I’ll order a set of those Joe. And I agree about the green Oury grips, they 
look Rad.  

Sent from my iPhone

> On Nov 18, 2021, at 1:34 PM, Joe Bernard <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Doug: I use Deity Black Kat pedals and they're great, I didn't like how 
> narrow the MKS were. Deitys come in a bunch of colors, I think Leah has the 
> cheaper Deftrap model which looks to be the same size as mine. Good stuff. 
> 
> Paul: That's a nice bike. Dig the green Ourys! 
> 
> Joe Bernard
> 
>> On Thursday, November 18, 2021 at 9:53:25 AM UTC-8 Doug H. wrote:
>> I have ridden my Clem a few times now and can report it is excellent on 
>> roads, gravel, and dirt. I rode with the rear tire at 25 psi and the front 
>> at 30 psi. On roads I'll probably pump that up to 35/40. The Tosco bars are 
>> better than I expected as I had already thought about putting Billie Bars on 
>> it but now I'm satisfied with the Toscos. I have them angled downward a bit 
>> which is comfortable to me. The MKS Monarch pedals are good too but I may 
>> try another flat pedal that is wider and flatter at some point, maybe even 
>> add some color bling like Leah has done on hers. Not much else to report yet 
>> but so far so good! 
>> Doug
>> Athens, GA
>> 
>>> On Wednesday, November 17, 2021 at 9:29:46 PM UTC-5 Gill wrote:
>>> So it’s been 15 months. I love the bike and extoll it’s virtues to anyone 
>>> who asks (and to some who don’t). It was not love at first sight. I bought 
>>> a clem for it’s personality - and price. Comfort and off-road capability 
>>> were the inducements. As time passed I came to appreciate clem’s beauty and 
>>> now find traditional diamond frame bikes look common and truncated in 
>>> comparison. For me the price was a sweet spot. It cost $1650, enough to be 
>>> a quality bike but not so much that it causes reluctance to ride the 
>>> granite strewn trails of cape ann for fear of dinging it up. Clem does what 
>>> you ask of it. Out last week a pedal came off at an inopportune moment 
>>> stripping the crank so I push rode it like a scooter 4 miles home and 
>>> thought it still rode nice. Can’t offer build inspiration as my clem is 
>>> still stock. All I’ve done is reposition the shifters to below the bends 
>>> freeing up hand space. This has made a big difference for any sort of 
>>> aggressive riding/climbing, works well for long descents too as you can lay 
>>> forearms flush on swept back and be comfortably aero. 
>>> 
>>> Maybe I’m just easy to please but for me this is a no-brainer. Whatever you 
>>> need, on or off-road, loaded or unloaded Clem Smith is a first ballot hall 
>>> of fame bike. 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Wednesday, November 17, 2021 at 5:45:12 AM UTC-5 Garth wrote:
>>>> Yeah, the Clem to some qualifies as a "beater bike", albeit a still 
>>>> relatively expensive one. The term is meant to convey something of a 
>>>> lesser investment/value/importance that one feels more liberated to be 
>>>> creative with. If you bought a new custom Riv, or a say a shiny new car 
>>>> .... would you take the liberty to adorn it with hand painted designs of 
>>>> your own ?  Would you gut the interior and replace it with your own design 
>>>> ?  While most do not, many do just that. 
>>>> 
>>>> Still, every bike is unique no matter how it adorned. In fact there are no 
>>>> duplicates of anything,  "Mirror mirror on the wall who's the fairest of 
>>>> them all ?"  Hah !  It's a trick question in that it starts with the 
>>>> assumption of two or more, when in actuality there is but The One. 
>>>> 
>>>> When I had my '83 Stumpjumper (silver) one mid-80's winter I just felt 
>>>> like hand painting some of the lugs orange as I had some Testor's paint 
>>>> handy. It was irresistibly fun !   I think this is exactly what my 
>>>> Bombadil needs too, some hand painting here and there. It's already a 
>>>> custom single color. no decals. I bought it used and it was flat black, 
>>>> which to me was worse in person than I imagined. So when it needed some 
>>>> frame work I had Jack @Franklin custom frames use that black powder coat 
>>>> as a sanded base to paint it with light green metallic Imron. I didn't 
>>>> like the original decals either so I left them off. About the only stock 
>>>> Riv color I've seen that I liked in the Clementine soda pop Orange. The 
>>>> Susie orange is a mildly burnt/dull offering. I expected something 
>>>> brighter ..... boo hoo hoo ! 
