Not to pile on here, but reaming out the clamp area of this stem (or
really, of any stem) sounds like a Very Unwise Idea. If you compare the
thickness of the handlebar clamps of a 26.0 Nitto stem and a 25.4 Nitto
stem, you'll see that the metal is the same thickness. You think maybe
Nitto
Hunqapillar 58cm
$2300
Philadelphia area (Phoenixville)
https://philadelphia.craigslist.org/bik/d/phoenixville-rivendell-hunqapillar/7647790163.html
On Monday, July 24, 2023 at 8:05:22 PM UTC-4 Will M wrote:
> Hi all. Along lines of this thread, my 62cm orange Quickbeam is for sale
> on eBay
Hey Erik!
Fun to see that old sequoia pop up on here, still got a soft spot in my
heart for that bike! Good memories..
Cheers,
Stephen
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 2:04:33 PM UTC-4 Ted Durant wrote:
> On Monday, July 24, 2023 at 11:09:06 PM UTC-4 John Dewey wrote:
>
> Just so y’all know,
This might be a long shot but I am checking to see if they have a Sugino PC
crank they are looking to get rid of. Preferably 165 but 170 would be OK as
well.
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Just a plug for the wonderful site https://whatbars.com/ that lets you pick
different handlebars and overlay them in a way that makes it really easy to
compare width and reach and everything. It has the Albatross and Bosco,
which is close enough to Tosco to see how different they are.
Mike
I appreciate the confirmation that Albatross has less reach than my Tosco.
I thought that was the case but wanted to be sure before I ordered one.
Doug
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 5:00:55 PM UTC-4 Garth wrote:
> Doug, From the diagrams the Albatross bar has a whopping 2-1/2" ...
> yes
Possibly dumb question: have you taken a good look at your chain? It ay be
kinked, which would cause skipping gears.
-Wes
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 4:04:01 PM UTC-7 eric...@gmail.com wrote:
> Andre attempted to make some further adjustments, the chain still skips. I
> tried installing a
Boscomoose sold, Campy binder still available.
On Sunday, July 23, 2023 at 1:11:08 PM UTC-7 jaredwilson wrote:
> and a couple parts now available
>
> Nitto/Rivendell Boscomoose, 58cm, fillet brazed - $175 + shipping
>
> Campagnolo quick release seat post binder, bought new but didn't fit on
Andre attempted to make some further adjustments, the chain still skips. I
tried installing a Deore XT M771 and that was a little bit better but the
chain still skips.
I called Riv and talked to Grant who was eager to see some pictures. Will
has a new dropout heading to me by mail, now I just
On Thursday, 27 July 2023 at 1:31:57 am UTC+10 Ed Felker wrote:
This is an interesting question. I rode PBP in 2007 on my coupled Riv
Bleriot and was comfortable the whole way on Grand Bois 32mm tires. it was
a fair bit more forgiving than the stiffer Ritchey Logic 700c I rode in
1999 with
Doug, From the diagrams the Albatross bar has a whopping 2-1/2" ...
yes inches less reach than the Tosco ! Yes, good choice !
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 4:16:27 PM UTC-4 Doug H. wrote:
Garth,
I may try bars with less reach than my Tosco bars to do just what you're
suggesting. I
Drew,
Where are you? Depending on the family bike scene near you, Facebook
marketplace or craigslist might have some deals. When I sold my cargo bikes
in Nashville, I sold then to someone from 4-5 hours away each time, so it
is often worth it to spread your radius if you don't find something
Albatross definitely do not come back as far as tosco bars. I think it
would be a good choice for what you are describing.
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 4:17:25 PM UTC-4 Doug H. wrote:
> I should have said more reach than my Toscos? I want bars that come back
> slightly less.
> Doug
>
> On
Eric - PBP on a fixed QB, wow, nice work! I had done some 100 mile rides
on a fixed gear around the same time but nothing like that.
