Don't put any grease on the spindles. The cranks slide onto them
"dry". At least this is what my LBS told me. The bolt which holds
them on should be greased though.
I'm one for Phil Wood grease or it's equivalent and Locktite Blue
"Designed for the locking and sealing of threaded fasteners whic
on 5/3/11 9:03 PM, Joe Bartoe at jbar...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi Bruce,
The AHHs are supposed to have 132.5 spacing. Unless you've altered that, you
should be able to use 130 OLD wheels just fine. I did that on mine.
My aught-eight model has 135, dead-on.
- J
--
Jim Edgar
cyclofi...@earthlink.n
Hello,
I'm new to the group. I have a 2009 AHH and it has 135 spacing. I
believe the Saluki which the AHH replaced had 132.5 spacing.
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Hi Michael,
I hope I'm not presuming too much, but you may be thinking of my
"adventure touring" (ex mtb) bike.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39151498@N07/4338978587/in/set-72157623375460150/
Camelbak MOLLE pouch, for the Camelbak Better Bottle (also great)
available at many military NEX/BX/PX an
Thanks, Sumehra!
My wife's Betty isn't nearly as amazing as your custom, but both she
and I are extremely pleased with the custom paint results. And it
looks much, much better than our poor quality shots would indicate.
=)
On May 3, 2:38 pm, SMP wrote:
> Geoff -- that looks amazing! :D Very n
Michael,
Is this what you were thinking of?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39151498@N07/4338978587/in/set-72157623375460150/
They are available at many military bases, or online vendors:
http://www.camelbak.com/Military-Tactical/Accessories/Bottle-Pouch.aspx
This setup is still working great btw.
The Ram had 132.5 spacing... the specs on the AHH say 135...
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My AHH has 135 mm spacing. It's from 2007.
On May 3, 2011, at 9:03 PM, Joe Bartoe wrote:
> Hi Bruce,
>
> The AHHs are supposed to have 132.5 spacing. Unless you've altered that, you
> should be able to use 130 OLD wheels just fine. I did that on mine.
>
> Best,
>
> Joe
>
> > Date: Tue, 3
Hi Bruce,
The AHHs are supposed to have 132.5 spacing. Unless you've altered that, you
should be able to use 130 OLD wheels just fine. I did that on mine.
Best,
Joe
> Date: Tue, 3 May 2011 14:22:23 -0700
> Subject: [RBW] Lighter Wheel Set Question
> From: br...@ohiotravelbag.com
> To: rbw-own
I did this on a 135mm frame I have making the 130mm rear hub I used a
133mm. This is exactly what the Surly Crosscheck was advertised to be
able to do with its 132.5 mm spacing.fit either size axle. Chrome
moly steel bends quite a bit before it stays bent ( no pun intended )
so I would add spa
+1 for adding some spacers. That's the best bet, although as mentioned,
re-dishing is required. I went the extra step and swapped in a longer axle
at the time. Sure, not necessary, but I needed a project...
Here's Mr. S. Brown's take on it:
http://www.sheldonbrown.com/frame-spacing.html
On T
Boy, Amazon doesn't give him much love, do they? No summary, no
image, nothin'. I probably don't know the whole story. Did GP post
anything about it on the site?
On May 3, 7:19 pm, William wrote:
> I'd read it. Heck, I'd probably even buy it and read it and give it
> to somebubba else to rea
Geoff -- that looks amazing! :D Very nice.
On May 2, 11:03 pm, Geoff wrote:
> Hi Sumehra,
>
> I'm still pretty new to this group, so I hope that this link will
> work:
>
> http://ImageEvent.com/gyuenfamily/karensbettyfoy
>
> I agree; when you're fortunate enough to get a really special bike
> l
Any chance for a Kindle version? :)
On May 3, 2011 2:24 PM, "Rene Sterental" wrote:
> Amazon just confirmed that they have a confirmed shipping date for Grant
> Petersen "Velosophy".
>
> Estimated arrival date: June 03 2011 - July 13 2011. I placed the order in
> January when I accidentally discov
on 5/3/11 2:22 PM, Bruce Oppenheim at br...@ohiotravelbag.com wrote:
> I would like to ride a lighter wheels/tires set on my A. Homer Hilsen
> at times when just riding paved roads.
>
> I have a pair of Mavic open pro wheels from another bike with road
> bike hub spacing (130). My A. Homer Hilsen
I would like to ride a lighter wheels/tires set on my A. Homer Hilsen
at times when just riding paved roads.
