You're super-bueno famous!!!
On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 10:33 PM, manueljohnacosta <
manueljohnaco...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> On my way back from San Diego I was approached by a guy who wanted to
> take a picture of me. I found out it was the same blogger who doe
> Cyclelicious!
>
> http://www.cyclel
on 7/31/10 7:54 AM, Shaun Meehan at meehan.sh...@gmail.com wrote:
> Does anyone know if Jim (or anyone else) has put the links to the
> online Rivendell Readers (pdf files) in one place for easy
> accessibility? I'm behind in my Reader reading and looking for the
> links. Thanks!
Thanks for the re
On my way back from San Diego I was approached by a guy who wanted to
take a picture of me. I found out it was the same blogger who doe
Cyclelicious!
http://www.cyclelicio.us/2010/manny-and-his-rivendell-bleriot/
-Manny
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Roadieryan truly grasps the complexity of this issue. As he predicted,
my wife lept over the discussion of eccentric hubs and chain
tensioning and is now fully focused on the details of the Eleven81
wicker basket, which she declares a stunning example of a bike basket.
Given that I'll be doing the
I'm assuming she doesn't like either the grey grid or the olive?
Happen to think the olive looks nice, but that's me.
An option could be the Arkel Tail Rider. Available in red. Not
necessarily as handsome, but would do the job.
Tweed might eventually make it's way, but when I asked, was told th
Joel,
Sounds like a great trip. There are enough trails to make that a
great route. And, yeah, avoiding the weekend crowd has it's appeal.
When I rode the trails down there in May it was a similar situation.
Lots of times had the trail to myself.
Yup, ridden the Root River trails many times. H
Schwalbe tires do seem to run a touch small at the beginning. Then
stretch out. My Hillborne has a new Schwalbe Marathon Supreme up
front and had to decrease the computer setting a couple of mm to get
things right.
On the Atlantis I used to own, 26x50 Big Apples fit fine. The 60s
seemed close.
On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 16:45, JoelMatthews wrote:
> Thanks James. So as Angus you use a thin bolt inside a robust
> spring. Like the concave washers on either side of the chain stay
> bridge.
That's correct, but truth be told, the spring, not so robust, is
largely cosmetic - the fender is sque
> In case you want to see another spring thing, I have a picture of the
> spring on the Berthoud fenders on my Nishiki:
Thanks James. So as Angus you use a thin bolt inside a robust
spring. Like the concave washers on either side of the chain stay
bridge.
On Jul 31, 6:13 pm, james black wrote:
> I painted the spacer to match the paint of the bike which I think
> gives it a "as-built" quality. Obviously, this solution won't work if
> the tire/bridge clearance on your project aren't sufficient.
Jim:
With luck I may be able to get away with that. The chain stays are
~42.5 length and I a
On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 15:03, JoelMatthews wrote:
> I have looked around and do not see where any of the usual suspects
> sell such a thing. Are the mechanics cobbling this together? If so,
> anyone come across a blog or youtube showing how?
In case you want to see another spring thing, I have
How about these?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/31353...@n07/3395869360/in/set-72157616085693460/
On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 4:05 PM, scott wrote:
> They may be doing a trunksack in the tweed. But if'n she is in a
> hurry, you may be out of luck. Maybe stap a wald backet to the back
> and never
They may be doing a trunksack in the tweed. But if'n she is in a
hurry, you may be out of luck. Maybe stap a wald backet to the back
and never worry about which bag to use.
Scott
On Jul 30, 2:13 pm, stormlight wrote:
> My wife loves the design of the Sackville TrunkSack. Its just what she
> ne
> With the tire size that I'm running on this bike
> (700x28c, Panaracer Pasela tire), I'm able to demount the tire without
> deflating it.
A slight correction to my former post. Obviously, I meant to say
"demount the wheel with out deflating the tire". I don't recommend
demounting the tire wit
Angus, that looks great! By "Nitto thing" are you referring to the
Nitto Wire Guard that Rivendell is selling? This one:
http://www.rivbike.com/products/show/nitto-wire-guard/20-189
How do you like it? Does it gouge the stays the way the Silver Hupe
does? I hope not. I'm thinking of picking one u
FS:1- 4 month old Sugino XD 600 170mm triple crankset 48/36/26 rings.
$90.
2- Campy Champ triple front derailer w. Ird type clamp adapter
28.6.$40.
3- Nitto Dirt Drop Stem 80cm Excellent condition $45.
All prices include shipping.Thanks for looking.
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You received this message becau
I got the re-painted Atlantis "up and running" last weekend. I think
it turned out well.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16951...@n08/4847125706/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/16951...@n08/4846506151/
The front fender warped (I stored it in the attic above the garage
while the frame was being repain
My wife loves the design of the Sackville TrunkSack. Its just what she
needs to replace some pans that are to big. However she is not down
with the color.
Anyone know of any of choices that are just not black nylon from the
local race rider bike store?
thanks
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You received this message becaus
Surly Long Haul Trucker, 42 cm frame 650 wheels, or else the Surly
1x1, same setup. It works for someone who is 4'9", she loves her long
haul trucker and cranks out 15+ miles multiple times a week.
We had a very tough time finding the right fit, with over 7 weeks
going to 13 bike shops. Finally, I
"Do you pull out the corks when you want to remove the rear
wheel, or do you have vertical dropouts?"
Horizontal dropouts - I unclip the metal SKS clip from the chain stay
bridge.
For me unclipping the front of the rear fender is annoying some of the
time - the bad fender line was annoying all of
I've been looking at that Train to get up to the Oakland..I thought
you had to box your bike on the Coast Starlight?
