!!
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Lots of people like the Esge two leg stands. I can only speak from my
experience and from comparing parking my wife's bike with parking my
bike for two months of touring. She seemed to be able to park anywhere
while I had to be a lot more selective.
Lifting a wheel clear of the ground was the only
The money we spend and how we choose to spend it. Sheesh.
I have a Joe S./Curt/Joe B. Rivendell custom that was damaged in a
collision. While it was away for repair, I put almost all the parts on a
(Panasonic-built?) Schwinn World Voyageur frame so I could continue riding
to work. It was pretty en
Having looked at the first mockup, I'm not convinced. Jars my view
too much. Also makes it look like it's a "fatty" bike. Fine. I'm
fat. That's been established. Don't like the idea that I'm stuck
riding a "special" bike.
With full-length twin laterals, ala the Singer camping, or the
origina
Very nice but I find those thin-wall models very prone to cracking...
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com]on Behalf Of James Warren
Sent: Sunday, April 04, 2010 9:57 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: [RBW] Egg
Sorry, Ryan...not Dan.
On Apr 5, 11:17 am, stevep33 wrote:
> Thanks Dan. I debated letting this one go for a long while. It's a
> wonderful bike.
>
> On Apr 5, 10:58 am, RoadieRyan wrote:
>
> > Steve that is a damn gorgeous bike I am sure it will find a good home.
>
>
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Thanks Dan. I debated letting this one go for a long while. It's a
wonderful bike.
On Apr 5, 10:58 am, RoadieRyan wrote:
> Steve that is a damn gorgeous bike I am sure it will find a good home.
>
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> I know a lot of folks here read Vintage Bicycle Quarterly. A friend
> received the latest issue on 04/03. I imagine mine should arrive
> today. Beth H's Rivendell is featured in this issues "My Favorite
> Bike" article.
Just a quick note: The magazine has been "Bicycle Quarterly" for quite
a few
I'll take the noodle bars.James
On Apr 5, 1:49 am, cyclotourist wrote:
> Updated showing items still available, thanks for the interest!
>
> $5 shipping any one item. Saddles are $10 shipping. Two or more items get
> *FREE *shipping thrown in. Can deliver to San Diego for the show next
> weeke
Steve that is a damn gorgeous bike I am sure it will find a good home.
On Apr 5, 7:16 am, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> Whoops about the wheels. I thought they might be a second, lighter wheelset
> for the Monocog but then remembered that the Monocog has disk brakes. So,
> withdraw request for wheels bu
I'm a fan of the Ortliebs. Mainly due to the ease of cleaning the
outside of winter grit and grime.
In absolute terms, have a set of Arkel Sackaroos I purchased from Jim
a few years ago. They work as fine as anything. Even with the basic
attachement system, haven't had problems.
Did have my ho
The mockups are really helpful, thanks for putting them together. I
have to say, i greatly prefer the look of parallel top tubes, if a
double TT is the plan, but i'm not on the Hunq list, so my vote is
more theoretical.
Two other observations in this discussion though:
This is the second Riv frame
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