All these responses have given me so much to think about, I appreciate all
the help. Thank you!
On Thursday, November 30, 2023 at 7:01:05 PM UTC-8 Joe Bernard wrote:
> My low on a 650B bike in Lake County, CA., is 26 x 50. It's useful!
>
> On Thursday, November 30, 2023 at 1:25:54 PM UTC-8 pi..
I love seeing someone else's bike dream fulfilled! Congratulations on your
new bike day and what color did you paint your bike??! (I promise
you all your RivSisters want to know...)
On Saturday, December 2, 2023 at 8:19:18 PM UTC-8 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> Since starting this thread, I di
I absolutely will be hoping for RivSister approval of my color way. In my
convo with Grant, he asked to photograph a number of the projects I've been
working on or recently completed, like he may Blagh about it, and since
this Canti-Roa is a relatively unique thing, I was going to give them fir
Here is the Flickr album where I will post my photos.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/45758191@N04/albums/72177720313109003/
There are several shots of the raw frame set in there now.
BL in EC
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 7:13:08 AM UTC-8 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> I absolutely will be hoping fo
The seat stay bridge. The dropouts. 🤌 Pretty rad. I can't wait to hear ride comparisons between this and the Legolas. Admittedly, I've been mentally dithering on re-raking my Legolas fork to make it chill out just a little bit and be possibly make it ride more like your canti-roadeo... but I wouldn
Brake choice is rh cantis.man even the raw frame is elegant
You can see nobilettes fine craftsmanship on display.
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 10:15:50 AM UTC-6 Nikko in Oakland wrote:
> The seat stay bridge. The dropouts. 🤌 Pretty rad. I can't wait to hear
> ride comparisons between this and
My bad...rh was a choice but maybe Bill changed his mind
Pure fantasy...some Bruce Gordon ming the merciless cactus
Would be cool looking
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 10:53:42 AM UTC-6 Ryan wrote:
> Brake choice is rh cantis.man even the raw frame is elegant
> You can see nobilettes fine craft
I think the Homer badges are pretty sweet. The one on Paul R's bike is
weathered, patinated and brassy. It looks beautiful. I'm not sure if
they're still made with same metals (doesn't look like it to my eye).
On Friday, December 1, 2023 at 8:32:10 PM UTC-5 ian m wrote:
> LOVE the Saluki, Hunq
Bill
Nice photos of the frame. The fork rake looks very nice. A few questions
after reading all the posts:
How much fork rake do you have??
How much BBD do you have?? Earlier you mentioned Grant used some extra
BBD, based on his Roadeo?I thought 80mm was RBW standard BBD for 700C
wheel
Miraculously I found it second-hand on eBay. The seller accepted my offer
for just the frameset and it's been hands-down my favorite bike to ride.
I'll share a separate post with all the details later next week when it's
more dialed.
On Thursday, November 30, 2023 at 11:55:24 PM UTC-6 Kieran J
I agree with Sky. The Hunq badge is the best.
On Friday, December 1, 2023 at 6:58:18 PM UTC-5 Sky Coulter wrote:
> The hunqapillar headbadge will always be the best.
>
> On Dec 1, 2023, at 3:36 PM, Kainalu V. -Brooklyn NY
> wrote:
>
> Science fact-
>
> There’s no finer headbadge in the univer
The perfect bike!P. W.~(917) 514-2207~On Dec 3, 2023, at 8:06 AM, Bill Lindsay wrote:Here is the Flickr album where I will post my photos. https://www.flickr.com/photos/45758191@N04/albums/72177720313109003/There are several shots of the raw frame set in there now. BL in ECOn Sunday, December 3
Procrastination is what I do best.
BUT!!! What about that 2020 IGH Matthews? I finally happened. Slowly but
eventually ...
Re: LIbertas: My brother owes me some $$ to be repayed in kind; he has all
sorts of kind including bike stuff that he picks up dirt cheap because he
likes (very intelligent)
Damn, Bill! That's going to be a dream bike. Maybe you've already covered
this and I missed it, but I'm curious whether you went with a threaded or
threadless fork?
Eamon
Seattle
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 8:06:19 AM UTC-8 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> Here is the Flickr album where I will post my
John H asked questions:
How much fork rake do you have?? As much as a Roadeo has
How much BBD do you have?? Earlier you mentioned Grant used some extra
BBD, based on his Roadeo?It's not 80, because the Roadeo isn't intended
for 40+ mm tires. It's a little less than 80. If you seek out
It's threadless.
Bill Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 12:31:27 PM UTC-8 Eamon Nordquist wrote:
> Damn, Bill! That's going to be a dream bike. Maybe you've already covered
> this and I missed it, but I'm curious whether you went with a threaded or
> threadless fork?
