Thank you for this Valerie, your post made my morning!

Sarah

On Monday, May 6, 2024 at 1:30:11 PM UTC-7 Valerie Yates wrote:

> Thanks for the kind words! I've been enjoying yours and Bill's and many 
> others' posts for years but I only rarely chime-in. 
>
> I have loved riding bikes since childhood, got my first drop-bars when I 
> was 8 (the Schwinn Bicentennial 10 speed), and yet my club riding phase was 
> also late (40-45) and very brief. I had just moved to Boulder, CO and the 
> club rides were a great way to get to know popular, local routes. But I am 
> introverted and group activities just aren't my scene. I have a few folks 
> with whom I like to ride and, whenever I can, I sign up for a trip with 
> HeartCycle.org. On the HC rides, everyone goes at their own pace. I enjoy 
> the random camaraderie that occurs during the ride without any expectation 
> of continuing to ride together. The club is based in Denver, started by 
> doctors, has long-standing members from across the US, and offers trips 
> across the US and Europe. Experienced riders, great routes, fully 
> supported, non-profit, and not fancy. They welcome new members if that ever 
> interests you or anyone else reading this. 
>
> My understanding of the Roadini is based on the website: 
> Roadini -  Functionally like a Roadeo, priced like a Clem.
>
> To me, the Roadeo feels absolutely plush, smooth, and elegant compared to 
> the too small, too stiff, carbon-framed, low-barred, skinny-tired road bike 
> I was persuaded to get when I moved to Boulder to fit in on rides with 
> various clubs. That bike is long gone. The shorter wheel-base, stiffer 
> tubing, and skinner tires of the Roadeo makes it much more taut and spare 
> feeling than the Gallop. For me, the Roadeo is the ultimate, classic road 
> bike for challenging myself on paved rides -- whether going fast or 
> climbing on my own or riding with faster friends.   
>
> The long-length, fat-swoop tubing, and fatter-tire capability of the 
> Gallop seems more like a lightweight, road-oriented Susie, to me. Less 
> concern about potholes and road texture than on the Roadeo and more 
> playful, all-day comfort. Since I haven't actually tried it on the rides I 
> do with the Roadeo, I can't say for sure how it compares. Its performance 
> could surprise me. In any event, I think the Gallop will be really fun and 
> a great intro to drop bars coming from the the upright models you've been 
> riding. I am eager to read your ride reports. 
>
> On Monday, May 6, 2024 at 12:51:38 PM UTC-6 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! wrote:
>
>> Valerie, well you’re an undiscovered treasure. I haven’t had the 
>> privilege to know you but just reading this reveals that you are a 
>> RivSister with a wealth of bike information and we NEED you here. Wow! It 
>> was oddly like reading a Bill Lindsey post with all the talk of 
>> incorporating a new bike into your collection and using it for certain 
>> subsets of rides. If you two don’t know each other I think you should get 
>> acquainted! 
>>
>> Thanks for taking the time and offering your opinion about this bike. I 
>> really think it could be a good first road bike for me, and a good one to 
>> experiment with drops. I’m so late getting into serious riding (I found Riv 
>> at 31 and was raising little kids but now am 3 years from empty-nesting) 
>> and I feel so behind. Everyone else seems like they had their drop bar 
>> phase and club riding phase in their 20s and maybe 30s. I never rode a 
>> group ride until I was 41. It’s a lot, so I’m very appreciative when other 
>> people (especially women) will share what they know. It really, truly helps.
>>
>> One question: Why do you think the Roadini is more like your Roadeo than 
>> your Gallop? What makes the Roadini and the Gallop different, do you think?
>>
>> Thanks again for this thread!
>> Leah
>>
>> On Monday, May 6, 2024 at 2:13:15 PM UTC-4 Valerie Yates wrote:
>>
>>> Following up on Leah's questions in a new thread (and in a new order).
>>>
>>> On Sunday, May 5, 2024 at 5:33:07 PM UTC-6 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Valerie, I would love to hear every single thing you say about this 
