After several configurations, I finally settled on 1x9 for my Sam, then 
went from bar end shifters to stem to DT (with a clamp on mount). I 
definitely shift less often with the DT than before. The difference between 
riding a derailleur bike in one gear and a SS, though, is how much more 
torque you can exert on the SS with its thicker rings and heavier chain. I 
want a true SS and will probably be an immediate pre-order(er) when/if RBW 
brings back a SS frame.

On Wednesday, November 29, 2017 at 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Deacon Patrick wrote:
>
> With several people interested in single speeding I thought I’d start this 
> thread for tips and lessons we’ve learned single speeding (and fixed too, 
> as I’ll soon be diving in). What have you learned, or are learning?
>
> I cover a lot of bits I learned here, in my review of the Quickbeam: 
> https://thegrid.ai/withabandon/quickbeam-sightings
>
> As I’ve been riding exclusively single speed now the last few weeks (and 
> my Hunqapillar is single speed, just using the 60” gear in the cassette as 
> that was the one that worked), I’ve again been impressed with how different 
> the mind/body/heart/soul set is with zero options but pedaling.
>
> With gears, the mind is always watchful and mindful of cadence and asking 
> the question “is it time to shift?” and “will this hill necessitate a 
> shift?” None of that nonsense. Me legs are me gears.
>
> I was good at being relaxed pedaling in a certain RPM range, and I shifted 
> to stay in that.  I “needed” more gear range when the terrain became 
> steeper because otherwise I was out of that range.
>
> Single speeding has taught me to relax from extremely slow cadence 
> pedaling to extremely high cadence. I’ve learned to climb with an 
> unweighted seated position, doing repeated one-legged squats, my weight 
> pushing down on the pedals to assist, my arms pulling on the bars to 
> assist. Yet it is soft and easy. Anaerobic work at an aerobic pace. It 
> feels amazing.
>
> Fast cadences feel a lot like running barefoot (and I expect fixed with 
> increase this in many ways) — floating along, limpid and lithe, riding a 
> rail as circles turn beneath me (this feeling is true all the time, 
> actually, but more so at higher cadences for me).
>
> Ride till you can’t, walk till you can.
>
> Obey this and the amount of time you spend walking will decrease steadily 
> and surprisingly as your aerobic fitness increases. What is “can’t”? For 
> me, it is when I am no longer breathing fairly relaxed through my nose (I 
> make exceptions to this when I want to push myself, or for short, steep 
> climbs).
>
> Intentionally ride the wrong of your two gears, both too high and too low. 
> You will learn a lot.
>
> The one geared bike is an amazing teacher, but it requires humility to 
> learn from it. A deraileur gets in the way of this learning.
>
> Most of all, enjoy and ride with abandon! Grin.
>
> With abandon,
> Patrick
>
> www.CredoFamily.org
> www.MindYourHeadCoop.org
>

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