Eric,
I seem to recall being attracted to the "Butterscotch" Saluki (?) way back
when. Though I'm not sure I ever saw one in the wild. I do like the
metallics being used now, at least what I see online. Like the new light
metallic yellow on the Homer (or Sam's?). Hard to keep up.
I must say thou
Thanks to all who offered help with replacing my Synergy rear rim. I have
a deal for a replacement.
Michael
On Wednesday, April 26, 2023 at 10:23:43 PM UTC-4 Fullylugged wrote:
> Velocity dropped the OC version of the Synergy a while ago after reports
> of rim cracking appeared. Then they dr
$1700 for a nicely appointed Sam Hillborne near Atlanta. Some of the
description seems off, but what're ya gonna do?
https://atlanta.craigslist.org/nat/bik/d/gainesville-rivendell-hillborne/7614929897.html
No affiliation
Eric
Indpls
On Monday, May 1, 2023 at 12:27:20 PM UTC-4 r.ha...@live.com wr
Thanks, Jeffrey; noted.
On Mon, May 1, 2023 at 7:13 PM Jeffrey Arita wrote:
> Patrick,
>
> One caveat: if you want the verbal (voice) turn-by-turn feature that
> ridewithgps offers (for routes), then you will need to pay for either a
> Basic or Premium subscription. The free version does not of
Well, I haven't yet bothered to figure out what my Apple ID password is, so
I bypassed MMR and wrote out an informal route sheet (with a fountain pen)
using Google Maps. Google Maps shows detail in far higher resolution than
MMR, which is too bad for MMR. The distance from my house to the computer
I love the idea of stick/kick shift in theory but - not unlike my dreams
that I can ride a singlespeed around here - it's just not feasible in
practice. My terrain is up/down/up/down all day, I gotta have those gears
and they gotta be available at the flick of a lever. This place is a
rollercoa
That was what came on the Rivendell Mystery Bikes, double crank on the
front, 9 speed cassette on the rear, but only a rear derailleur and
shifter. No shifter boss or cable stop for a front derailleur. I think it
was referred to as a stick shift - you shifted the front by pushing the
chain with
Years ago, probably close to 40 years ago now, a book came out describing
the adventures of 2 British brothers' around the world bike tour on custom
touring bikes. For some reason they forewent front derailleurs on their 2X
drivetrains and instead carried little sticks on their handlebars which
the
>From https://www.rivbike.com/products/cassettes-7 :
*Jim 7 speed cassettes, made by former SRAM people in China*
Backstory Stuff: On getting these from China; and indexing with these
When SRAM took its manufacturing from China to Taiwan, probably but who are
we to say, to avoid the raised tar
So what's the lowdown on S-Ride? Are they the manufacturer of the new Riv
7s cassettes? And how does their stuff compare to other budget drivetrain
options like SunRace & Microshift?
On Tuesday, May 2, 2023 at 12:57:54 AM UTC-4 Luke Hendrickson wrote:
> S-Ride stuff is great for the price! Admi
I'm using a $15 Shimano 7speed trigger from eBay with my Jim 13-42 7speed
and it's working great.
On Tuesday, May 2, 2023 at 2:04:21 AM UTC-4 Luke Hendrickson wrote:
> Ha! I love that set up. I have full friction on my Riv but friction front
> and indexed rear on my Soma which is pleasant and
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