I have a pair of Mavic open pro wheels from another bike with road
bike hub spacing (130). My A. Homer Hilsen is (135). Since the Mavic
hub spacing is a bit narrower, my question is... will
I saw a member's photo last year that had a nifty (I think it was
insulated) water bottle holder that attaches to the front basket that
I can use now.
A Web search doesn't bring it up.
???
TIA
Michael D.
Walnut Creek, CA
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Can't help this - apologies in advance -
"SimpleGreen is made of people!"
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
On May 3, 2:36 pm, nawr...@comcast.net wrote:
> I have already added one to my stable. Jumped on one of the dark maroon
> prototypes. It is so awesome. Just like the Quickbeam that it replaced.
"I've never seen a reason not to use
the cheap tub-o-grease from the auto parts store"
Except the especially stinky varieties. Some I've encountered are
pretty rank, while others are nowhere near as terrible.
On May 3, 4:40 pm, John Speare wrote:
> On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 9:14 AM, omnigrid wr
On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 9:14 AM, omnigrid wrote:
>
> phil wood grease is nothing special. it's just marine bearing grease. or
> pretty much the same stuff that park tools sells in bike shops.
>
Indeed. For bikey applications, I've never seen a reason not to use
the cheap tub-o-grease from the aut
I'd read it. Heck, I'd probably even buy it and read it and give it
to somebubba else to read.
On May 3, 2:24 pm, Rene Sterental wrote:
> Amazon just confirmed that they have a confirmed shipping date for Grant
> Petersen "Velosophy".
>
> Estimated arrival date: June 03 2011 - July 13 2011. I pl
I said yesterday how well the Herse fits and feels. Today I took a
break from work and chores for a short, 14 mile, therapeutic ride on
Riv Custom #3, just errands and rambling around Rio Rancho, some
gratuitous hills and some expected wind, and realized again just how
sublimely perfect my Rivs fit
Amazon just confirmed that they have a confirmed shipping date for Grant
Petersen "Velosophy".
Estimated arrival date: June 03 2011 - July 13 2011. I placed the order in
January when I accidentally discovered it.
René
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Of course I meant centimeters.
On May 3, 1:31 pm, Tim Smith wrote:
> I have a 58” Quickbeam for sale. It is repainted bright yellow (with a
> white head tube and original Riv decals), and has Phil hubs, Tektro
> sidepull brakes (canti bosses were removed before the repaint), new
> rims. MKS quill
I have a 58” Quickbeam for sale. It is repainted bright yellow (with a
white head tube and original Riv decals), and has Phil hubs, Tektro
sidepull brakes (canti bosses were removed before the repaint), new
rims. MKS quill pedals with toe clips and straps. Brooks B17 saddle.
Jack Brown 33.3 tires.
This is the stuff I mentioned previously:
http://www.campmor.com/birkenstock-cork-life-2-oz.shtml?source=CI&ci_src=14110944&ci_sku=91642WC
If it's just a couple threads popping up on the sidewall, it seals 'em
down real well. Slop some on both sides and boot it if there's a
concern. Tyvex USPS P
I have already added one to my stable. Jumped on one of the dark maroon
prototypes. It is so awesome. Just like the Quickbeam that it replaced.
That headbadge looks great and cant wait to fill the blank space on my headtube
with it. It is just not right to ride a bike from Rivendell that
Well, truth be told, IF, (and that's a *huge* IF), I was going to be
trying such (which I'm not), I'd probably not be using a Riv...
But, it's a fun bike video to watch and at least think in hypothetical
IF's about. ;)
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On the headbadge, is that a pterodactyl on the right? Or do the kids
call those pteranodons now? Either way, you gotta love that.
On May 3, 11:16 am, newenglandbike wrote:
> PS the headbadge is so good
>
> On May 3, 2:14 pm, newenglandbike wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > They sound great. Notice
PS the headbadge is so good
On May 3, 2:14 pm, newenglandbike wrote:
> They sound great. Noticed this from the post: "Wheel particulars.
> We'll have a few wheel options--cheap bolt-ons, fancier q/r style."
>
> I'm psyched if this means what I think it means I was hoping
> they'd bring ba
They sound great.Noticed this from the post: "Wheel particulars.
We'll have a few wheel options--cheap bolt-ons, fancier q/r style."
I'm psyched if this means what I think it means I was hoping
they'd bring back the Suzue QR free/free hubs.
-Matt
On May 3, 2:01 pm, Pondero wrote:
> T
There's an update in today's Rivendell News about the SimpleOne.
http://www.rivbike.com/blogs/news_post/355
If/when they offer a 650B version, I'll no longer be able to resist.
