So, blognetnews was a terrific blog aggregator for cycling-related
blogs. Unfortunately, the website died back in July.
Would anyone out there happen to have the list of blogs that were on
blognetnews.com/cycling/?
It's a long shot, but I'm hopeful
Thanks
Kevin
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Nitto Humble post and saddlesack xs. Been itching to buy the post
and 'sack. What better time than now?
Cheers!
cm
On Oct 30, 6:40 am, Angus wrote:
> Thanks for the reminder John...order placed.
>
> On Oct 29, 12:46 pm, John Bennett wrote:
>
> > We've had a super slow week, and yesterday was th
I love the Marathon Extremes!
I have a set 700x40 that I've ridden a few times but not for a long
time since I went with the 50s on the Bombadil/Atlantis. I used them
on a mixed ride and thought they were awesome in both dirt and
pavement. I couldn't feel any sluggishness on the road and the grip
on 10/29/10 12:17 PM, Patrick in VT at swing4...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Oct 29, 2:25 pm, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
>> Second observation: gearing: this sort of course seems like a good
>> candidate for a ss: say 60" to 65"; I used to use 63" for allrounder
>> dirt-cum-pavement. I don't see anyone twidd
@ Peter,
Agreed. But alas, like many component groups, the silver is slowly
fading away as a good option; the 6700 group only comes with black
brifters.
The next logical question then is: What to do about this? Hoard, or
hope for a revival in silver components (like the new Campy Athena
silver
That's interesting. I rode the Marathon Extremes (discontinued by Riv I
believe) on the Atlantis today, rode on pavement and climbed on tacky dirt, and
they just felt great.
I know these things are nonlinear, but I just thought I'd give you some data.
-Jim W.
p.s. I ate ribs and drank beer in
I think Rob mentioned the Platypus bottles. I have owned a few of them
and use them backpacking every trip for around camp and longer
waterless sections. I'll bring a 1L one for the ride in two weeks.
I am going to ride the new-to-me Ram. Gotta pick up some fatter
tires.. thinking about a 35 or 3
+1 on the Mara Sups being great climbers and smooth rollers, that occasionally
(often often) feel like they are filled with lead (on a SH).
andrew
On Oct 30, 2010, at 6:07 PM, EricP wrote:
> First caveat - I have not used the 700xanything Big Apples. Only the
> 26 inch version. Second, hav
First caveat - I have not used the 700xanything Big Apples. Only the
26 inch version. Second, have used the Marathon Supremes in both 26
and 700 versions. Have the latter 700x40 on the Sam Hillborne. I
find the Supremes a better climbing tire. My wife feels the Liteskin
26 inch Big Apple is a
Nice build, as always! Love the red stem spacers.
You lose me at the brifters, though. I don't mind the "brifting" part
- whatever floats your boat, shifting-wise - but I wish they could be
silver.
-Pete
On Oct 30, 2:54 pm, "Bryan @ Renaissance Bicycles"
wrote:
> Here is the latest Betty Foy Bu
There are many web videos about how to make a wallet out of tyvek.
FedEx shipping bags being the most popular source, seein' as how
they're free and all...
On Oct 30, 6:38 pm, Peter Andrews wrote:
> Of course, you could always learn how to make a wallet out of duct
> tape... they last quite a
And I only have to bottle holders. I ride an inferior bike.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 1:29 PM, doug peterson wrote:
> The Platypus looks interesting, and that's like 1-1/2 big bottles.
> That 3rd bottle gets kinda grungy at times. Extra water can be handy
> for washing out scrapes too.
>
> dougP
On Sat, 2010-10-30 at 15:38 -0700, Peter Andrews wrote:
For what it's worth, duct tape was developed in 1942, so it might well
have been available in colonial India. Not sure anybody had thought of
making a wallet out if it, though...
> Of course, you could always learn how to make a wallet out
Of course, you could always learn how to make a wallet out of duct
tape... they last quite a while and tend to protect their contents
from the perils of butt-sweat. And no mold.
On Oct 30, 3:01 pm, Steve Palincsar wrote:
> On Sat, 2010-10-30 at 09:46 -0600, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> > I've got the
Work has become 'this thing I do in the middle of my ride' on my Bomba-
commuter (yes, it makes me smile every time). Clearly I am currently
'working to live', though I still aspire to 'live to work' someday.
Perhaps when I retire... (though I sure hope it's before that).
