This excellent summation of a randonneur bike's mission also describes a 
commute bike's mission. You need to get yourself and some gear to a 
destination, on time. A commuter (this one, anyway), may get a randonneur's 
"five hour" feeling at the 40 minute mark. 

In the bigger debate, I don't really see a debate at all. You take what's 
useful, and make it your own. All of my bikes owe a lot to both Grant and 
Jan's ideas. Except the mountain bike - that's more a Keith Bontrager / 
Charlie Cunningham joint. And the Gravel Roadster is sort of a Sheldon 
Brown / Jeff Jones thing... But the way I set up the Quickbeam and the Ross 
low-trail fixed gear bikes surely owes a lot to both Jan and Grant. And 
Sheldon. 

Philip
www.biketinker.com 


On Wednesday, May 8, 2013 8:03:19 AM UTC-7, Steve Palincsar wrote:
>
> On Wed, 2013-05-08 at 07:39 -0700, Michael wrote: 
> > What actually is a Randonneur frame? 
>
> > Meaning, what is it about its geometry and materials that makes it more 
> suited to this activity over other traditionally styled road bikes - 
> fenderability and tire width and ad- ons capability excluded? 
>
> Think about the mission.   
>
> You need a bike that's comfortable for long distance riding, that won't 
> fatigue you because it rides roughly.  You can expect that the rider is 
> going to be tired and inattentive at some point (inevitable if you're 
> riding through the night) so you can't tolerate hair-trigger handling 
> that will get away from you if you're slow and inattentive. 
>
> You can expect to start at 7 am and, for the longer rides, ride through 
> the heat of the day, past sundown, and into the chill of night.  In some 
> places, that can mean as much as a 25-30 degree temperature range.  You 
> can't do that with a pair of arm warmers and leg warmers that you can 
> stick in a jersey pocket, so you're going to have to be able to carry 
> the clothing you needed when it was cold during the heat of the day. 
> "More than you can stick in a jersey pocket" means you're going to have 
> to carry bags of some kind.  The more accessible those bags are when 
> you're riding (so you don't have to stop and park the bike to put on a 
> pair of sun glasses, for example) the better. 
>
> On the longer rides you will have to ride at night.  That means you'll 
> need a lighting system.  The really long rides will outlast the range of 
> battery-operated systems, so either you'll need to replace batteries or 
> will have to rely on bicycle-powered systems that don't need batteries. 
>
> Randonneuring is a spring-time sport, and in most areas of the country 
> spring is a rainy season.  You can't skip out on a ride because it 
> rains, so the bike is going to have to go in bad weather.  The worst 
> part about riding in the rain is getting chilled because you're wet, and 
> to deal with that you'll not only need suitable rain clothing, you also 
> should find a way to keep the worst of it, spray from the road, off you. 
> That means you'll need to mount fenders, and that in turn means the bike 
> should have the room to fit them and the attachment points to fit them. 
>
> All that said, it's a sport that is run against a time limit.  Time 
> allowed is based on distance, with no consideration for terrain.  Go too 
> slow and you won't finish in time.  Also, the rides are typically in 
> mountainous country, so the bike is going to have to be set up so you 
> can climb long, steep hills. 
>
> Basically, any bike that can meet those functional requirements will do. 
> Many bikes can't meet them all but can do some, and often compromises 
> will be made.  In fact, the rules used to mandate fenders but since so 
> few bicycles made recently can actually fit fenders, they relaxed the 
> rules to make them optional.  Some people do without them.   
>
>
>
>

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