I had a Roadini and attempted to put my 135mm ENO hub in the back. It was a
no go—the frame was too stiff to bend out. Maybe being the eccentric hub
made this more difficult.
By comparison, I had no issue putting a 135mm hub in my old 130mm BMC
Monstercross, or a 130mm hub in my 126mm old road bik
Great question, and I’ve had a different result. I’ve got a Silver Hub
(only available in 135 mm) laced to a Velocity Dyad, and it fit easily into
my Sergio Green Roadini frame, without much fuss. 2.5 mm on each side is
not much. No mechanical spreading, etc. in fact, the silver hub was
rea
PM Sent!
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 12:06:55 AM UTC-5 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> Another part from friend Doug's parted-out A Homer Hilsen. This is a pair
> of Sugino XD2 crank arms with no rings. Just the right crank arm, left
> crank arm, all the chainring bolts you need, plus a set of five
This Clem is still for sale in Sacramento if anyone is looking for a small one. (Not mine/no affiliation)Rivendell Clem Smith Clementine - bicycles - by owner - bike sale - craigslistsacramento.craigslist.org
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Hi Joe, my $0.02
It seems like two sets of wheels will come with the bike? If so put that
in your FS description too. Its a reasonable asking price as a starting
point, since it also has lighting and a generator hub. You will likely get
some bites if you are willing to ship, or help with arran
thanks Tim
On Sunday, December 17, 2023 at 4:03:45 PM UTC-8 Tim Bantham wrote:
> Beautiful build Jamin!
>
> On Sunday, December 17, 2023 at 1:52:32 PM UTC-5 Patrick Moore wrote:
>
>> BSNYC built up his Homer similarly and praised it highly, tho' I think
>> that, now, it's back to swept-back bar.
Nice..he should get you to do it
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 10:34:07 AM UTC-6 Marty Gierke,
Stewartstown PA wrote:
> Just a thought, but why not? Plenty of raptors around Riv HQ. Maybe if we
> all twist Grant's wing he'll come up with something cool.
>
> Marty
>
> [image: RBW Fender Bird.
Three quick responders, but Ben was first. SOLD
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 7:29:41 AM UTC-8 Tim Bantham wrote:
> PM Sent!
>
> On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 12:06:55 AM UTC-5 Bill Lindsay wrote:
>
>> Another part from friend Doug's parted-out A Homer Hilsen. This is a
>> pair of Sugino X
Spread all frames but one, which I had built @ 135, from 130 to 135 quite
easily. My experiences suggest it requires patience and a bit of
bravado—the spread to get that extra 5mm was/is quite startling. But as I
had / have settled on 135 which is—theoretically at least—stronger thanks
to reduc
There's nothing wrong with shoving a 135mm rear wheel into a 130mm frame.
If it were me, I'd respace my 135mm rear wheel to 130mm and re-dish the
wheel, but I'm a mechanic and I have the axles in my workshop. Likely
nothing bad will happen if you take the short cut, but it's always OK to do
t
Check with Rivendell to see if this a safe option. I would think it is. I
have a mix of both 130 and 135 OLD bikes in the mix with a few 140mm. My
1987 Schwinn Voyageur is 130mm that I have a 132.5 wheelset mounted on.
Pretty sure the frame was 126mm OLD prior to me getting it. Settled on that
I'm considering converting my 64 Clem L frame into a beach cruiser and kid
hauler to keep at my in-laws' place in Florida. The bike is currently
stripped down to just F/F/HS/BB, so starting from scratch here. I can
source most of the components from my various parts bins, but looking into
doing
BTW, regarding spreading the rear.
Just a word of caution, not sure I'd advise this unless you're adventurous
and/or experienced...or crazy.
Or all of the above. And, as always, YMMV.
Jock
Jock
On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 9:22 AM John Dewey wrote:
> Spread all frames but one, which I had built @
John Dewey
10:13 AM (0 minutes ago)
to rbw-owners-bunch
BTW, regarding spreading the rear.
Just a word of caution, not sure I'd advise this unless you're adventurous
and/or experienced...or crazy.
Or all of the above. And, as always, YMMV.
Jock
On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 9:57 AM R. Alexis wrote:
The show stoppers that I would fear are:
1. A coaster brake requires a no-tensioner way to take up chain slack. On
normal cruisers, that's done with horizontal dropouts. The Clem has
vertical dropouts.
2. Cheap coaster brake hubs are not 135mm and the Clem is 135mm O.L.D.
Bill Lindsay
El Ce
Hi everyone -
I deleted the listing and now have a more complete list of what's up for
grabs. There will be some other parts in the photo link that aren't Riv
adjacent but available so don't be shy! All prices are before shipping.
Nitto 115 (42cm) - no markings on the visible areas when wrapp
I think a coaster clem would be sick! The Mone hub builds are based on the
shimano CBE110 hub. I think for your application an off the shelf CBE110
would do the job just fine. You would however need to space it out to
135mm. The stock axle is likely not long enough so you'd need to install a
l
If you have parts that work for 135 rear and you are not setting it up for
roadie riding (which I am just guessing because of the dynamo wheelset)
then it might make sense to try a different Riv frame. The main difference
with the Roadini is a slightly more road oriented geometry. And even that
I've lost count of the number of frames whose rear triangles I've spread.
