Good advices above. On my SS mountain bike, I run about 51gi. About 5-700’ 
climbing per mile around here. More gravel SS, I ran closer to 60gi. 

I do love fixed offroad. 
If you haven’t visited this site, it’s excellent read. 

http://www.63xc.com

On Thursday, August 24, 2023 at 8:38:07 PM UTC-6 jasonz...@gmail.com wrote:

> Thanks for the excellent information and antidotes Patrick and David... I 
> appreciate the details and after crunching some numbers, it might be a good 
> plan to flip my 48t chainring to a 40 and feel the difference from the 
> current 74" to a more dialed back 61". Then, if I need more or less I can 
> pick up a different cog or play from there.  I was debating back and forth 
> to drop to either my options of 40 or 36 and felt like 36 made more sense 
> but I think I might find a better feel with a 40 and not cut back so far 
> that it takes a lot to bring it closer... smaller tweaks vs giant swings 
> maybe?  a 36t would put me at mid 55" which might be good but I could make 
> more tweaks with the 40t and still have the speed that I do enjoy.
>
> Thanks again, I am fully aware that there is a bunch of value I'd be 
> walking away from, but more importantly I absolutely love this Riv out of 
> the entire lineup and if there were one LOTR races I loved the most it's 
> the Ents (and that matters, to me)
>
> xo
>
> On Thursday, August 24, 2023 at 9:15:54 PM UTC-5 Patrick Moore wrote:
>
>> I have to say that I personally would keep that QB and ride it, at least 
>> until the market improves.
>>
>> The old single speed mtb standard gear was ~50-55". Personally I find 
>> that far too low not to get irritated on the flats. I don't know what your 
>> hills are like, but I preferred 60" to 65" and walking to a lower gear.
>>
>> Long ago I built a fixed gear mountain bike and decided I preferred a 
>> gear no lower than about 60" or 62" (175 mm cranks) because, while I don't 
>> mind getting off and walking, I absolutely hate going downhill or before 
>> headwinds in a tiny gear. My hills were sometimes steep and often sandy but 
>> not that long (half a mile at longest).
>>
>> After a bit I decided I preferred multiple gears for real hills and 
>> turned the mtb (nice top model Diamond Back) into a fixed gear allrounder 
>> with 60 mm Big Apples, a 64" gear and 170 mm cranks.
>>
>> A bit later I set up a 2010 Monocog 29er with a single 63" gear (170 mm 
>> cranks) which was fine for all around sandy road/trail riding and modest 
>> hills as well as flat pavement.
>>
>> My current (2012) Monocog has a single 65" gear and 175 mm cranks for 
>> sometimes deepish sand (but 72 mm tires at 13 psi) but I don't often face 
>> hills on that bike.
>>
>> If I were faced with more hills I'd want at least a second, much lower 
>> climbing gear. I've toyed with the idea of a kickback hub for a ~46" direct 
>> and a 64" overdrive (1.38) but so far I've preferred the simplicity of a 
>> single gear. But if I were faced with more hills I might do this. Or I 
>> might try to find a way to get a 19 t and the current 15 t cog on one side 
>> of the hub that with the 32 t ring (30.5" wheel) would give a 51" low and a 
>> 65" high, and use a QR hub for easy swapping. 
>>
>> OTOH, when I briefly put 42 mm (39 mm actual on the 19 mm OW rims) Naches 
>> Passes on my 1999 Joe Starck road custom, I rode it on some of our firmer 
>> sand with a SA 2 speed fixed hub giving 57" and 76" gears, and it was great 
>> fun but I didn't like getting my "pretty bike" all dirty.
>>
>> On Thu, Aug 24, 2023 at 6:11 PM Jason Zakaras <jasonz...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> So as its been posted, I'm selling my Quickbeam, but even with "too low" 
>>> prices, its still not moving.  I also have options to figured out how to 
>>> tow my newest addition and I can make space/have the space so who cares.  
>>> The big concern for me is riding it and I don't find myself jumping on it 
>>> as often as I'd like.  Partially due to the epic mtn bike scene immediately 
>>> around me and my newly rebuilt bombora that I absolutely love.  That said, 
>>> It would be fun to hit the trails on a QB and I have a pass&stow rack and 
>>> some bags I'd like to use to do some camping with my twin boys (7) and the 
>>> SS would be a nice way to enjoy the trip out to the woods with them.  
>>>
>>> The question I pose is what gear options do you all enjoy.  I've dug 
>>> into the internets and I'm sure there is a post or 100 on this here already 
>>> but I figured with the upcoming roduno and its many possibilities, this 
>>> might be a fun chat to dig into.
>>>
>>> I'm currently at 48-18 and its great climbing around rural gravel roads 
>>> in the midwest but now I'm in steeper hills its a bear-cat.
>>>
>>> Thanks xo
>>> Jason Cheap QB For Sale.
>>>
>>> -- 
>>>
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>>> .
>>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Patrick Moore
>> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>>
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Executive resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, letters,
>>
>> and other less well defined but still important writing services.
>>
>>
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> *When thou didst not, savage,*
>>
>> *Know thine own meaning, but wouldst gabble like*
>>
>> *A thing most brutish, I endowed thy purposes*
>>
>> *With words that made them known.*
>>
>> Tempest Act 1 Scene 2
>>
>

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