Had been thinking about that. Unfortunately, the wife has a
conference in Baltimore first week in Feb. If I tag along, there goes
the flying vacation budget for the year.
Plus, have to learn to tough it out and quit whining about less than
ideal riding conditions. Feel like am turning into more
On Mon, 2010-11-22 at 19:01 -0800, Rob Harrison wrote:
> Very nice!
>
> Are you using Pano? I've been very pleased with that app.
I like Hugin for stitching panoramas. Seems like there are several, for
all the various operating systems, that do a very good job without a lot
of manual effort.
This sounds like a very good option.
I've only found one place in the US selling the S2C (coaster brake).
I'll try my LBS as I don't really want the coaster brake.
Anyone else know where to get these?
Thanks!
Angus
On Nov 21, 9:50 am, "Thomas Lynn Skean"
wrote:
> Hi, all!
>
> Does anyone have
Hi,
Brent Steelman makes stems - $150 in about two weeks. Fantastic workmanship.
On Nov 22, 2010, at 8:01 PM, eflayer wrote:
> how about a salsa sul quill. price is decent...and you could have it
> powdered the color of your choice.
>
> thought they were being manufactured again, but could be wro
This photo cracks me up.
I think Grant has not been vocal enough about the 'dual purpose'
functionality of splats.
I'm also guessing that there will be significant sales volume based on
this use alone.
Splats are destined to be a classic.
-JimD
On Nov 22, 2010, at 10:55 AM, ANDREW LETT
This one is making its way onto all my bikes. By far my favorite. Check out the
built-in saddlebag loops:
http://www.specialized.com/us/en/bc/SBCEqProduct.jsp?spid=57843
(If Bridgestone and Rivendell hadn't caught my attention decades ago, I'd
probably be a spaz for Specialized.)
On Nov 22,
I never imagined I'd say this, but I'm REALLY pleased with my first
ever set of linear pull (aka "V-brakes") on my Bombadil. For years I
was a hydraulic disc-brake snob, thumbing my nose at all other brakes
(in general), and any rim brakes that weren't cantis (Boy, what a
maroon!!!). I run Av
Admittedly I have a bit of a Brooks "dependency", but despite having a
strong opinion on this topic, I speak the truth. Since I've been
riding Brooks B17s on my road and mountain bikes, all my comfort
problems have vanished. I no longer even ride with padded shorts
(thank God)... In fact, my new
Advice will only go so far. There's just nothing, not shoes, not
underwear, nothing, that's as personal and unique as saddle fit. One
man's easy chair is another man's fence post!
If you can find a shop that has the WTB Test Ride program that Jim
Thill mentioned above, give that a try. Also, some L
Yeah, I know what you guys mean! I love Avocet O2 saddles and have
about 1/2 dozen in various conditions. I plan to try a saddle recover
service like this one when mine start wearing out:
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/eby/bik/2066484291.html
$30 isn't too bad a price to recover a saddle. The guy de
Hey Guys, just went to my local TJ Max and they had 100% fine merino
wool sweaters for 19.99 and 29.99 Not real thick, more like a t-
shirt, with 1/4 zip and mock turtleneck. Ill post a picture if I get
a chance. Might be worth going to your store and looking.
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If anyone has a large saddlesack for sale, lemme know!
cheers
Ben
--
Benjamin G. Van Orsdol
Student of Social Work
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Helen Bader School of Social Welfare
414-940-8644
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW
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Hey I had a concern also with a small PBH and picking a Sam H frame. I'm 5'
11" but short legs and long torso. My PBH is 83. But I love the way my
56cm
fits. I had only minor tweaks with handlebar height and seat height and it
just rides down the road.
On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 4:51 PM, Minh
I just ordered a pair. I remember various mountain bike buddies that
would try a dozen or more different tires on their mountain bikes and
just stack them up in their garage in a floppy pile. How many 650B
tires will be too many? We've got 3 bikes. We have 6 different pairs
of tires for those 3
Try some different grips with the Bullmoose bars first, maybe? Ergon makes a
cork version now which isn't bad looking and they're very comfortable:
http://www.ergon-bike.com/us/en/interbike2009-gp1-biokork
The Nitto Periscopa is a good test stem to try on your way to deciding whether
you need
BB,
thanks, i know i just need to chip some paint and get over it :)
I was thinking of running liner pull, but i'm happy with the road
brake levers i have at the moment and don't want to use a cable
adaptor. i actually have an ONZA HOLA sitting in a box looking for
something to do, i need to fin
I'm with you on being less than enchanted with cantilever brakes.