>>> bike. Do you have sweepy bars? Drop bars? Have you ridden it on a club 
>>> ride? Do you find it to be quick and lively? What was the reason you bought 
>>> your Charlie? 
>>>
>>>
>>> *What was the reason you bought your Charlie?  *
>>> In general, I like to buy used/demo bikes to try them out and see how 
>>> they perform in the applicable subset of the variety of rides I like to do 
>>> - whether paved or dirt/gravel, steep hills or rolling flats, and whether 
>>> short rides, all day, or multi-day, loaded or supported, alone or with 
>>> people. Although many have overlapping capabilities, I tend to set them up 
>>> for specific types of rides, rather than being all-rounders. With a new 
>>> bike, I like to figure out if it fills an empty niche or if it excels 
>>> relative to an existing bike in a category, which would then likely be sold 
>>> or repurposed. It is a fun game. 
>>>
>>> When the Gallop demo was for sale, I had just discovered what an 
>>> unbelievable blast the Gus is on bumpy dirt rides (so fun! so liberating!) 
>>> and was curious about the effect of the swoopy top tube and longer 
>>> wheel-base on a road-oriented bike. Also, it is purple. 
>>>
>>> *Do you have sweepy bars? Drop bars? *
>>> The bike came with albastache bars which I always try to like, but I 
>>> never do. Hard to explain, but the bars felt too skinny to my hands for 
>>> such a rounded, plush bike. I think drop bars would work well with the 
>>> right stem height and reach. I have 4 drop-bar bikes so I didn't want to 
>>> move it in that direction. I had on-hand a bosco-moose bar so I swapped 
>>> over to that one. I love it. I have such a great view while riding and 
>>> supreme comfort climbing and descending.   
>>>
>>> *Do you find it to be quick and lively?*
>>> It is lively! I don't know about quick. I haven't ridden it with 
>>> garmin/strava going so I can't compare my speeds to other bikes. It is very 
>>> fun to ride. It is the kind of bike that inspires me to pedal a bit faster 
>>> because I feel the energy go right into your motion. It puts a big smile on 
>>> my face. I have it set up with a triple so I have a huge range of gears, 
>>> which helps in my very hilly neighborhood. It likes to climb. I don't know 
>>> if I am going fast (likely not) but it is not hard. It is far more 
>>> responsive and nimble than my Clem H, which I sold. That was a tank. This 
>>> is like a rowing scull, easy to bring up to speed and to plane in rhythm 
>>> with the bike. It sails down hills. It feels like it disappears under me. 
>>> It is weird because it is not the lightest bike I have. 
>>>
>>> I think having wide tires helps because they mitigate all the road 
>>> texture. I switched from the Soma Shikoro tires that came with it to 
>>> Schwalbe G-One Speed TLE in size 50.  The Soma's were fine but the 
>>> Schwalbe's feel more plush.  Like I'm riding a Rolls Royce. Well, what I 
>>> imagine a Rolls would be like. 
>>>
>>>
>>> *Have you ridden it on a club ride? *
>>> I no longer do club rides. I don't know if this is the bike I would 
>>> choose for riding with my go-fast friends and family. I am more of an 
>>> all-day pace rider so when I am riding with faster people and trying not to 
>>> hold them up, I tend to choose my Roadeo. It fits in better with the roadie 
>>> riders in my area. The Roadeo is also the bike I choose when challenging 
>>> myself on steep, paved climbing, like Vail pass, because it is lighter. I 
>>> think it would be really fun to take the Gallop up Vail pass if I were 
>>> going by myself but I don't know that I'd be keeping up with anyone. I have 
>>> to ride the Gallop more to assess my speed on it.  I get the impression 
>>> that the Roadini is more comparable to the Roadeo than my Gallop would be. 
>>> It also sounds like the production Gallop may have slightly different ride 
>>> characteristics from the version I have. And while I love my Roadeo 
>>> for what it enables me to do, I think I smile more on the Gallop. 
>>>
>>> Hope that helps! Happy to answer any other questions. 
>>>
>>

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