I would say that which Rivendell works best (and whether a Rivendell at all
is the right call) depends on your randonneuring aspirations and
priorities. I have
I should have said more reach than my Toscos? I want bars that come back
slightly less.
Doug
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 4:16:27 PM UTC-4 Doug H. wrote:
> Garth,
> I may try bars with less reach than my Tosco bars to do just what you're
> suggesting. I don't want to sit farther back and
Garth,
I may try bars with less reach than my Tosco bars to do just what you're
suggesting. I don't want to sit farther back and change the angle of my
legs to pedals. Would you say the Albatross bars have less way back than
the Toscos?
Doug
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 6:09:02 AM UTC-4
Rack is sold. Open to offers for the bag.
On Tuesday, July 25, 2023 at 3:33:11 PM UTC-6 Daniel Rooke wrote:
> Going to revise to say $60 shipped for the bag.
>
> On Tuesday, July 25, 2023 at 1:37:21 PM UTC-6 Daniel Rooke wrote:
>
>> Both are in good condition. The bar tube bag has very
The roadini doesn't have front rack braze-ons. But saddlebags or
bikepacking style bags would definitely work.
On Wed, Jul 26, 2023 at 12:15 PM Toshi Takeuchi wrote:
> The Roadini is worth some consideration. Many people finish PBP on carbon
> fiber racing bikes, so you could definitely do it
The Roadini is worth some consideration. Many people finish PBP on carbon
fiber racing bikes, so you could definitely do it with a Roadini and have a
much more comfortable and pleasant ride. The Roadini is probably better
(for me) than the Roadeo because it accommodates wider tires. If I were
Hi Garth,This is for my Platy. The bars are good and everything fits so well, but I just feel like sitting back a little bit. The tall Nitto stem I have is the longest stem they make, so I can’t fix that. The regular Nittos don’t allow for as high of a bar, and I love where my bars sit. I don’t
I wish, Ray! It’s the way the post thickens at the top; you can’t force it any lower.On Jul 26, 2023, at 12:15 AM, Ray Varella wrote:Leah, Would cutting a couple inches off your seatpost solve your problem?A 350mm long seatpost is pretty long and likely intended for frames with very extreme
On Monday, July 24, 2023 at 11:09:06 PM UTC-4 John Dewey wrote:
Just so y’all know, TD is kind of a local legend. He is, after all, one of
Richard Schwinn’s best pals.
Anyone who read Grant's Blahg entry on the closing of Waterford will know
that Richard Schwinn has more best pals than just
Nick,
I just love being upright and wanted to do drops too. No handling issues.
Mike,
Those are compass/herse brakes…don’t know what their reach is off hand but
you can look them up on their site.
Cheers!
Alex
On Wed, Jul 26, 2023 at 12:43 PM Mike Godwin wrote:
> Alex
> What is the reach on
Alex
What is the reach on the brakes? Are they Dia Compe 750s or similar size?
Mike SLO CA (who traded a Waterford 61 cm HHH for Legolas many moons ago)
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 5:00:42 AM UTC-7 Alex Wirth wrote:
> Bump :-)
>
> On Sunday, June 18, 2023 at 7:43:57 AM UTC-4 Alex Wirth
Whoa! What is that stem and how did it work out for you? Do you have long
legs/short torso and needed a tall bike with less reach? Any odd handling
impacts from the lack of any stem extension?
Beautiful frame, too.
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 8:00:42 AM UTC-4 Alex Wirth wrote:
> Bump :-)
>
Clark - congrats on a well ridden race and a fun new experience. The San
Jose is a great bike - a single speed/fixed sibling of the slightly more
common Volpe. I have a Volpe setup with a flip flop hub and Albatross bars.
If you have a photo, I'd be interested in seeing your San Jose.
As a
I’m a bit of on outlier, but I completed PBP in 2007 on my Quickbeam, which was
set up at the time as a fixed gear (since converted to a three-speed IGH). The
Quickbeam is pretty comfortable for long rides, and easily accommodates fenders
and wide-ish tires.