>>>> 
>>>> Spray-can painting is something we used to do as kids to bikes and 
>>>> anything else that would take it. I wonder how many are willing to paint 
>>>> over and/or accent their stock paint jobs ? I'm sure some have !  I like 
>>>> the idea of a "blanco" primed and ready to paint as you like frame. Given 
>>>> a blank canvas some may find it overwhelming at first.... but after that 
>>>> first step into the seeming abyss and seeing that all is indeed well ..... 
>>>> such is the Living as Life Itself. 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>>> On Tuesday, November 16, 2021 at 10:12:57 PM UTC-5 Joe Bernard wrote:
>>>>> Here's a bit of history which I think will be interesting for this thread 
>>>>> in light of how beautiful and colorful and modernized these bicycles have 
>>>>> become: 
>>>>> 
>>>>> In the Blahg or Peeking Through The Knothole or whatever it was called 
>>>>> then, the original murmurings about the new, lower cost TIG-ed Riv was 
>>>>> that it would be painted flat black. The idea was you could use it as a 
>>>>> beater townie and touch it up with a spray can. I think - not sure about 
>>>>> this - the decals were going to be offered as a stick-on kit. The decal 
>>>>> idea later - this part I remember well - was retained for the 
>>>>> glossy-paint bikes and you were supposed to be able to have them do it 
>>>>> for you with the regular name, plus you would get extra letters to mess 
>>>>> about with as you wanted. But then the first frames came pre-decaled with 
>>>>> a clearcoat and that was the end of that. Interesting, no??
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Tuesday, November 16, 2021 at 6:13:50 PM UTC-8 Joe Bernard wrote:
>>>>>> Btw can we discuss the first Clem pictured in this thread? I think 
>>>>>> Leah's "eccentric" build is the coolest. One thing I can't really do 
>>>>>> with my custom cuz of the gray/red scheme is toss other colors at it, 
>>>>>> which is ever so slightly first-world-problems frustrating. I love the 
>>>>>> splotches of red and orange on her blue frame, that bike POPS! 💙❤️🧡
>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Tuesday, November 16, 2021 at 5:52:26 PM UTC-8 Joe Bernard wrote:
>>>>>>> Ok buckle up kids, your old pal Joe's got numbers. This is effective 
>>>>>>> toptube, which Grant will tell you isn't enough information to size a 
>>>>>>> bike so don't listen to me! 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> New/current/late-2021 Clem L:
>>>>>>> 45cm        62.5
>>>>>>> 52              65.5
>>>>>>> 59              68.5
>>>>>>> 64               70
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> These are the numbers for the last H model, which I believe match the 
>>>>>>> previous few years of L, too. My 2018-ish 45cm L matched this:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 45cm         57.5
>>>>>>> 52                61
>>>>>>> 59               65.5
>>>>>>> 64                67
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> None of this (as far as I know) applies to the first gen 
>>>>>>> Clem/Clementine, I believe they're all a smidge shorter in reach. One 
>>>>>>> super-bad thing about the Riv site is you can still find PBH recs for 
>>>>>>> these frames based on the first gen..it's way off now. Also I know 
>>>>>>> nothing of stack/reach, which I'm sure affects all this stuff. 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> For another chip in the cookie jar (I never remember idioms correctly 
>>>>>>> so I'm just making up my own now), my custom was designed for me at 
>>>>>>> 79-ish PBH with a tall headtube and intended to run Boscos. It's 
>>>>>>> 54.2x63. 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Joe "numbers guy" Bernard 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Tuesday, November 16, 2021 at 5:03:18 PM UTC-8 Patrick Moore wrote:
>>>>>>>> Perhaps more helpful: my perfect level tt road bike frame size is 60 X 
>>>>>>>> 56 c-c. My built road bikes have 57 and 58 cm c-c tts with Riv-type 
>>>>>>>> slightly upsloping tts. Please help me translate this into Clems.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> And again, how fat a tire will a 700C 59 cm Clem take?
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 16, 2021 at 5:39 PM Patrick Moore <[email protected]> 
>>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> ..Aside: "59cm - 86 to 96cm; 700c rim size, but with room for "29er" 
>>>>>>>>> tires." I've never measured my pbh because I've known forever what st 
>>>>>>>>> size and tt size make a bike fit me. But I'm 5'10" tall with Asian 
>>>>>>>>> build (I wear 34 w 32 length jeans instead of v-versa; if I had an 
>>>>>>>>> Anglo build I'd be 6'1" ), so would I fit a 59?
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> And, if so, how fat a 700C tire will a 59 cm Clem take?
> 
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