Riding my Riv helps keep
On Oct 29, 10:22 pm, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> > On Oct 29, 12:17 pm, Patrick in VT wrote:
> > (in the ss category, of course - ss'ers aren't really
> >> competitive in the elite or even cat 3 fields),
>
> Is this because of the type of course, or overall? >
> Not doubting, just asking. And I know n
On Sat, 2010-10-30 at 09:46 -0600, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> I've got the toe strap; can anyone supply the bills?
>
> Back in the old colonial days, when my father was stationed as a burra
> sahib/bwana in India, Nairobi and Karachi and traveled to points even
> sweatier and further without the law,
Hey Patrick, who's to say you have to get both tires the same? Get one
of each!
While I thought I was kidding . come to think of it , why not?
It's funny how we assume we need the same tire front and rear, but the
two serve totally different functions and ride completely different.
--
You re
I am using a SRAM PG 850 series 11-32 cassette (silver) with DA 9
speed barends in friction mode and it works fine, a little slop here
and there but that is probably user error as I haven't been
"frictioning" all that long. The thing I like about the 8 speed setup
is that I can get the SRAM 850 ca
The Platypus looks interesting, and that's like 1-1/2 big bottles.
That 3rd bottle gets kinda grungy at times. Extra water can be handy
for washing out scrapes too.
dougP
On Oct 29, 9:10 pm, cyclotourist wrote:
> I think Noel suggested bringing extra water along, and someone else (Mike?)
> said
Thanks, Rene; one more small + for the BAs, as far as I am concerned.
Patrick Moore, who hit 36.5 mph down the usual, 4/10 mile S bend hill
this morning on 60 mm BAs at 12/17 psi.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 10:52 AM, Rene Sterental wrote:
> Patrick,
>
> I have both and aside from telling that the s
>From today's ride near Davis, CA:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/35176...@n03/5129645066/
--Eric
campyonly...@me.com
www.campyonly.com
www.wheelsnorth.org
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I was cleaning up my bike pile and found the Spring 2007 Riv Reader
with the article about the Bombadil. If anyone is interested I scanned
it and posted it to the Flickr Bombadil group:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/bombadil/pool/
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The mechanic was boh right and wrong. Suntour shifted as well with all
Suntour parts but they were unable to control the OEM as well as Shimano and
they didn't shift without the proper chain. That is no longer a huge issue
as chains have come a long way.
I have Suntour XC_Expert derailleurs and th
Frame or Bike. I have a NOS powdercoated custom lugged frame
Protovelo built by custom builder Mark Nobilette.
64cm. Too small for me. Just to good of a deal at the time.
Essentially a half price custom. $1500 or best offer.
Will turn around and order 68 Bomba from Rivendell if sold.
On Oct
Cranks and bars are sold.
On Oct 27, 9:46 am, Jeremy Till wrote:
> Some odd items but i'm fairly low on bike project funds so need to
> free up some capital. I'd prefer local pickup in the Sacramento/Davis
> area or the SF Bay Area, especially on the hub and bars, but will
> consider shipping as
Well the Hilbourne seems awfully close the AHH that I just bought.
Though it looks like I'm buying the wife one once we see what shade of
Red is available.
I have a 96.5 PBH Weight about 225 .. which is normally Feb weight..
bad year for weight. Wife cooks to good.
I go for week to 2 week lon
Have you looked at the Nau billfold?
http://www.nau.com/mens/categories/accessories/billfold-807U01.html
I have one and like it, though it's a little bigger than I had hoped.
-Eric
On Oct 30, 9:06 am, Earl Grey wrote:
> I ride with my wallet in my back pocket, and sweat a lot here in
> Thailan
Here is the latest Betty Foy Build for a customer in DC:
http://www.renaissancebicycles.com/gallery/rb-gallery-1/
Lisa has a longish commute (mostly along bike paths) and plans to be a
year-round rider. The dynamo XT wheelset is from Peter White, as is
the B&M Cyo N Plus light.
The Ultegra drive
Having ridden both Shimano and Suntour 7 speed indexed bikes back when
that was the newest thing, I can confirm that Suntour indexed 7 did
not shift as buttery smooth as Shimano, but did not jump out of gear
unexpectedly. Rather, even with indexing, one had to occasionally
overshift (with Suntour C
Hi Michael,
unhappy how? I was thinking of getting the most expensive SRAM 8 speed
I can find, which seems to be about $15 (the 850), because I like the
gear ratios better than Shimano's. Now you have me worried, as my
current cassette on the Sam is an Ultegra, and indeed shifts dream-
like. I may
Thanks everyone. Am particularly impressed by Soulrun's stuff. Have
asked them if they would do a custom, and may get a matching tool
roll, while I am at it. :)
Also found another interesting etsy vendor making wallets out of
sailcloth,
http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6885190§ion_id=6388280
A
And yet another 650b tire to choose from. Things just keep getting
better.