"Spirit of the group" notwithstanding (it's your bike, after all), the
Magura hydraulic rim brakes are nice, but may be limiting in terms of
what kind of handlebar bar you can use with them. My choice would be
to use v-brakes (aka li
I hate to do this again, but I'm out--with the snow day today I need
to get to the office on Friday and put in an honest day's work. Hope
y'all have fun and I'll make it out one of these days.
Ryan
On Nov 18, 10:53 pm, Rob Harrison wrote:
> Zoka has great pastries and is right off the Burke-Gil
Looking ever more likely I will be moving to smaller digs back east,
so am clearing out those pieces in my overflowing parts collection
which are probably better used on a Resurecto or as that pizazz part
of a good looking Riv build.
I have the Day After T'Giving and will not be part of any shoppi
Quill stems are a great frustration for me for exactly this reason:
very little selection in terms of rise, clamp diameter, etc. So many
good handlebar options that simply aren't available to those of us who
happen to have a bike with a quill stem. And what seems to be a simple
stem swap becomes an
The top of my beverage refrigerator resembles this remark (Nifty-Swifty,
Maxy Fasty, CdlV, spare Oursons, Cypres, speedblends...and then there are the
26" tires for the Ram...)
From: William
dozen or more different tires on their mountain bikes and
jus
I think $200 for that bag from Rivendell is the deal of the century,
plus you'll get free shipping and a 5% rebate in January if you're a
member. Not to mention Riv could use the dollars in their cigar
box.
On Nov 22, 11:25 pm, ben van orsdol wrote:
> If anyone has a large saddlesack for sale, l
...but the VO quill adapter gets you into the full mainstream of
selection if you want quick and easy stem swaps, and it's only $16. I
think it's not bad looking either. That piece converts your
1" (22.2mm) quill bike into a receptacle for any 1-1/8" clamp-on
stem. Those come in every size, rise
I agree with William. I have a large Saddlesack mounted on my
Atlantis. I use it practically every day, for everything. Even in my
area, where carry-nothing carbon fiber bikes abound, I get
compliments. $200 may seem like a lot of money, but amortized by use,
it's nothing. (And who's going to part
Anne
I've found that the Saddlesack Large will hold the entire kitchen and
clothing part, leaving a front solution for the shelter part. I do
Nitto-Mini + Platrack and strap the tent, bag and mat to that.
On Nov 23, 12:02 pm, Anne Paulson wrote:
> I agree with William. I have a large Saddlesac
On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 12:21 PM, William wrote:
> Anne
>
> I've found that the Saddlesack Large will hold the entire kitchen and
> clothing part, leaving a front solution for the shelter part. I do
> Nitto-Mini + Platrack and strap the tent, bag and mat to that.
That's probably true, but once I
On Nov 23, 12:02 pm, Anne Paulson wrote:
> Right now I'm trying to figure out whether it would be big enough for
> an overnight. Sadly, I think not-- in this cold weather, I need tent,
> sleeping bag, pad, Trangia, food, warm clothes. I may try to pack
> everything in it, though, just to see.
Hi
One thing I'll mention that I've never seen mentioned before is the
_smell_ of the Saddlesacks. Like a good, old-fashioned tack shop.
Leather & (I think) treated cotton duck, I about fell over when I
opened the box. I was in heaven.
-Allan
On Nov 23, 12:45 pm, Lee wrote:
> On Nov 23, 12:02 pm, A
Lyotard Berthets are sold. Thank you.
There are inquiries about some of the other items but nothing final.
On Nov 23, 12:24 pm, JoelMatthews wrote:
> Looking ever more likely I will be moving to smaller digs back east,
> so am clearing out those pieces in my overflowing parts collection
> which
You'd think someone would have made a quill with a removable face
plate by now
On Nov 23, 2:19 pm, William wrote:
> ...but the VO quill adapter gets you into the full mainstream of
> selection if you want quick and easy stem swaps, and it's only $16. I
> think it's not bad looking either. T
I wish we had Seattle's snow. By the time the storm hit Portland it
was a piddley little thing - just a dusting. I got sent home from
school conferences early. This morning I came in late - mid 20's.
