Thank you Terry. Yes, seems to mean it's a Taiwan version. :)
On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 12:18:44 PM UTC-4 Ian Terry wrote:
> Gorgeous build, Paul! Really, top notch.
>
> I can't say it with 100% confidence, but I think MIT stands for "Made in
> Taiwan."
>
> Happy trails,
>
> Ian Terry,
> Mia
Gorgeous build, Paul! Really, top notch.
I can't say it with 100% confidence, but I think MIT stands for "Made in
Taiwan."
Happy trails,
Ian Terry,
Miami, FL
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 10:46:18 AM UTC-4, ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
>
> Hello Everyone. I'm new-is here.
>
> Almost finished building up my
Hi Joel.
That looks awesome. I'm going to give that a shot.
Really enthusiastically new to a lot of this. Rad.
On Wednesday, July 15, 2020 at 12:58:59 PM UTC-4 Joel Stern wrote:
>
> I spend a lot f time in the curve of the Albatross bars. I sit upright
> far less. Drops would kill my back bu
Hi Doug.
I'm pretty set up with bikes for the moment, but I'm trying to sort out if
an older (horizontal top-tube) 56cm Atlantis will fit my friend, who is
5'10-ish.
P
On Tuesday, July 14, 2020 at 12:45:01 AM UTC-4 dougP wrote:
> Paul:
>
> Thanks for the chainguard info. I'll look into it.
>
Paul:
Thanks for the chainguard info. I'll look into it.
Not sure what the max tire size with fenders is. The Toyos were rated at
52 mm for 700c (58 cm & up) and 2.1 for 26" (56 cm & below), but no mention
of whether that was with fenders. I've had 45 mm Schwalbe Marathon
Supremes on with f
Well my AR used 26” rims, that was my reference. Sometimes I don’t have
all or of the nomenclature. And I probably did not understand the post
properly.
On Mon, Jul 13, 2020 at 8:23 PM Patrick Moore wrote:
> Joel: I guess you meant to say that you don't like 29" tires? Excuse if I
> misread.
>
Joel: I guess you meant to say that you don't like 29" tires? Excuse if I
misread.
Here's what I've found after comparing the very light, very short,
24.8"-tall, ~28 mm wide, Elk Pass-shod wheels on my 26" wheel road bikes
with the 29.6"-tall, 60 mm-wide tires on my dirt road bike: at least with
v
It’s a great looking bike. I don’t like 26” wheels either but love 659b.
On Mon, Jul 13, 2020 at 6:14 PM ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
> Hi Joel.
>
> It's a 53cm, actually.
>
> I'm 5' 11" with a 34-ish PBH (longer torso). Fits me really well.
>
> I suppose the next size up would have worked as well, I'd just
PS: I'll repost pics with the new handlebars and fenders when they arrive.
The Billie bars work better for me on this bike.
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 6:14:21 PM UTC-4 ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
> Hi Joel.
>
> It's a 53cm, actually.
>
> I'm 5' 11" with a 34-ish PBH (longer torso). Fits me really well.
Hi Joel.
It's a 53cm, actually.
I'm 5' 11" with a 34-ish PBH (longer torso). Fits me really well.
I suppose the next size up would have worked as well, I'd just have to have
used a shorter stem and you'd see less seatpost... but I wanted 650B wheels
— I dislike fat tires on 29'er wheels, to
Paul, is that a 52 or 54? I am curious about your PBH and what size you
went for, and it looks like the top of the step is equal to the saddle.
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 10:46:18 AM UTC-4, ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
>
> Hello Everyone. I'm new-is here.
>
> Almost finished building up my new Atlantis MI
Beautiful bike, I like how you've set it up
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 10:46:18 AM UTC-4, ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
>
> Hello Everyone. I'm new-is here.
>
> Almost finished building up my new Atlantis MIT and thought I'd share it.
> *What
> does MIT stand for, anyway?*
>
> Finally coming to the realizati
Hi Doug,
Thanks for your reply.
It's interesting, because a lot of long wheelbase bikes have too much rake
up front, which makes the front feel kind of sloggy. The new Atlantis has a
tight enough rake, just a long rear end, and so it still feels relatively
agile. Very cleverly done.
What is t
Paul:
BTW, the 1 x 10 is not unusual. If it does what you need done, it's right
for you. Long ago, Grant said something to the effect that a bike frame
was just a place to hang all the parts you need for what you want to do
with your bike. I doubt there are too many Rivendells out there that
Paul:
Great to hear you're enjoying your ride. The current Atlantis is the most
comfortable one yet.
Short history: Toyo built the Atlantis for a long time, and while it was
updated a bit here'n'there, it was mostly things like adding braze-ons &
minor running changes. A few years ago (I'
Thanks for the reply and info James.
Yes, the Atlantis is really, really long. I've designed my own frames but
nothing this long, and it's just awesome, I feel like a kid riding a
Stingray. Especially with new rubber fast tires.
The Sam H I built up has similar components (1x10) but had lower B
Paul,
Wonderful build, my friend.
Atlantis-es been built in Japan by Toyo in the early 2000s and then by
Waterford in the US until a few years ago when Riv offered up a MIT
version. However, I have heard whispers that if you throw down enough cash
that you can still get a MUSA (Made in the USA) A
Thanks Ann. Already am... it doesn't look so clean any more.
Testing some lower bars this week + fenders + this really rad Schindelhauer
rack I found in Germany:
https://www.schindelhauerbikes.com/en/Accessories/Front-Pannier-Rack.html
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 1:01:20 PM UTC-4 Ann L wrote:
Beautiful bike! Congratulations and now enjoy riding the hell out of it :)
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email
to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@goog
Thank you Steve. Were they all American made before this?
Taiwan makes some amazing bikes.
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 11:26:39 AM UTC-4 Steve Cole wrote:
> MIT = Made in Taiwan
>
>
> On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 10:46:18 AM UTC-4, ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
>>
>> Hello Everyone. I'm new-is here.
>>
>> Almo
MIT = Made in Taiwan
On Monday, July 13, 2020 at 10:46:18 AM UTC-4, ☆ Paul ☆ wrote:
>
> Hello Everyone. I'm new-is here.
>
> Almost finished building up my new Atlantis MIT and thought I'd share it.
> *What
> does MIT stand for, anyway?*
>
> Finally coming to the realization that a really uprigh
21 matches
Mail list logo