Then you could just hop on the BART to get to the city. Then my plan
would be to ride back home. I just need to coerce someone in to going
with me.
~Mike~
On Jul 31, 10:55 am, Ann
On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 9:53 AM, doug peterson wrote:
>. That bus leg has always put me off using Amtrak to the Bay
> Area. To get to San Francisco requires another bus ride from Jack
> London Square.
The Coast Starlight train stops in both San Jose and Oakland; no bus required.
--
-- Anne P
Joel,
I have no idea what size tire you're contemplating on this project,
but it may not be necessary to use a spring device. I was able to
achieve a nice fender line on my Rivendell Road Standard (which has
the horizontal dropouts that your project bike also has) by using a
nylon spacer. With th
Eric,
I enjoyed your photos of the Rail-Trail tour in Wisconsin. Very nice
shots, some of the photos have a quality that reminds me of a Frank
Patterson drawing.
I'm just curious about your caption on the photo of your wife holding
a camera - "holding one of our favorite non film cameras M4-P 50/
Manny:
That's good to hear that Amtrak took the bikes that way. I saw your
pix of them hanging in the train car & I've done that on the Surfliner
route. That bus leg has always put me off using Amtrak to the Bay
Area. To get to San Francisco requires another bus ride from Jack
London Square.
d
I've got a couple of old Atlantis info sheets & both list "max tire
size" at 2.1" for the 26" wheeled (excepting the 47 cm frame @ 1.7")
and 52 mm for the 700 wheels. I also recall Riv generally says the
Atlantis handles anything up to 2" wide.
Don't forget that the rim width affects the inflated
Guys that tour on uni's don't usually carry their own luggage. Not
saying some don't but 2 good friends have toured the Swiss Alps,
Tasmania, Africa, India, 1 of them is actually in Mongolia now with a
touring group and they haven't carried anything but maybe a
camelback. these guys ride 36in schu
On the Schwalbe site there is a comments forum, and one of the posters
begs Schwalbe to make a 55, because the 50 is too skinny and the 60
rubs on the chainstays of his Atlantis. Again, that's second hand
info, and it depends on the rim, but that was my source. The tires
are still available.
On
On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 9:53 PM, Earl Grey wrote:
> My friend has been riding a Fisher mountain bike for years (a 13") but
> now wants a faster/more versatile bike for mixed and road riding and
> commuting. Pretty much the only stock bikes that fit her are Terrys
> (her PBH is 67cm), and she isn'
Up here in Portland, we have regular appearances by unicyclists at
local brevets, and ten or more show up to race in a Unicycle category
at Cross Crusade every fall. Still, I don't see them very often out in
traffic.
Beth
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Group
Hi all,
Does anyone know if Jim (or anyone else) has put the links to the
online Rivendell Readers (pdf files) in one place for easy
accessibility? I'm behind in my Reader reading and looking for the
links. Thanks!
Shaun Meehan
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Goog
Nice idea! Do you pull out the corks when you want to remove the rear
wheel, or do you have vertical dropouts?
On Saturday, July 31, 2010, Angus wrote:
> Here we go. Just took the installed photo (if I had to do it again I
> would put the rough, cut end of the cork towards the fender).
>
> The b
I am taking the bike on the Amtrak to LaCrosse this September. Then
will had east on the trails through central Wisconsin then south via
Horicon Marsh back to Illinois. Will be going just before the leaves
change. With luck I will get decent weather. It would be great to do
the trip when the lea
The railtrail that goes east out of LaCrosse was super-nice! I think I read
that it's the first ever...
Steve
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com on behalf of EricP
Sent: Sat 7/31/2010 8:44 AM
To: RBW Owners Bunch
Subject: [RBW] Re: Hillborne out of town
True.
Thanks for the pics. Very clever. I think I can do that ;)
BTW, your silver and cream Atlantis, wow.
On Jul 31, 6:33 am, Angus wrote:
> Here we go. Just took the installed photo (if I had to do it again I
> would put the rough, cut end of the cork towards the fender).
>
> The bolts, I believe
True. However, my other two bikes have tires 50mm and 60mm wide. So
these are positively skinny for that type of riding.
Yes, the rail-trails are great. Ended up purchasing a season pass to
take advantage of them. (Next on the list, lower half of Gandy Dancer
trail.)
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
I believe the 60s will fit without fenders and the 50s will fit with
fenders.
On Jul 30, 10:35 pm, William wrote:
> The 60's, I'm told, will not fit an Atlantis. The 50's will, or that
> is my understanding. Correct me if I'm wrong.
>
> On Jul 30, 6:06 pm, Frankwurst wrote:
>
> > Huh? They won
Here we go. Just took the installed photo (if I had to do it again I
would put the rough, cut end of the cork towards the fender).
The bolts, I believe, are long bolts that SKS provides for the fork
crown; the clip and other metal bits are also standard SKS hardware.
I recall that I had to drill
Yeah, I saw those and got quite excited, but they are still too big, I
think.
Gernot
On Jul 29, 9:17 pm, Seth Vidal wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 29, 2010 at 10:00 AM, Earl Grey wrote:
> > Thanks for all the recommendations.
>
> > I should have mentioned that she is interested in a go-fast (partly to
>
I'll take a picture today (thought I had one) and post it.
I used the "spring clip" that came with the fenders, but spaced it out
from the fender and inch or so with the cork spacers. It required two
longer bolts and cutting and drilling the corks.
Sorry for the delay, just got home from a short
Well, sure--that's just the sort of stuff these bikes were designed for! The
railtrails in Wisconsin are great, aren't they? Had a blast riding them on the
Saluki a couple of summers ago...
Steve
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com on behalf of EricP
Sent: Thu
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