>
>
Hello Bill,
The frame and fork look great! Love being able to see the craftmanship of
the lugs and welds with out the paint in the way. It should be wonderful to
ride once it's done. As for "lawyer lips", I have to agree that they are
not my favorite. Lately my wife and I have been getting out
Hi pals, bought winter tires for the car so time to go a-scroungin :)
Bars:
-Crust towel rack 645mm wide, earlier gen with the deeper drops $100
Brakes:
-2x (aka 1 bike’s worth, 2brakes2stop2wheels) Paul Minimotos NIB $275 pair
$137.69 each
Brake levers:
-Fake TRP levers- got them in a An
I'd say grind off the lawyer lips now before it gets painted.
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 4:48:57 PM UTC-6 JohnS wrote:
> Hello Bill,
>
> The frame and fork look great! Love being able to see the craftmanship of
> the lugs and welds with out the paint in the way. It should be wonderful to
>
Looks great, I love the fancy tape wrap located in several spots on the
bike. Never going to have to go thirsty while on this bike, also!
On Sunday, 3 December 2023 at 16:54:20 UTC-8 krhe...@gmail.com wrote:
> I was very fortunate to buy this bike as a "demo" form RBW headquarters in
> Walnut
@Jason,
Thank-you.
Gotta be prepared with all the water I can carry, if I loose track of how
far I have gone down the trail.
Kim.
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 5:06:07 PM UTC-8 Jason Fuller wrote:
Looks great, I love the fancy tape wrap located in several spots on the
bike. Never going to h
Went for a ride in snow today and had a blast! I also slipped around a
little bit as I tried to follow the packed snow of tire tracks. Got me
thinking about studded tires. I've never ridden them before and know
nothing about them.
Do any of you fine folks with more experience in such matters t
King kargo cage is sold - impressive amount of interest in it!
I'll update with more pending/sold stuff tomorrow, but still responding to
people's emails for now
Brent "bottle cage enthusiast" in chicago
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 6:11:43 PM UTC-6 Brent Knepper wrote:
> Hi pals, bought win
Hey John, glad you got out and had fun in the snow!
Right now I am running the 45nrth Khama tires and they work really really
well. Last season I had the Schwalbe Marathon version and they were great
on ice but so so at best in the slush or any inches of snow built up. I
love the confidence of
Red Saluki! Maybe the only one. Highly APPROVE!
Best,
Rich in ATL
On Saturday, December 2, 2023 at 9:56:52 PM UTC-5 Roberta wrote:
>
> Gorgeous! Congratulations.
> On Saturday, December 2, 2023 at 5:16:41 PM UTC-5 Robert Blunt wrote:
>
>> Ok. Last year I sold my Bleriot to a friend who really n
John, for many winters I commuted to work with Nokia Hakkepelitas, 700 x
35. For more grip, riding on local lakes and snowmobike trails, we would
use sheet metal screws on knobby mtb tires, kind of noisy and slow on any
bare pavement, but very secure on hard ice.
Steven Sweedler
Plymouth, New Ha
Very nice Bill. Well worth the long wait. Thanks for sharing pics of the
raw frame.
Best,
Rich in ATL
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 7:54:50 PM UTC-5 George Schick wrote:
> I'd say grind off the lawyer lips now before it gets painted.
>
> On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 4:48:57 PM UTC-6 JohnS wr
This has also been my experience with the Schwalbe Marathon Winter Plus
(700c x 40mm). The studs grip very well on the ice, but if the packed
snow/slush gets deep down enough that the tires don't sink though to the
ice/pavement below, the studs have nothing to bite into, and one can lose
tract
I use 700x35 Nokians on my winter commuter. They work pretty well 95% of
the time, but today I was about at the limit – it snowed yesterday, thawed
a bit and rained, cleared off and froze hard, and then dusted snow again,
so we had loose powder on top of a sheet of pure ice. For conditions like
tha
Thank you all for your replies. Just to clarify @frahm30, are those the 45N
Kahva tires? I'm wondering about the fit of 2.25 with studs in my Hunq
frame. Worked at a bike shop this summer and saw a bike with studs (sheet
metal screws) that chewed into a frame! Ouch!
In the case of studded tire
Yes, sorry. I didn’t catch the auto correct! Mine are 27.5x2.1. The only
others I used were right at 2”. So I can’t really say if wider helps. I can
say that the more aggressive tread and studs have made a huge difference.
They are about as loud as a car with studded tires though and my old set
That is precisely it! I dm'd you...
On Sunday, December 3, 2023 at 6:55:00 AM UTC-8 Rusty Click wrote:
> Colin, is this the rack you're looking for? This came off my Atlantis
> when I changed to V-brakes.
>
>
>
> On Friday, December 1, 2023 at 10:59:05 AM UTC-5 Collin A wrote:
>
>> Just a fri
Tires *like* the W106 700x35 Nokians work well for snow and ice on paths,
however on rutted ice, they have no studs to pull you out.
Tires *like* the W240 700x40 Nokians are more aggressive with knobs, stud
volume and stud placement. You can ride these pretty much anywhere.
Schwalbe Marathon Wi
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