I have a medium shopsack too, for groceries, and I love it.In fact, I
want to get another one- but I notice they aren't on the site anymore.
Where'd they go? I hope they weren't discontinued with the sale (were
they?)! I'd be really bummed if that were the case.
--
You received
Forrest - Your Sam is sitting in front of me in my office as I'm
writing this.
Jay
On Feb 9, 3:19 am, Forrest wrote:
> I have an Atlantis (58) now, and I had a Sam (56). Amazingly similar fits
> for me between these two bikes in these sizes. I like that the Atlantis can
> take bigger tires than
What brakes?
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Thomas Nezovich
Sent: Wednesday, February 08, 2012 9:13 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Atlantis vs. Sam
The 559 wheels ne
Patrick: 26" wheels are a hard sell, probably because road-bike-oriented people
associate them with "slow" MTBs and cheapo X-Mart bikes. Back when we sold
Atlantises, it seemed like 58cm frames sold better than 56cm by about 10:1 (a
guess). Perhaps RBW has a more accurate ratio. In any case, man
Paul Moto BMX. These are the Paul V brakes without the big scallop. I did
find a set of old Shimano cheapy cantis among my stash that worked (old Altus,
I think) but my Atlantis deserves better.
On Feb 9, 2012, at 9:23 AM, Allingham II, Thomas J wrote:
> What brakes?
>
> From: rbw-owners-bun
I hadn't noticed they were gone! this bag is so perfect! I would never
sell mine ever. I always overfill mine and when I used to only have
one net for two bikes and would forget to transfer it, I simply tied
the handles in a knot to keep everything in there. Works great.
S.
On Feb 9, 2:51 am, ne
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 8:14 AM, scott wrote:
> I hadn't noticed they were gone! this bag is so perfect! I would never
> sell mine ever. I always overfill mine and when I used to only have
> one net for two bikes and would forget to transfer it, I simply tied
> the handles in a knot to keep everyt
The Large Shopsack (which is still available) is at least equally useful, and
fits perfectly in a Large Wald basket, a Paul Flatbed, or a Gamoh Cargo Rack,
or on a Platrack. I use mine in all 4 of those configurations.
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto
Thanks for the apercu; that makes sense. But I am glad that at least a
few makers are making truly nice 559 road tires -- I hope the trend
continues. Me, I want a 28 or 30 mm racing tire in 559. But meanwhile,
the Kojaks do pretty well.
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 7:41 AM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
Does anyone know of a source for them? My knees are begging me for
this. My frugal nature has me wondering why not just buy a cog and
convert the cassettes I already own. Additionally my herd runs 7 and
9
speed drive trains, so I'd like to do this for my 7 speed stuff too.
I have seven speed spac
No 36, but Harris (and QBP I'm sure) carries a 34t Miche.
Note (y'all) that it is easy to grind off the rivets that hold at
least the cheaper cassettes together, for easy customizing. I use a
16-18-20-22-24-29-34 on my Big Apple wheelset, 15-17-18-19-21-24-30 on
the Kojak wheelset.
On Thu, Feb 9,
Hi,
I have a Deore LX Rapid Rise rear derailleur for sale. It's basically
brand new. which means the derailleur has about 20 miles on it and the
pullies are brand new...hence the basically. i tried to love it i
wanted to love it. but couldn't for the life of me love it...50$
shipped.
Thanks
--
26 in is just a no go for me, I guess as an old guy it takes me back to the
old mtb days and that is,just not what I was looking for personally. Again
no offense intended but for shorter pbh people who were always awkward on
700c bikes 650b is just awesome.
On Feb 8, 2012 8:19 PM, "Forrest" wrote
I tour with a large shopsack in a large Wald basket in back and a
medium shopsack in a small Wald basket in front. (I also use a large
handlebar bag.) Fantastic combination. The load is rigid, and the bags
can be popped out of the baskets in seconds to take into the tent or
the B and B. And, of cou
Clyde:
Action Tec lists a 36t (also 38 & 39!) on their website but they are
titanium @ $78 each. You can buy the entire 12-36 9 speed Shimano
cassette from Riv for a lot less ($55 last time I noticed). For your
7 speed, there's a 13-34 standard Shimano cassette.
The bargain option I've used is
Agree with Jim on the pluses of 26" wheels for touring. While I've
never had any problem with the 700s on my 58 cm Atlantis, given my
druthers I'd go 26".
The perception of 26" being slower is not reality. My wife has one
bike with 700 x 28 Paselas, and does not coast downhill as fast as I
do.
Has anyone used these?
http://www.mtbr.com/cat/tires-and-wheels/tire/panaracer/tserv/prd_357546_151crx.aspx
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On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 2:08 PM, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> Has anyone used these?
>
> http://www.mtbr.com/cat/tires-and-wheels/tire/panaracer/tserv/prd_357546_151crx.aspx
>
Not in yellow - but I have tservs on our tandem. Good tire - rolls
well - nice balance between flatproof and plush.
-sv
--
Yo
I have 60cm LHT with 26er wheels and it's great. It can look a bit ungainly
with the 26s on larger frames if you use skinny tires, but I run 50mm Big
Apples and black fenders so the visual perception of the wheels looks
pretty good in proportion to the whole bike.
Can't say much about speed, as
You should be able to do this.
Not necessarily a longer B screw but your old one put in from the back side.
Search for reversed B screw and you will find some pics.
