"Just Blog"

On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 11:18 AM, Steve Palincsar <palin...@his.com> wrote:

>  About the comment at the end:
>
> As it stands, this traditional, but fairly new (2008) machine now has
> classic mudguards appropriate to its era. Bluemel's, right for a veteran
> cycle, would be all wrong here: an anachronistic affectation, and a misuse
> of a scarce, irreplaceable part.
>
> How, I wonder, is recreating the look of a 40 year old Bluemels fender by
> dremeling now "appropriate"?   2008 was only yesterday.  Wouldn't a plain
> out of the package no cutting or dremeling at all Longboard or SKS silver
> be exactly "appropriate," since that's what was available in 2008?
>
> And I completely agree with your comments re: sanctimoniousness.
> Smarminess, too.
>
>
> On 11/14/2013 11:31 AM, Anton Tutter wrote:
>
> Has anyone seen this?
>
>
> http://v-ccnewengland.blogspot.com/2011/03/sks-longboard-fenders-improved.html
>
> The author explicitly expresses his distaste of these fenders and of the
> Rivendell aesthetic, and preaches sanctimoniously about French
> "re-enactors" and "anachronistic affectations" yet it was a Riv product he
> chose as the basis for "re-enacting" a set of Bluemels.  And his 2008 steed
> is sporting decades old MAFAC Racers, Weinmann non-aero levers and a VO
> "constructeur" bottle cage copied from an old French design. Not
> anachronistic in the least.
>
> *SKS calls them beige, but they are cream-colored. Their design partner
> for this product is Rivendell Bicycle Works. As one would expect from such
> provenance, there are aesthetic problems, but these can be overcome with a
> bit of careful Dremeling, a penknife, and fine-grade sandpaper. In short
> order these fenders can be made to match the classic shape of the standard
> SKS P45, a profile that functions beautifully and soothes eyes accustomed
> to the aesthetic ideals of classic British and Italian bicycles.  *
>
>
> *As they come, the Longboard fenders are excessively long. This hardly
> would be noticeable amongst the clutter of racks, baskets, twine, tweed,
> and sloping (or extra) frame tubes on Rivendells. Indeed excessively long
> fenders actually are prized by French bike re-enactors (not that most would
> go anywhere near plastic fenders). However if rough stuff riding is on the
> agenda, the long trailing end of the front fender will act as a scoop for
> brush and leaves. *
> Technically, with respect to the rotation of the wheel, which is pertinent
> to the author's point, it's the leading edge, not trailing edge.
>
> * You who ride trails; who do not need to show you spent the maximum
> possible amount of money for fenders; and who have figured out there are
> better ways of engaging French culture - for instance reading Flaubert -
> than trying to make a thirty-year-old UJB look something like like a
> sixty-year-old Herse... prepare to cut. *
>
> Because Rivendell owners never touch trails.  I don't know about you, but
> I've seen plenty of Bluemels shatter into bits on hard trials.  My alloy
> fenders have held up great!
>
>
> *First pry the SKS bling-let from the front fender, and the mudflap from
> the rear. This corrects SKS's unfortunate fascination with black plastic. *
> *Bluemel's, right for a veteran cycle, would be all wrong here: an
> anachronistic affectation, and a misuse of a scarce, irreplaceable part.*
>
> I get the anachronistic bit, but scarce and irreplaceable? Hardly. I pick
> up used and NOS sets of Bluemels all the time for less than a set of
> Longboards.
>
> It's no wonder he disallows commenting on his blog.
>
> Anton, shamelessly and affectatiously re-enacting and anachronising since
> 2005, Tutter
>
>
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-- 
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