Danny- Thank you, Hope to run into you sometime!
Laing- Thank you for the input. I had a feeling that the front derailleur 
would be mentioned. It does shift fine, but I will look at options. This 
was the derailleur suggested to me. Do you have any suggestions?
On Monday, April 4, 2022 at 1:54:30 PM UTC-5 lconley wrote:

> Congratulations.
> Nice bike, but sorry, I cannot help myself - please get a front derailleur 
> that actually fits the bike and the drivetrain. That derailleur is meant 
> for a triple crank and also the cage is too long for the chainrings used - 
> forcing the derailleur to be mounted too high. It may work fine, but it is 
> mechanical malpractice. Just the misguided ramblings of a mechanical 
> engineering nerd.
>
> Laing
>
> On Monday, April 4, 2022 at 1:29:14 PM UTC-4 larson....@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> [image: E986D2B1-4A98-4B9A-B7C7-C523BF1A7922.jpeg]Hey everyone! I am two 
>> months in to being a Rivendell owner, a 2TT dark green Appaloosa, and 
>> thought I would give my initial impressions. I live in the hilly Driftless 
>> area of southwestern Wisconsin, ride about 3000+ miles/year and am in my 
>> upper 50s. Only about 250 miles on the Appaloosa because of a cold, wet 
>> early Spring.
>>
>> The build is pretty straight forward, based on information from this 
>> forum and the help from Candice at Analog Cycles. I think I had only seen 
>> two Rivs in the wild, with one being on a car rack. Had a nice road-trip 
>> late last Summer to Ames IA to pick up the frame (thanks Brent!) This is 
>> the first bike I have built myself. I wanted a bike for mixed road day 
>> rides and short tours. Originally I was stuck on a Hunqapillar, but had no 
>> luck finding one. Then the Sam, but couldn’t find one of those either that 
>> would work for me. In retrospect, the Appaloosa is probably the best choice 
>> for me, situated between my Black Mountain Cycles monstercross and my Salsa 
>> Fargo, both of which I love. I expected Joe to ride like a Cadillac, 
>> comfortable and stable, and it does. What has surprised me is that the bike 
>> feels lively, and does not ride at all like a heavy touring bike. The 
>> comfortable position with the Billie bars, upright but with a very nice 
>> position at the front curves, works well for me. I appreciate the 
>> simplicity and the ease of working on the bike. I like the practicality of 
>> buying a very good frame and putting modest level parts. I also have come 
>> to understand some of the Rivendell philosophy of riding.
>>
>> I have ridden the bike on good and bad paved roads, gravel and a couple 
>> of farm field roads. In another month I will get to try the bike on some 
>> single/double track, and have several overnighters and a week tour planned. 
>> The Appaloosa is fun, capable and puts a smile on my face! Thank you to 
>> this forum for all the information I have gleaned in the last two years.
>> Randy
>>
>

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