The shim you mention is a bottom bracket or freewheel spacer. I use a six
speed cassette on an 8 sp hub and it takes the 4.5 mm
On Thu, 2012-02-09 at 09:31 -0800, ccanter wrote:
> Does anyone know of a source for them? My knees are begging me for
> this. My frugal nature has me wondering why not just buy a cog and
> convert the cassettes I already own. Additionally my herd runs 7 and
> 9
> speed drive trains, so I'd like
As long as we're talking tires for 559, I'll throw my current faves in the ring:
http://www.maxxistires.com/Bicycle/Mountain/MaxxLite-310.aspx
Don't let the knobbies in the picture fool you -- these are round-profile, good
enough for fast commuting, rough-housing, and trail riding. Super light a
Speaking of 26" "road bikes," here's a cool Paramount on 'bay:
www.ebay.com/itm//290663312629 Love the bike, not the silly-stupid
BIN. Is this that same Mad-Wis shop being discussed a couple days ago?
On 2/9/12, John Speare wrote:
> As long as we're talking tires for 559, I'll throw my current f
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 4:25 PM, cyclotourist wrote:
> Speaking of 26" "road bikes," here's a cool Paramount on 'bay:
> www.ebay.com/itm//290663312629 Love the bike, not the silly-stupid
> BIN. Is this that same Mad-Wis shop being discussed a couple days ago?
>
Yep - that would be it - Budget Bic
My kind of bike! too big for me, though.
I've noticed that, while small, light wheels do (at least) *feel*
faster to accelerate they don't *feel* as if they hold their speed as
well -- which is one reason the relatively heavy wire bead Kojaks feel
so nice: more inertial feel. Still, very light whe
Mad-Wis location + ridiculous price (I've got gold!) gave it away!
Cool bike though. If it had decent clearance for at least a 1.75" tire
it would be an awesome bike!
On 2/9/12, Seth Vidal wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 4:25 PM, cyclotourist wrote:
>> Speaking of 26" "road bikes," here's a cool
I think they got their negative connotation based on the lack of good
rubber. That and the MTB association. I'd love to have a country bike
set up with 559 Hetres!
On 2/9/12, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> My kind of bike! too big for me, though.
>
> I've noticed that, while small, light wheels do (at l
Seth
It's worse than that. They have the Buy It Now rigged so that even if you
do Buy It Now, it responds "sorry, it's not for sale"
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To view this discussion on the web visit
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I'm not aware of a source for 36t cogs, since that's not one that wears
out, and most of the cassettes are not made to have cogs switched out
(easily) these days. As someone pointed out, the Shimano 12-36 9sp cassette
and the 7sp 13-34 cassette are not terribly expensive. Even if you could
find
While we are on the subject, i just got a pr of Pasela 559 x 37 skin wall tires
from Harris. Very light, and will be on the Rambouillet.
Sent from my Kindle Fire
_
From: Seth Vidal
Sent: Thu Feb 09 13:09:32 CST 2012
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroup
Looks kind of like a Brompton
Sent from my Kindle Fire
_
From: cyclotourist
Sent: Thu Feb 09 15:25:46 CST 2012
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Atlantis vs. Sam
Speaking of 26" "road bikes," here's a cool Paramount on 'bay
My Atlantis came stock with 35 mm Paselas. When the rear wore out,
the front had enough sidewall cuts to be worrisome. I replaced them
with T-Servs & was quite happy with how rugged they were in
comparison. It's a good tire at a decent price. Don't recall much
about the ride so they couldn't ha
The T serve is about like the Pasela but thinner in the sidewalls and
a tough part under the tread like the older Urbanmax which had it in
the sidewalls too. That was a tough, light tire for me.I've
quite a few miles on 27" gumwall Pasela TG's in the 1 1/8 and 1/4"
inch widths. All good bu
Yes Furthermore Bar sounds like a energy bar that Rivendell makes.
Agreed.
On Feb 8, 6:56 pm, Geoff wrote:
> +1. I really like the "Furthermore" Bar, too. Good one, Andrew(BSWP)!
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To post to
Received my green 150mm bullmoose bar today... Maas Powder Coating did
a fine job!!
On Feb 8, 9:56 pm, Geoff wrote:
> +1. I really like the "Furthermore" Bar, too. Good one, Andrew(BSWP)!
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T
Do what I do in great life decisions like this. Flip a coin. That's
how I got to be a teacher. Or just go with the San Marcos. Anything
Rivendell touches is gold.
On Feb 7, 6:05 am, trek610 wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am at a cross roads and need some help deciding on how best to spend my
> money...
>
"Even if you could find the correct cog, it sure seems like a lot of
screwing around."
Don't discount the entertainment value of screwing around. Rational?
Probably not.
dougP
On Feb 9, 3:55 pm, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
wrote:
> I'm not aware of a source for 36t cogs, since that's not one
I've done this with a couple of Raleighs and a Centurion and they are
decent bikes but its difficult to know what damage or corrosion is
inside the frame. Stress cracks from accidents that have been
straightened on the rear triangle or just plain bad brazing with
overheated joints etc. You just don
Anybody heard of this stuff? Recommended by my LBS for "roadie"
pressures, 70-80 psi in my case.
I bought a bottle last week after flatting my the rear Supreme on my
Sam and put it in the punctured tube as a test.
Pouring it in there took a bit of trial and error, but it does seems
to be holding. A
New Sunrace 8 speed freewheel 13x28 freewheel, $10 + shipping.
Shimano Deore XT 8 Speed long cage derailleur, excellent shape - $30 +
shipping.
http://dmayne.home.mindspring.com/tp/DSCN0575.jpg
http://dmayne.home.mindspring.com/tp/DSCN0574.jpg
2 Shimano Megarange Tourney Rear Derailleurs, new -
1 NOS Nitto Dirt Drop Bar in wrapping, 48cm width bar end to bar end - $55
+ shipping.
http://dmayne.home.mindspring.com/tp/DSCN0565.jpg
1 Used Nitto Dirt Drop Bar, 48cm width bar end to bar end, normal tape
residue, good condition - $40 + shipping.
http://dmayne.home.mindspring.com/tp/DSCN0564
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