Unfortunately, I timed my ride just as the sun was starting to melt
the little snow/ice we had. Sli
On our way to chattanooga, tn we made a stop in bristol, va at
mountain sports ltd. I was there to find out how things would feel on
a 64cm atlantis - curiously it might be the right size for me. It was
raining so a test ride was not in the cards, but we'll stop by there
on saturday. Fingers cros
My problem with WTB saddles is the back is too flat (side to side),
giving that sensation of it being too wide between the legs.
The saddle I've recently discovered, thanks to Sean at Rawland, is the
Afton Classic from Dimension. You can have your local LBS order one
from QBP, or find a place on t
Free recycled leather wallet when you donate $60 or they donate $10
when you buy the recycled leather wallet for $25. The end of the year
is coming, so get your donations in and deduct away from your taxes.
Also Riv has a new assemble-your-boxed bike video.
--
You received this message because
Well done!
On Nov 22, 11:34 pm, "Bill M." wrote:
> I was web crawling on the topic of ultra-compact double cranksets last
> night and found this post from list member benzzoy last March:
>
> "I don't particularly like the look of the Davinci or the TA Carmina
> cranks.
>
> I do love Campagnolo's
Thanks to all for buying some things.
Here's what is available yet:
Nitto Grand Randonneur 135 bar, one each in 42 and 45 $25 each
Salso Pro Road 40c-c $15
Salsa Poco 38 and 40 c-c $15
On Nov 18, 3:51 pm, Anne wrote:
> Handlebar garage sale, all are in excellent condition.
> Nitto Grand Rando
the Salsa SUL with the poster child for open face quills. Then there
is/was the ugly poster child, the Profile Design H2O.
I emailed Salsa today and got a response nearly immediately (yea!
Salsa). And I quote, "the cromo SUL quill and threadless stems are no
more."
On Nov 23, 2:36 pm, Peter Pesce
I meant "the SUL was the poster child..."
On Nov 23, 5:09 pm, eflayer wrote:
> the Salsa SUL with the poster child for open face quills. Then there
> is/was the ugly poster child, the Profile Design H2O.
>
> I emailed Salsa today and got a response nearly immediately (yea!
> Salsa). And I quote,
I went to our local TJ Max today just to see what I could find. I
scored two long sleeve "sweaters", which are more like a thin base
layer, but very nice extra fine merino. $19.99 each, normally $40.00,
which is pretty cheap in itself. I tried them on first, because you
never know how things
Hey Guys...I am needing to purchase a new non indexed steering
headset. I need to know what the crown race diameter is on my fork.
Current headset installed is a tange levin
Will
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Owners Bunch" group.
To post to t
Have been dragging my feet, but it is clear that I need to cull the
herd. This frame is back from RBW with the rear dropout fixed, which
is why it is newly painted. While they were fixing it I couldn't
resist a Renovelo that came up for sale, so regretfully this frame is
redundant. (The renovelo is
The 35 lbs I've lost seem to be staying that way. Ergo, the size L wool jerseys
can go, because I take an M these days. I can send more info or a pic of any of
these is there is an interest. Please reply off list of course. None have any
holes or tears. Excellent could have come out of the wrap
Unexpectedly received my brother-in-law's 1984 Bianchi Limited
(Ishiwata 022 / Suntour / SR). It seems the only thing Italian is the
name. Anyhow he just hit 60 and likes what I did to my Atlantis and a
couple other bikes. Albatross bar-end cork hemp etc. Does anyone
remember which which Riv Reader
Hi Mitch. This isn't the Reader you referenced, but it is a great
resource on 650B conversions:
http://www.freewebs.com/650b/
Hope the project works out!
Lee
On Nov 23, 6:52 pm, Mitch Browne wrote:
> Unexpectedly received my brother-in-law's 1984 Bianchi Limited
> (Ishiwata 022 / Suntour / SR).
Mitch, that issue of the Riv Reader with the Rory Cameron article on 650B
conversion is number 33. Number 34 has some info on Ed Brayley's conversions.