In the meantime, I'm looking forward to the stories those of you who
are going to add one to your stable.
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You recei
on 5/2/11 8:51 PM, Leslie at leslie.bri...@gmail.com wrote:
> Okay, this evening I was bouncing through old tunes I liked on
> YouTube, and happened back across an earlier bicycle video of Danny
> MacAskill from a couple of years ago that I'd really enjoyed (with a
> cool tune), but that led to a
phil wood grease is nothing special. it's just marine bearing grease. or
pretty much the same stuff that park tools sells in bike shops.
On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 8:46 AM, Alex Zeibot wrote:
> I use Phil Wood waterproof grease. In my opinion it's the best out there.
>
> On May 3, 2011, at 8:31 AM,
Rick and I are in... we are also staying at Sherwood.
Regards,
Bruce
On May 2, 11:46 pm, Montclair BobbyB
wrote:
> Attention Riv Rally East Riders:
>
> The Wellsboro PA weather forecast for the coming weekend (as of Monday
> evening) indicates a 30% chance of rain.
> According to my math, that tr
That's interesting, I actually find the Marathon Supreme 35mm's to be
really zippy on my QB, more so than the Jack Browns I had on at first.
That might just be the $138/pair premium biasing my perception
though...
The Schwalbes really are solid tires, especially in the wet and
considering the toug
I wore a light short sleeve jersey, a light long sleeve jersey over
that, and brought a windbreaker. The windbreaker lived in a jersey
pocket all day. The longsleeve jersey came off and got stuffed into
the handlebar bag at mile 35 or so. Doug's sweatsoaked wool
longsleeve baselayer went into MY
I've bought seatposts, F+R ders, hubs, brake calipers, a set of tires,
and probably a couple other things I've forgotten. All have gone
well. I have very little doubt that a 58cm Rambu will come up when I
have the appropriate number of discretionary dollars on-hand, someday
in the future as well.
On May 2, 8:47 pm, Tony wrote:
> Where else would you put the wool arm warmers, knee
> warmers and socks needed at the beginning of the day?
jersey pockets. i'm partial to street clothes myself, but jerseys -
because of the pockets - are really functional and my first choice if
I'm doing a seri
It's been deleted already! Interesting.
Joe
> Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: FS: 1996 Rivendale
> From: veloban...@gmail.com
> Date: Tue, 3 May 2011 08:29:52 -0500
> To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
>
> Should ask the seller for a serial number on the bottom of BB and run it by
> Rivbike.
>
> On
I beeswax all M4 bolts that go into the frame. H20 bolts, any ranck
or fender bolts, and downtube friction shifter bolts. Grease for
everything else.
On May 3, 6:46 am, Alex Zeibot wrote:
> I use Phil Wood waterproof grease. In my opinion it's the best out there.
>
> On May 3, 2011, at 8:31 AM
I guess maybe 1/2 this group has bought something from someone else on the
list. Two bikes, a frame set, couple of saddles, saddle/handlebar bags,
knickers, caps, jerseys, a courier bag, who knows what else.
Good group of people..
>
>From: Bryan Edgar
>To: RBW
Sauron link: http://www.sheldonbrown.com/nanodrive/rivendell-sauron.jpg
On May 2, 9:54 pm, "Jim M." wrote:
> Now if they really made the Sauron that Sheldon Brown created, I'd get
> another Riv. ;-)
>
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Me too! I had a great experience buying my sought after Rambouilet from Don
Pearsall in NM. I also appreciate all the help many on the list gave me,
spontaneously linking to geometry charts for the Rambouillet and Romulus for
example. A very pleasant experience all around. Thanks!
Tim
On Tue,
Notice how I'd used the word "today"? Yeah, took me a while too, and I was
anxious to share my finding with somebody! :) Glad it helped!
On May 1, 2011 11:50 PM, "Brian Hanson" wrote:
> Rex - wow - I can't believe I didn't just work that one out on my own. I
> changed the pump around, and it's pe
I use Phil Wood waterproof grease. In my opinion it's the best out there.
On May 3, 2011, at 8:31 AM, Patrick in VT wrote:
> On May 2, 5:22 pm, Alex wrote:
>
>> I'm building up a bike from scratch for the first time in my life
>> (exciting!) and I have a question about grease and beeswax.
>
+1 to Patrick's advice. I also just built my first bike (Riv Blériot) and
sought advice on this from various sources. The rules of thumb I used were:
1) grease where the threads are big and strong (like on a BB) or on
unthreaded connections (e.g. stem into top tube). I used Phil grease.