On Oct 30, 10:35 am, Jan Heine wrote:
> Grand Bois announces their new 650B x 36 mm tires.
>
> http://janheine.wordpress.com/
>
> The goal is to replace the Mitsuboshi Trimlines with a tire of similar
> size, which rides b
Patrick,
I have both and aside from telling that the supremes weigh
significantly less, I can't really tell if they roll ant faster on my
regular commute of pavement and gravel.
My max speed on the downhills seems to be the same.
René
Sent from my iPhone 4
On Oct 30, 2010, at 8:50 AM, PATRICK
SOMEWHAT angry? Who raised that moron?
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jim Thill - Hiawatha
Cyclery
Sent: Friday, October 29, 2010 7:24 PM
To: RBW Owners Bunch
Subject: [RBW] Re: Two posts on our site
M
Thanks -- very useful.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 10:05 AM, Garth wrote:
> With each tire description there is a little chart Schwalbe shows.
> http://www.schwalbetires.com/sites/all/definitions//Evaluation.html
> http://www.schwalbetires.com/bike_tires/road_tires/toughest
> http://www.schwalbetires
I forgot to add.the main difference in the Supremes and BA
Liteskin is durability and volume. For my $$, I'd choose the Supreme
because I perfer the longevity over the minor volume loss. Despite the
same labeled size, it will be a little smaller in width and volume,
2-3mm.
--
You received th
Vegan version: http://www.flickr.com/photos/cyclotourist/5129014316/
(What you get when you're home sick on a rainy Saturday morning)
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 8:35 AM, cyclotourist wrote:
> Exactly: I just use a toe strap around a wad of bills.
>
>
>
> On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 8:10 AM, Weird Har
With each tire description there is a little chart Schwalbe shows.
http://www.schwalbetires.com/sites/all/definitions//Evaluation.html
http://www.schwalbetires.com/bike_tires/road_tires/toughest
http://www.schwalbetires.com/bike_tires/road_tires/faster
On Oct 30, 11:50 am, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
>
Welcome to the list. Look at the current line of Rivendell models --
personally, had I the cash (and if I really wanted to add another bike
to the herd just now) I'd choose the Roadeo -- nice road racer with
more tire, fender clearance. And, at 6', Grant would probably put you
on a 64 cm. Just
Thanks for this. Can you point me to the Schwalbe speed chart?
I am now torn between the Supremes and the 50 mm Liteskin Big Apple
... I know the 60 BAs are very nice rolling for their width, softeness
and bulk.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 7:49 AM, Garth wrote:
>
> Patrick, No the Marathon Supremes
I've had a couple of these:
http://www.aerostich.com/packing-it-in/more-packing-options/wallets-and-travel-security/world-s-thinnest-wallets-executive.html
Super thin, nylon. Not excessively durable, but a decent trade-off for the lack
of bulk.
Rob in Seattle
On Oct 30, 2010, at 3:07 AM, Bru
I've got the toe strap; can anyone supply the bills?
Back in the old colonial days, when my father was stationed as a burra
sahib/bwana in India, Nairobi and Karachi and traveled to points even
sweatier and further without the law, he, being careful of his kit,
would put his nice leather wallet in
I've wanted wallets, musettes and small bar and saddle bags made if
the old Rivendell cotton, what they used to use for burrito wraps,
brown, thick and tight, not the lighter grey stuff they sell now. I've
got a couple of small pieces at home if anyone wants to try to make a
wallet out of them. Le
I got the 2L container, as I can put 1L in the 2L, but can't easily put 2L
in the 1L.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 5:35 AM, EricP wrote:
> Well, on that easy ride we did last year around San Diego, ended up
> severely dehydrated. Drank two large bottles on the ride and that
> still wasn't enough. D
Grand Bois announces their new 650B x 36 mm tires.
http://janheine.wordpress.com/
The goal is to replace the Mitsuboshi Trimlines with a tire of similar
size, which rides better, is a bit faster, yet lasts about as long
(which is very long indeed).
I still prefer the Hetre for bikes that can fit
Exactly: I just use a toe strap around a wad of bills.
On Sat, Oct 30, 2010 at 8:10 AM, Weird Harold wrote:
> Come on, it's Rivendell. Get a piece of waxed canvas and a zip-tie.