Tom Nezovich
On Nov 23, 2010, at 10:05 PM, Lee wrote:
> Hi Mitch. This isn't the Reader you referenced, but it is a great
> resource on 650B co
Thanks guys, this provides all the trouble I need ;)
It will be nice having someone else fund parts for a change!
On Nov 23, 7:11 pm, Thomas Nezovich wrote:
> Mitch, that issue of the Riv Reader with the Rory Cameron article on 650B
> conversion is number 33. Number 34 has some info on Ed Bray
I have at least 15 fine, as new (or, as new when bought),
no-moth-holes merino and merino/silk pullovers that cost me a whopping
$4.69 each at Goodwill. Check your thrift stores (but not if you live
in ABQ, NM -- save those for me).
I generally am on the cusp between M and L -- the ideal is a long
Good on ya Bruce. Impressive!
Wanna share with us how you did it?
And if you say ride more and eat less,
I will mope and go eat a piece of pie
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Congrats on the loss. Your loss, perhaps my gain. I am interested in these
if available.
*RBW Wooly WarmGreen size L S/S excellent condition $40*
*Swobo Solid red size L S/S ""
$40
DeMarchi Red with white accent L S/S " " $
On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 6:56 AM, Bruce Baker wrote:
> Hey I had a concern also with a small PBH and picking a Sam H frame. I'm 5'
> 11" but short legs and long torso. My PBH is 83. But I love the way my
> 56cm
> fits. I had only minor tweaks with handlebar height and seat height and it
> just
I was just catching up with the posts and saw this thread. I've got
RB0219. Blue. Purchased in 2005 from Peter White.
George Strickler
On Nov 18, 2:21 pm, CycloFiend wrote:
> on 11/18/10 9:40 AM, NickBull at nick.bike.b...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > But the SN's must not be precisely sequential, o
On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 11:19 AM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
wrote:
> I'm with you on being less than enchanted with cantilever brakes.
> "Spirit of the group" notwithstanding (it's your bike, after all), the
> Magura hydraulic rim brakes are nice, but may be limiting in terms of
> what kind of
So i'll just keep this thread going as i pull the bike together,
headset went in ok, cockpit looks roughly ok. went to install the
cranks (an old suntour superbe pro double) and realized the 107
installed BB would be too narrow, the 113 i popped in looks ok, but
the inside chainring is really clos
I just bought a Sam Hill up there. They quite few of them also
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 23, 2010, at 6:24 PM, Seth Vidal wrote:
> On our way to chattanooga, tn we made a stop in bristol, va at
> mountain sports ltd. I was there to find out how things would feel on
> a 64cm atlantis - curio
For sale is my 64cm Rivendell Atlantis
I built this up as my fully-loaded touring dream bike, but sadly I am
just too big for it really need something a bit stouter (something
more like a Bombadil, or maybe a Hunq). I hope it will go to a good
home.
Many of the parts are new or nearly new. I bo
Regarding brakes--you might check out the new TRP CX-9 v-brakes
(http://www.trpbrakes.com/category.php?productid=1040&catid=185). They
are a short-armed v-brake designed to work with road levers. I have
some of the Tektro road levers designed for regular v-brakes, and am
not particularly impressed
Bruce, I agree on the PBH thing, i'm just shy of 6ft but my PBH is
only 85 so right inline with you. I guess i have short legs compared
to other people, good to know your 56 fits ok, makes me feel better
once i have everything put together that i'm in the right ball park.
Jim, to be fair the last
Quarter inch gap is more than fine.
On 11/23/2010 8:36 PM, Minh wrote:
So i'll just keep this thread going as i pull the bike together,
headset went in ok, cockpit looks roughly ok. went to install the
cranks (an old suntour superbe pro double) and realized the 107
installed BB would be too nar
1/4" is about 6 mm, which is plenty. I have three bikes with either
ring or crankarm or both within 2 mm of stay, with no problems yet.
IIRC, Sheldon thought 2 mm the safe minimum.
On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 9:36 PM, Minh wrote:
> So i'll just keep this thread going as i pull the bike together,
> he
If it doesn't rub its okay..
On Nov 23, 8:36 pm, Minh wrote:
> So i'll just keep this thread going as i pull the bike together,
> headset went in ok, cockpit looks roughly ok. went to install the
> cranks (an old suntour superbe pro double) and realized the 107
> installed BB would be too na
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