The first was a drawn-out, hourlong affair but these days its 5 minutes, a
2x4 and Bob's-your-uncle. I wouldn't hesitate to do it in this situation.
Also innumerable are the frames that I've just jammed a larger hub into
That Ram is looking good Stephen!
On Sunday, December 17, 2023 at 5:58:47 PM UTC-5 Steve wrote:
> Platypus in the Jungle
> Spent the past week camping at Edisto Island, SC. Quiet back roads, woodsy
> trails and a few miles of freshly paved bike path.
>
> [image: 4773C539-A6CC-42EE-9359-FD8
Nice! I wish I had the badges I used for the poster, but alas they were all
loaners (Grant sent me a bunch for the original poster), or photos I found
online. The only badge I have at this point is the one on my Clem. Tell me
more about the 5th one from the left. Looks like it could be the origi
Handsome has some coaster wheels for ~$150, but spaced at 110mm:
https://handsomecycles.com/products/handsome-handbuilt-rear-wheel-single-speed-coaster-brake-aluminum-700c-silver
Eric
On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 12:58 PM Justin Kennedy
wrote:
> I'm considering converting my 64 Clem L frame into a
wow nice - especially the Baggins pin!
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 12:21:59 PM UTC-8 Marty Gierke,
Stewartstown PA wrote:
> Nice! I wish I had the badges I used for the poster, but alas they were
> all loaners (Grant sent me a bunch for the original poster), or photos I
> found online. The
Joe,
You have a very cool bike that is not very common. I cannot say what the
"right" price is, but there are a few ways to improve your chance of
selling it:
1. Make the bike look its best. Give it a good wash and pump up the
tires. A bike with flat tires looks like a neglected bike. If
I have a 6500 series Ultegra RD with a long cage. Anyone know the range of
cassette I should be able to work with? I believe the short cage can take
28, but I can't find the long cage max anywhere...any help is appreciated!
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google G
Generally, with Shimano road derailleurs the short and long cage versions
usually had about the same max cog specification, around 27 or 28t. The
difference was that the longer cage one had enough capacity that it could
handle a triple in front.
The general consensus around here is that Shiman
Concur with Jeremy:
12-27 no problem
11-28 no problem
11-32 probably
11-36 probably not
11-42 I'd bet that's a big no
Bill Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 3:35:52 PM UTC-8 Jeremy Till wrote:
> Generally, with Shimano road derailleurs the short and long cage versions
> us
Thanks Jeremy - I was definitely hoping an 11-32 would be OK.
On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 3:35 PM Jeremy Till wrote:
> Generally, with Shimano road derailleurs the short and long cage versions
> usually had about the same max cog specification, around 27 or 28t. The
> difference was that the longer
I have one with an 11-30 cassette and it works well.
Cody, Chicago
On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 5:42 PM dylan green
wrote:
> Thanks Jeremy - I was definitely hoping an 11-32 would be OK.
>
> On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 3:35 PM Jeremy Till wrote:
>
>> Generally, with Shimano road derailleurs the short a
I am running an 11-32 cassette with a long cage and it indexes fine.
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 6:47:48 PM UTC-5 codyt...@gmail.com wrote:
> I have one with an 11-30 cassette and it works well.
>
> Cody, Chicago
>
> On Mon, Dec 18, 2023 at 5:42 PM dylan green wrote:
>
>> Thanks Jeremy - I w
A wolf tooth road link can help provide clearance for the larger cogs
should you run into issues.
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 4:16:04 PM UTC-8 Andy Beichler wrote:
> I am running an 11-32 cassette with a long cage and it indexes fine.
>
> On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 6:47:48 PM UTC-5 cod
I too have used it with a 11-32 and it worked fine.
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 4:16:04 PM UTC-8 Andy Beichler wrote:
> I am running an 11-32 cassette with a long cage and it indexes fine.
>
> On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 6:47:48 PM UTC-5 codyt...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> I have one with an
Hi folks,
Very high chance of this going nowhere! I picked up a 60cm silver Sam
Hillborne frameset from the last run, as I despaired of C&L ever receiving
any Homers in Canada (still haven't), but I'd really really like a 61.5
Homer with downtube shifter mounts and caliper brakes (Jason F will
sent you a message!
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 5:35:10 PM UTC-8 Paul Richardson wrote:
> i bought this for my wife but, alas, she says it's "too scratchy." which
> means...it's made of wool, not that weird "fleece" stuff she is so fond
> of. i'd say it fits like a smallish medium. (pard
I suppose I should have mentioned it would be a 57cm frame. Love the mix of
reviews+experience. Thanks all!
On Monday, December 18, 2023 at 11:44:08 AM UTC-8 wboe...@gmail.com wrote:
> I've lost count of the number of frames whose rear triangles I've spread.
> The first was a drawn-out, hourlo
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