--Eric Norris
campyonly...@me.com
This is an interesting question. I rode PBP in 2007 on my coupled Riv
Bleriot and was comfortable the whole way on Grand Bois 32mm tires. it was
a fair bit more forgiving than the stiffer Ritchey Logic 700c I rode in
1999 with 23mm tires. I'm on tandem for PBP this year but if I were to ride
I found a Ram 56cm for $1000 on Facebook yesterday:
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/198144339898384/
On Wed, Jul 26, 2023 at 8:29 AM Dick Combs wrote:
> Folks are confirming what I suspected. My quandary is finding one and
> what size. Looking at past geometry charts It looks like I
Folks are confirming what I suspected. My quandary is finding one and what
size. Looking at past geometry charts It looks like I need a 56 or 58 My
PBH is 84, short legs long torso. Any recommendations on size as well a
leads on Ram’s for sale
On Wednesday, July 26, 2023 at 11:02:59 AM UTC-4
Sold!
> On Jul 24, 2023, at 2:53 PM, Matthew Williams
> wrote:
>
> Nitto Boscomoose 580mm handlebars
> Dullbrite CroMo TIG-welded.
> Used, in good condition.
> $180.00 or best offer.
> Free shipping in the USofA.
> Sorry, no international shipping.
>
>
I never understood the need for groups of cyclists to denigrate the kind of
cycling other people do.
In the 1990s, I rode with a cyclist who was sponsored by Bridgestone, Eric
House (the first man to do Furnace Creek 508 in under 30
hours:
Grant described the intent of the Rambouillet to me as a French
audax-inspired bike when I spoke to him about a bike for a cross country
ride (and afterwards) that would be a light load, credit card trip versus
self-supported full touring one.
I have to chime in and talk about types of
Another vote for the Rambouillet here.
Grant described the intent of the Rambouillet to me as a French
audax-inspired bike when I spoke to him about a bike for a cross country
ride (and afterwards) that would be a light load, credit card trip versus
self-supported full touring one. I was
Same as Eric Norris, I say I've never owned a Ram. There are a few young
randonneurs in San Francisco who both ride Rams and are heading to PBP with
them this year.
On Tuesday, July 25, 2023 at 11:32:36 PM UTC-4 LBleriot wrote:
> I guess the answer depends on your vision/intended use of the
I totally agree. Most people on RIv's are already on a large frame size for
them (based on Riv's sizing standards) so it seems that going further back
on a large frame with a slack geometry would be the opposite of what would
be needed. That's why Analog started selling zero setback seatposts.
Personally, I would just buy the correct stem.
If you do want to modify the stem you already have, I would use a brake
cylinder hone, generally available at local auto parts stores, Open it up
as little as possible, leave as much metal as possible. You can also use a
stem spreader (or snap ring
Bump :-)
On Sunday, June 18, 2023 at 7:43:57 AM UTC-4 Alex Wirth wrote:
> non-fee payment (paypal f, venmo, cashapp, zelle) Paypal G also
> available but add 3%.
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I'd use an adjustable reamer to ream the stem from 25.4 to 26.0. I did this
back in the 1980s when I wanted to use 26.4 Cinelli bars in a Nitto
Technomic stem. The adjustable reamer I have for seat tubes has enough
adjustment (down to 23.75) to be used for stems as well.
You can get cheap
Leah, Why is it you believe you need more setback in the first place ?
Compared to the Betty you had with it's 72 degree seat tube angle, the
Clems are a more shallow 71.5, which equates to the same saddle and post
capable of setting further back by about 6.5mm. As I've already expressed,
if
I did it once decades ago and it's a bad idea. Even if you can pry that
sucker open enough - risking structural weakening - you'll have the most
scraped up bar you've ever scraped.
On Monday, July 24, 2023 at 1:05:02 PM UTC-7 chasenl...@gmail.com wrote:
> how do you all make this happen?
>
>
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