I agree with it all, what a great bike to make into what you want.
The one thing I find quite amazing-this is an observation, not a
critique-is, especially on Cyclofiend, the amazing amounts of stuff
that people hang on their bikes.  It's like farkle city!

On Sat, Jan 8, 2011 at 3:54 PM, JimD <rasterd...@comcast.net> wrote:
> Well said Jim.
> I wish I could find the thing I read from Douglas Brooks where he talks
> about 'resolved' and 'resourcefull' bikes.
> A Hampsten Tournesol Rando bike is an example of a resolved bike.
> Everything is optimized for the function of long distance/unsupported
> riding.
> A Rivendell (pick any one) is a premier example of a 'resourceful' bike.
> Grant designs great riding bikes that are flexibly configurable. They may be
> aimed at different
> primary riding domains (Roadeo vs Bombadil) but can be setup across a wide
> range within the
> design target domain.
> Underlying this approach to the hardware is a sensibility for bicycling and
> bicyclers that is wide
> ranging - everything but racing.
> For me this sensibility has enriched the experience of bicycling beyond the
> bounds of my perspective during
> my first 20 years of riding.  I was riding '10 speed racing bikes' and
> should go fast, train, be like Eddy.
> As I 'matured' I found the challenge of going fast and faster was getting
> hard and harder.
> I had to succumb to the dreaded triple to climb the hills around here.
> Once I realized I wasn't racing. I started thinking about other approaches.
> Having discovered Rivendell I'm riding more and having more fun than ever
> before.
> -JimD
>
>
> On Jan 8, 2011, at 11:09 AM  Jan 8, 2011, CycloFiend wrote:
>
> on 1/7/11 12:06 PM, Kelly Sleeper at tkslee...@gmail.com wrote:
> (great questions which ended with...)
>
> What makes the Rivendell Different.. how does one explain that difference to
>
> those that just see a steel antique looking bke?
>
> I think there have been a couple of handling or "discussion of trail"
> threads where this has popped up before.  These are a couple points I've
> probably made before...
>
> Rivendells (and I include all of the designs, not simply custom models) have
> a similar quality of ride. While a Roadeo is different from a Bombadil,
> there's an underlying set of design tenets which seems pretty consistent.
> For me, in my riding conditions, they are superlative. They are stable,
> predictable, solid handling bikes that generally keep me out of trouble, and
> then react appropriately when I'm silly enough to get my self into it.  If
> they didn't handle well, nothing else would matter.
>
> The handling and ride is a sum of a all parts. It isn't _JUST_ trail, head
> angle, bb height, chainstay length, angles, and length.  It's all of those
> things.  You cannot just change one aspect and have the same bike.  The
> bicycles are a product of those variables, plus the things which Grant has
> learned in the XX number of years of plotting out frames, testing them and
> thinking pretty deeply about the results.
>
> The bicycle designs have grown to be incredibly versatile. Ten years ago,
> the longer reach brakes weren't availalble. The clearances which we now
> enjoy were only possible with canti brakes.  Finding a 28mm 700C tire was
> difficult, let alone a higher quality 30mm+ tire. The limiting factors have
> been the components, and Grant has always been pushing the envelope in this
> particular corner of the bicycle world. Add to that his commitment to high
> quality bags and racks and you end up with a useful and continually variable
> design.  As I've repeated too many times, both my Quickbeam and Hilsen have
> been errand bikes, road bikes, mountain bikes, race bikes and brevet bikes
> in the time I've had them. Over the past couple years, I've grown to feel
> that if a bicycle can't be fendered or adapted, it really is not a "bicycle"
> in the true sense.  In other words, when people ask what my "road bike" is,
> I kind of stare at them blankly.
>
> All of this could be done roughly, or quickly, or with a more industrial
> design tenet, but the fact that Rivendell connects the tubes with lugs, has
> small, undernoticed details and pays attention to decal fonts, paint colors,
> and bicycle packaging (just to pick out a quick few) to the extent that they
> do just locks them in for me. It distinguishes them as practitioners of a
> craft.  It's important to me to support that.  The "finish" work is part of
> the craft...part of the art of what they practice.
>
> I suppose it's easy to equate the outside, finishing layer with the whole.
> The first thing someone notices is the paint layer, the contrasting colors,
> the lugs.  While that's part of the equation, the strength lies underneath.
>
> - Jim
>
> --
> Jim Edgar
> cyclofi...@earthlink.net
>
> Cyclofiend Bicycle Photo Galleries - http://www.cyclofiend.com
> Current Classics - Cross Bikes
> Singlespeed - Working Bikes
>
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