On Aug 6, 2010, at 9:30 AM, Seth Vidal wrote:
Now - here's a silly question for everyone. If you have a bike where
you routinely have to move things around to do work on it or to
transport it - what do y'all use to mark your seatpost height? I'm not
sure I want to score it - I've tried 'permane
I use a Sharpie. I've found that the proper height varies a bit from year to
year depending on my level of fitness and flexibility, and the type of shoes
and shorts I'm wearing. But it's usually a difference of a few millimeters
at most. A centimeter sounds huge to me, so it does not surprise me th
arage are correctly
adjusted. Not a silly question either. Incorrect saddle height is VERY common.
From: Seth Vidal
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Sent: Fri, August 6, 2010 9:30:08 AM
Subject: [RBW] what a difference a cm makes
If you have a bike
On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 8:30 AM, Seth Vidal wrote:
>
> Now - here's a silly question for everyone. If you have a bike where
> you routinely have to move things around to do work on it or to
> transport it - what do y'all use to mark your seatpost height? I'm not
> sure I want to score it - I've tri
Use a center punch to mark your seat post. one little dot
-- sacyclepath --
***SteveArdrey**
--- On Fri, 8/6/10, Seth Vidal wrote:
From: Seth Vidal
Subject: [RBW] what a difference a cm makes
To: rbw-owners-bunch
I bought that romulus from andrew on the list and I hadn't had much
chance to ride it due to family drama but recently I was riding it
more and I wasn't entirely comfortable, but I couldn't figure out what
was going on. Then I was reading BQ and read the article about health,
bike-fit and training