2) fin
Should ask the seller for a serial number on the bottom of BB and run it by
Rivbike.
On May 3, 2011, at 8:27 AM, Leslie wrote:
> $200??Hope it's not stolen! If honestly for sale, I'd grab it
> just to save it
>
>
>
> On May 3, 2:09 am, Thaddeus wrote:
>> Hi all:
>>
>> I just came
On May 2, 2:51 pm, Steve Palincsar wrote:
> Jan's very fond of them, too -- I'll wager he thinks they're the best
> cantilevers ever made -- and we know from his writings that he's into
> SERIOUS MAJOR braking.
i would take that bet. there are some really good cantilever brakes
out there if the
The decks are cleared and I'll be there. I'm also staying at the
Sherwood. My only regret is I had to take off the VO Zep. fenders
from my Hillborne as they were, as put on, too annoying. I'll try
again another time or perhaps order the longboards. I'll expect to
get muddy.
I think there was a
Posting has been removed. I hope they either realized what they were
sitting on, or the original owner was reconnected with their bike.
Those kinds of adds always give me the willies.
On May 3, 9:27 am, Leslie wrote:
> $200?? Hope it's not stolen! If honestly for sale, I'd grab it
> just to
On May 2, 5:22 pm, Alex wrote:
> I'm building up a bike from scratch for the first time in my life
> (exciting!) and I have a question about grease and beeswax.
cool. no better way to learn about your bike.
you want to grease just about everything - all threaded bolts and
anywhere metal contact
$200??Hope it's not stolen! If honestly for sale, I'd grab it
just to save it
On May 3, 2:09 am, Thaddeus wrote:
> Hi all:
>
> I just came across this amusing post on the Boston Craigslist.
>
> http://boston.craigslist.org/bmw/bik/2358812458.html
>
> Obviously no relation to the seller
This may be blasphemy to some, but you might try to get the saddle
wet, or just damp, and then go for a ride. I have done that
(inadvertently) with brooks saddles in rain storms and they do tend to
break right in after being ridden wet. Farthest I've gone in a day
is 135 miles though, after whi
Yes, a saddle should feel good for a long time. My Berthoud pokes my
sit bones after awhile. My old B17 was comfortable all day and into
the night. I returned it under warranty when it became quite
lopsided. I then purchased a Berthoud. It's a really nice saddle and
I think I may keep trying.
Soma is selling the M-bars grandad, the Lauterwasser.
I just put them on the WmJ Hood, with Genny levers.
The bars have more drop than M-bars.
Around town they feel good, haven't done a long ride
with them yet.
http://store.somafab.com/solahacr.html
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On Mon, 2011-05-02 at 20:46 -0700, Montclair BobbyB wrote:
> Attention Riv Rally East Riders:
>
> The Wellsboro PA weather forecast for the coming weekend (as of Monday
> evening) indicates a 30% chance of rain.
> According to my math, that translates to a 70% chance of NO RAIN... So
> as of this
On Mon, 2011-05-02 at 15:54 -0700, islaysteve wrote:
> Sorry if this doesn't add much, but at 200K, my butt would be sore
> with any saddle! Maybe it's just fine and your expectations are too
> high? Or do you have experience with other saddles that are comfy
> over that distance??
Certainly. I
I'm in as is my son who will come up from DC. See you at the Sherwood.
On May 2, 11:46 pm, Montclair BobbyB
wrote:
> Attention Riv Rally East Riders:
>
> The Wellsboro PA weather forecast for the coming weekend (as of Monday
> evening) indicates a 30% chance of rain.
> According to my math, that
People seem to love or hate M-bars. They took some getting used to for me, and
getting them up high enough really helped. Now they are my preferred climbing
bars (We do hilly training rides 2x a week April - August). You can get
surprisingly aero on them for fast descents as well.
Bruce
>__
Wow. Glad I went with the DaVinci splitters, then. Though I'd prefer
something other than black.
Yours,
Thomas Lynn Skean
On May 2, 5:53 pm, jandrews_nyc wrote:
> Speaking of cable splitters...
> has anyone used the Bruce Gordon ones?
> I purchased a set but have yet to set them up as the instal
Hi, Bill.
I'm glad the folks at RBW are helping. I'm sure you'll stabilize the
bar unless the stem itself is problematic.
I use Albatross bars with a Dirt Drop 100 with a shim with mo
problems, even on torn-up roads and hoof-beaten trails. Maybe not as
bad as what you've got. But I weigh ~245. Ne
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