Thanks to everyone who participated in the first round of garage cleaning.
All purchased items have been shipped.
A bit more time today so added a few things to the list and adjusted a few
prices.
Updated - Fall 2014 Garage Sale
Soma Lauterwasser CrMo Bar
New, never mounted - $45 shipped
Soma
Bump?
$700?
-Justin, confused in Oakland
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I followed the homemade chocolate recipe in EBDJ. I need to try again. I
used salted macadamias and should have used unsalted, and I probably should
have used a little more sweetener. It's pretty hard core (bitter).
Anyway, making it was ridiculously easy.
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I currently run tubeless 650b tires on the following rims:
Stan's ZTR 355 (out of production)
Pacenti PL23
Velocity A23
With Stan's rim tape and sealant the following tires worked fine tubeless:
Grand Bois Hetre
Compass Babyshoe Pass Extralight
Pacenti Pari-Moto
Pacenti Quasi-Moto
Schwalbe Raci
David: what rims do you use with the tubeless Hetres?
For the record, Stan's in tubes, as long as the pressure is high enough (I
can't define that beyond: doesn't work in 29er tubes sub 25 psi off road
amongst the goathead patches, while tubeless does in the same tires), works
very well, as I've s
I essentially never get flats with Hetres. Perhaps because I run them
tubeless with Stan's sealant. In 4-5 years riding Hetres and now
Babyshoes in Madison WI, San Fran, and San Diego, I have experienced a leak
on two occasions that I can remember, requiring mid-ride adding of air, but
I have neve
I got a flat with my Hetres last night from the poor condition of Los
Angeles' roads--cracks and potholes. It doesn't happen monthly, but I don't
ride this bike everyday.
On Friday, November 14, 2014 6:48:28 PM UTC-8, Eric Norris wrote:
>
> Obviously, Jan H. is lucky not to have to deal with thi
This discussion made me thankful for our lack of bike infrastructure in
Nashville: I'm forced to ride in the (clear of debris) track of the right car
tire. Bike lanes can't be neglected and full of junk if there aren't (m)any.
Never thought I'd be thankful for that. Haha.
Edwin
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If only I was 4 inches shorter.
On Nov 15, 2014 2:53 PM, "Patrick Moore" wrote:
> This is getting better and better, if the bike is in good condition. The
> price is for a built bike, correct?
>
> (Not in the market, as I have a very nice blue 58 Ram, but $1K for a well
> built one is not a b
OK, so he's 33, not 43, and he "competed", not "won". But still pretty eye
catching!
Thanks to the one who posted that video.
Patrick Moore, about to go for a sandy Fargo ride, regretting that it isn't
on a fatbike, in coldish ABQ, NM
On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 7:45 PM, cyclotourist
wrote:
> Ther
This is getting better and better, if the bike is in good condition. The
price is for a built bike, correct?
(Not in the market, as I have a very nice blue 58 Ram, but $1K for a well
built one is not a bad price. IIRC, my out of pocket for the built bike (I
bought frame and parts separately) was j
The simple physics is that light, supple tires with thin rubber are going to be
punctured more easily than tires with thicker rubber, heavier walls, puncture
strips, etc. It is not a criticism of high performance tires, that’s just the
way it is. The things that make a tire puncture resistant
Part of the problem here is that the roads aren’t wide enough in many places to
accommodate a bike lane. Basically, there’s the travel lane and the concrete
gutter. I of course steer clear of piles of stuff like the one in my photo, but
the “sweeping” action of the cars tends to move the flat-ca
Bill, Happy for you. I love build details and reasons for them, as
well as pictures where possible. Happy trails. Jim D
Massachusetts
On Friday, November 14, 2014 12:47:51 PM UTC-5, Bill Lindsay wrote:
>
> Sale Pending indeed and I'm excited about it. I've wanted a 58cm 'lant
Sorry, just looking for a sale for now. Already bought my replacement
bike-- you know how it goes =)
Let's try $1,000 + shipping and packing. Thanks all.
On Thursday, November 13, 2014 9:13:13 AM UTC-8, Michael Gasparino wrote:
>
> Any chance of a trade for a 56cm simple one?
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Deacon, I like this. Jim D. (in relatively warm)
Massachusetts
On Friday, November 14, 2014 6:16:35 PM UTC-5, Deacon Patrick wrote:
>
> Och, Michael! Get thee in thy saddle and though shivering do pedal down
> the way and tell me all about it when red cheeked you return to
Team Un-Racer would be a very good CX team to be associated with!
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 6:11 AM, Beth H wrote:
> I, for one, am grateful for my local cyclocross scene and its close
> cousin, short-track mountain biking.
> As a child, I rode my department store fake BMX bike through unifinished
I looked at the photo, and it doesn't look that abnormal. We have car
accidents in Seattle, too. I just go around the pile of debris, rather than
through it. When you look at the photo, you can see that the "travel lane"
is clean.
That said, I had to go through a pile of bottle glass in a narro
I can't compare hetres to narrower tires, but my ~40mm marathon supremes have
had less flats in three years than my hetres have in six months. The ride is
nicer though, but not enough to switch my simpleone to Barlow passes.
Hudson in atx.
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I, for one, am grateful for my local cyclocross scene and its close cousin,
short-track mountain biking.
As a child, I rode my department store fake BMX bike through unifinished
construction sites, making up my own obstacle courses and trying to clean every
feature I could find. (At the tender a
I never ride in the deep shoulder if I can help it. All kinds of debris there
that collects over the years. Flatland for sure.
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I've had a few flats with Hetres, but less than I had with narrower tires. I
think the lower air pressure lets the tires roll over stuff than would puncture
a high pressure tire. Jan's argument is true in my experience.
Richard
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Nice Bomba! It looks like the perfect bike for the Leesburg loop (one of my
favorite rides around here).
I've noticed those signs for breweries along the W&OD as well, it reminds
me of when Old Dominion Brewing Co. used to be right off the trail in
Ashburn. So tempting.
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After every auto collision some kind soul sweeps the debris into the bike
lane.
M
On Friday, November 14, 2014 9:48:28 PM UTC-5, Eric Norris wrote:
>
> Obviously, Jan H. is lucky not to have to deal with this on a daily basis:
>
> https://flic.kr/p/pM2AGC
>
> His flat-free experience would be m
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