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "RBW Owners Bunch" group.
> To
Come on, it's Rivendell. Get a piece of waxed canvas and a zip-tie.
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rbw-ow
Patrick, No the Marathon Supremes are not dogs. But, it depends on
your definition of a dog tire! From other forums I participate in,
lots of folks use them and they are quick rolling tires. You can look
in Schwalbes speed chart for each tire too, the Supremes are the best
rolling of all the Marat
Thanks for the reminder John...order placed.
On Oct 29, 12:46 pm, John Bennett wrote:
> We've had a super slow week, and yesterday was the slowest day of all.
>
> Grant wrote this last night:
>
> http://www.rivbike.com/blogs/knothole_post/303
>
> Dave thought of this a little while ago:
>
> http:
Whatever else you can say about them, they have a clever URL.
--
Jon ³Papa² Grant, riding solo today in chilly
Austin, Texas
From: lukemcg
Reply-To:
Date: Sat, 30 Oct 2010 06:28:35 -0700 (PDT)
To: RBW Owners Bunch
Subject: [RBW] Re: Wanted: Rivvish cloth wallet recommendation
I've used this w
I've used this wallet on the plains of Kansas with our 90-100 degree
days and high humidity: http://www.all-ett.com/
Luke
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Betty Foy ordered for my wife, Winter is coming on...need some new
riding clothes. Time to support the home team - Rivendell!
Joel
> - Show quoted text -
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Have used a Kavu wallet in the past. http://tinyurl.com/33w6crz
Personally went away from the cloth wallets as they wear out on my.
Too much sweating. Especially if I carry it while riding. Everything
just soaks through.
End up just carrying my wallet in a bike bag instead.
Also makes it impo
Good job. Sounds awfully close to my own Sam. Hopefully he enjoys
it.
Here's how mine has looked most of this year - http://tinyurl.com/2e7uqac
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
On Oct 30, 2:59 am, Earl Grey wrote:
> All I ordered this week was some Silver shifters, but I talked a
> crabon-Dura-Ace-Fel
Well, on that easy ride we did last year around San Diego, ended up
severely dehydrated. Drank two large bottles on the ride and that
still wasn't enough. Derrick had to give me one of his bottles to
finish the ride. (That was after the second stop to repair a flat.)
So, yeah, too much is proba
Jandd has a nice Trifold one http://www.jandd.com/detail.asp?PRODUCT_ID=FTFW
I was going to recommend Eagle Creek, but they've changed their
wallets, no more Trifolds. Too bad, I've used the same one for about
15 years. Lifetime warranty too, I had them replace the velcro on it
for no charge. The
These are pretty sweet. If you don't see what you want, contact them
and they can make to order. Both pack cloth and waterproof. No
leather. Made in the U.S. by Laura and Joe. Great folks and great
products.
http://www.etsy.com/shop/soulrun
On Oct 30, 4:06 am, Earl Grey wrote:
> I ride with my
According to the late Sheldon Brown, Suntour indexed shifters
generally pull less cable than Shimano indexed shifters. See:
http://www.sheldonbrown.com/harris/freewheels.html
A mixed arrangement CAN work, however. A Suntour 6 speed shifter
actually has an extra "click", and if used on a Shimano 7
http://www.rolfs.net/store/p/939-Trifold.aspx
for $10.99, it's tough to beat.
From: Earl Grey
To: RBW Owners Bunch
Sent: Sat, October 30, 2010 3:06:17 AM
Subject: [RBW] Wanted: Rivvish cloth wallet recommendation
I ride with my wallet in my back pocket, and
I ride with my wallet in my back pocket, and sweat a lot here in
Thailand, which means my leather wallets get disgusting after a while
(they actually mold!).
The only cloth wallets I seem to be finding are made by surf wear
lifestyle companies, but someone's got to be making something more
reason
All I ordered this week was some Silver shifters, but I talked a
crabon-Dura-Ace-Felt-riding friend into ordering a Sam, and apparently
he ordered $2000 worth of parts with that. Might turn out to be the
ultimate Sam, SON front hub, Phil Rivvie rear, Nitto racks. So let a
friend ride your Riv, and
I have the 700x40's (38 actual) and run them between 65 and 80 psi but
I weigh 265. I think they roll really nice and way better than my
Marathon 700x47's but those tires would probably last 12,000 miles,
maybe more. All that rubber and 41mm wideness inspires confidence and
a certain carefree ride
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