Yesterday I rode for the first time with the gray Sackville panniers. They 
are nice and very well made, and my 14" Dell laptop fits well enough but not 
perfectly. I couldn't figure out how to use the balls to tighten them in 
place so I just came up with a configuration of the balls for the top and 
used zip ties on the bottom of each bag. They stay in place very well and 
are quite handy with their zippered flaps. 

I'm not sure if I prefer them over the medium Sackville saddlesack, but 
since that bag doesn't fit well with the Nitto Big Rear Rack, the panniers 
become and excellent replacement. 

Here are some photos of my evening commute tonight. 18 miles between San 
Jose near the airport and Palo Alto along the Guadalupe & SF Bay trails with 
just 3 miles of streets. Coming home there is a relentless headwind, tonight 
it was about 12 mph according to Weather.com and it took me almost 2 
hours.  http://tinyurl.com/3l3mb36
Since I worked all day on the computer, my left shoulder was hurting when I 
started the ride but the magic of the Nitto Touring bars prevented the pain 
from becoming unbearable and instead it was just a nuisance. I was tired 
when I got home, but it was night and day compared to the last time I did 
this same route with the headwind in the evening. It's much nicer to do this 
route early in the morning when the wind is lighter and it's always a tail 
wind. The only nuisance are the clouds of tiny flies around the swamps or 
pools of water that you sometimes don't even see, but get all plastered on 
your arms, clothes, legs and you have to make sure you're riding with your 
mouth closed! When you're out of the cloud of flies, you just wipe them off, 
they don't even move. Tiny black spots!

Today in the morning I drove to RBW and after spending a couple of hours 
there testing several bikes, I drove back to work with a 58 Hunqapillar 
frame in my back seat. If you have to ask why, you probably don't belong in 
this forum... :-) Just kidding!
 
The story unfolded like this... 

Last year, shortly after I got my Atlantis to supplement my AHH, I decided 
to get a Betty Foy http://tinyurl.com/248qgyo that my daughters could ride 
with me and was hoping we'd do some camping trips like the S240 I did last 
summer to Angel Island with my oldest daughter and my son: 
http://tinyurl.com/42bee6z. Naturally, I wanted to use the bike as an around 
town bike so I got a 58 that would fit us all; for my daughters the saddle 
would go as low as the frame allowed, for me higher. I set it up with 
Albatross bars and the usual stuff. My daughters loved it, my oldest tested 
it and complained the Brooks saddle had its nose up up high and she felt the 
bars were a bit too far out, but that was it. None of them rode it or asked 
to go on a bike ride with me and since I also didn't find the Albatross bars 
comfortable, a few weeks ago I set it up with the Modolo Yuma trekking bars 
(not as nice as the Nitto) and started using it to go around Palo Alto. For 
me, it felt a bit on the smaller side but I liked its ride.

Then last week, as I was celebrating my 25th wedding anniversary and we were 
joking what to get for each other as presents (none of us had gotten 
anything for the other one), I half jokingly said I was getting another 
bike. The truth is that I was thinking that if my daughters weren't going to 
ride the Betty, I might as well sell it and replace it with a 62 Betty/Yves 
that would fit me better. To make the story shorter, I started talking to 
Keven, one thing led to the next, and for the first time I found myself 
seriously considering a Hunqapillar. He explained that they are having some 
issues with long lead times for Bombadils and for me, the Bombadil that I'd 
need would have been a 56 as the 60 I started with proved to be too 
long/tall. The 58 Hunqapillar, on the other side, is a 700c frame and I have 
several spare wheelsets and most of the other parts to just build it up. 

To be honest, the gray color scheme of the Hunqapillar had never attracted 
me at first sight. Familiar story? The same thing had happened with the AHH 
blue and the Atlantis green. Now I love them. The pictures on the Riv site 
also don't make justice to the gray/wine color combo. So I started looking 
for photos on Flickr and found an amazing set of photos of a Hunqa taken by 
Devil.Bunny http://tinyurl.com/3v9pgsl that were so good and the colors so 
deep and bright that they changed my perception. I then showed the photo to 
my wife who was still grumbling that I couldn't get another bike if I didn't 
sell one. She liked the color combination and the bike, to my surprise.

So, this morning I test rode a 62 Betty, a 58 Hunqa (with drop bars so not a 
good position for me), a 60 Bombadil with Bullmoose bars (which I loved) and 
a 62 Hunqa with Albatross bars (which I still don't like that much). My 
biggest surprise were the Bullmoose bars; I had tried them when I got my 
Bombadil and Riv was just starting to carry them and at the time, I didn't 
like them. Whatever happened on these last two years, the fact that I've 
discovered I'm so comfortable with the Nitto Touring bars, I don't know; I 
just loved how they felt. 
Jay prepped my frame with love and care and withstood my sporadic comments 
about not forgetting to do something or other, and installed the headset 
(Tange), the BB (Phil 111mm), the front derailer (Microshift) and the Sugino 
triple crankset (24-34-46). Along with the frame came the Nitto mini front 
rack, the 26.8 Nitto S-83 seatpost, a sliver double legged Pletscher 
kickstand, the 20cm Bullmoose bars, several rolls of maroon Newbaum's tape 
just in case I decide to use it and a Hunqapillar poster.
 
I decided to go with a Tange headset since I'm getting so much shimmy on my 
Atlantis when riding no hand at speed (on dowhnill sections). The Atlantis 
has a Chris King headset which I heard were prone to shimmy. Let's see how 
the Hunqapillar behaves in this matter.

My plan is to set it more like a dirt-mountain bike for now and also use it 
around town. I may put fenders on it right away or wait a while longer. 
Eventually, I'll decide which one is the better tourer/commuter for me as 
well between the Hunqa and the Atlantis, and vary their use or even sell 
one. The Betty will probably have to go soon to appease my wife, but then 
again, I may manage to make it stay and try to talk my daughters into coming 
on rides with me. In the fall they'll both be in Berkeley, so I'll have to 
drive up there with the bikes to go riden on Tilden park with them and my 
son, and hope for more. It would be a shame to sell it as it is pretty much 
in brand new condition, having been ridden around 20 miles total. Maybe my 
wife will forget about her if I give her a very nice present!
We'll see how it all unfolds, but in the meantime, I'll start building the 
Hunqapillar up and sometime this weekend it should be ready. I'll be taking 
photos and sharing them.
 
And thanks for enduring the long ramble... :-)

René

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