Hi Leah,

I'm also excited to hear about your journey towards a road bike; you
probably don't know it but your writing on this list was one of my main
influences towards ending up with a Riv. Drop bars and pavement are very
familiar, comfortable territory for me, and – like others have said here –
I still enjoy that type of riding at times.

You're probably already familiar with him, but if not, I'd recommend
checking out some of Jan Heine's work – Bicycle Quarterly, *The All-Road
Bike Revolution,* his blog, etc. Bicycle Quarterly was my point of
departure from "mainstream" bike culture, and I came around to appreciating
Riv a bit later and now enjoy both approaches for different rides. Jan is
much more focused on speed than Grant is, but in what feels to me like a
healthy way. This is an old blog post that I think may be worth a read, as
it's an articulation of the same sort of perspective you seem to be
arriving at: https://www.renehersecycles.com/riding-fast-is-fun/. Jan also
wrote somewhere (can't find it right now) about how he and Grant are good
friends, and he wanted to make it clear he's not dissing Riv by promoting
what he likes.

I currently have two of what I'd call "really nice" bikes, a Gus
Boots-Willsen and a Crust Lightning Bolt (alongside moderately nice bikes
like a Bridgestone MB-3 and a dumpster-find Bianchi Volpe). The Gus is
"full-Riv" – friction shifting, Carradice saddlebag, weird bar wrap, etc –
and the Crust is full Bicycle Quarterly, with 42mm extralight tires,
low-trail geometry, Gilles Berthoud handlebar bag, and all that. (Jan is
not affiliated with Crust, but Crust designed the Lightning Bolt with his
preferences in mind). The two bikes are a perfect combination for my
current riding: there is enough crossover that both work great for
doubletrack rides, and the Gus is ideal for riding singletrack while the
Crust excels at long, fast road and gravel rides. Rivendell doesn't make
randonneur bikes like my Crust, as it sounds to me like they don't like the
lighter-gauge tubing and the handling optimized for drop bars and moderate
front loads, but Grant has written (quoting from memory, so hopefully I'm
pretty close here) that he's glad companies like Crust exist and do
different stuff from Riv. I don't feel like riding my Crust is an insult to
Rivendell, just an expression of the fact that my riding conditions are a
bit different from theirs, though I totally get it if that's how it feels
to you.

I've never ridden a Roadeo or Roadini, but I've ridden a LOT of road race
and "sport-touring" bikes from the 1960s through 2000s, many of which (like
early 80s Trek sport tourers, one of my main rides for a long time) have a
lot of similarities to the Roadeo. I prefer my Crust for several reasons:
it's designed for bigger tires, which when they're René Herse Extralights
are just as fast as 23mm tubulars and far more versatile; it can carry a
big handlebar bag for long rides without compromising handling at all; and
it feels more "alternative" when showing up to group rides, a feeling we're
all used to with Rivendells - but it's still just as fast as the carbon
bikes, unlike my Gus. And the biggest factor is that it's made of
superlight steel tubing, which I like not for the weight savings (less than
a water bottle) but for the flex characteristics – it flexes with each
pedal stroke and feeds it back into the drivetrain, taking away the
pushing-against-a-brick-wall feeling of hammering up a hill on a stiff
bike. Jan calls this "planing," and it's pretty controversial, and others
call it a lively frame, a somewhat less controversial term. My personal
experience says it works – take that however you want. I do not believe the
Roadini would "plane" or be particularly "lively," based on what I've
heard, and the slightly lighter Roadeo might or might not depending on how
much power you're putting down.

A classic road bike like the Roadeo is also an aesthetic choice, though,
not just a practical one, and if that's the sort of bike you want, I don't
want to be the one to argue against that! Those sorts of bikes are very
well-proven for many use cases, and fast-paced, shortish (~30 mile) group
rides are certainly one of those.

Basically what I'm hoping to say here is that "road bike" can mean many
things, and that Jan Heine's writing has been a huge positive influence on
my riding and maybe could be for you too. Best of luck with the process of
contemplation and decision!

Josiah Anderson
Missoula MT

Le sam. 20 avr. 2024 à 13:33, Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! <
[email protected]> a écrit :

> I’m starting to wonder about a roadbike. But it has to be a Rivendell
> roadbike because I’m loyal and all that. Anyway, I don’t know that the
> Roadini really offers enough of a change for me. I have no idea what is
> going on with the Gallup. Then there’s the Roadeo - that one looks great
> but there’s a 2 year wait, unless I can find one used. Which would be
> ideal.
>
> Who rides their Rivbike in club rides and what do you ride? Who has a
> Roadeo that never gets ridden and wants to sell it? I don’t even know what
> size I’d be but I’m an 81 PBH. Must I ride drop bars? I never have before.
> I know nothing about any of this. Clearly.
>
> Note: I still like my raspberry Platypus for club riding but it does take
> a toll on me in wind. I recently got a shorter-height, longer-reach stem
> which marginally helped, but our high spring winds are taking it out of me.
> I did a club ride yesterday with my women’s group and my heart rate was in
> the 170s the whole 26.3 miles. It was brutal. Everyone else agreed it was a
> hard ride, but I felt like it was harder on me than them, and I’m the
> youngest and probably the most fit.
>
> Leah
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "RBW Owners Bunch" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to [email protected].
> To view this discussion on the web visit
> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/fab5132f-e8ca-4a76-842d-9b994853e099n%40googlegroups.com
> <https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/fab5132f-e8ca-4a76-842d-9b994853e099n%40googlegroups.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
> .
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW 
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/CADqZWjNYi_kUNDFPDz6S9m8NuJBdBs_jJK3J4pTskW3fggiEWA%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to