[RBW] Re: Further anxious worrying about very small rings and cogs: 36/24 X bastard 11 or 12-32 or 36

2012-04-07 Thread Michael Hechmer
Are you trying to ride up the walls of your house?  What exactly do you 
need a 24/36, and how fast do you have to spin that gear to keep the bike 
upright?  

Michael

On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:08:14 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:

 1. The stock mini 2-bys seem to have 42 outers. Do any of y'all use 36 
 outers?

 2. If so, (a) Do people laugh at you? (b) Do you notice any additional 
 friction?

 I think I've scored steel 36 and 24, so wear ought not to be an issue, 
 right?

 -- 
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html



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Re: [RBW] Re: Further anxious worrying about very small rings and cogs: 36/24 X bastard 11 or 12-32 or 36

2012-04-07 Thread Steve Palincsar
On Sat, 2012-04-07 at 04:11 -0700, Michael Hechmer wrote:
 Are you trying to ride up the walls of your house?  What exactly do
 you need a 24/36, and how fast do you have to spin that gear to keep
 the bike upright? 

My Bruce Gordon Rock 'n Road Tour came with a 22x32 granny: 18.6.  The
24x36 with the identical tire gives an 18 gear.  A tiny bit lower, but
not dramatically so.  I found that 18.6 gear a real treat carrying 40lb
worth of gear in full front and rear panniers up 2-3 mile long 12-14%
grade hills on tour in the Shenandoah Valley.  And I didn't have any
trouble keeping the bike upright at all.  



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[RBW] Re: Shin Shield Synchronicity

2012-04-07 Thread John Bennett
Take two Tums and call us in the morning.

Dr. John @ RBW

On Apr 6, 10:40 pm, Mojo gjtra...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I am watching Rivendell sail away from my shore. My heart is filled with
 sadness; or maybe it's gas. Hard to tell the difference sometimes.







 On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:59:45 PM UTC-6, David G wrote:

  Got an email from RBW with a photo and description of the new Shin Shields:
  These are nada mas que waterproofed shin-covers that are ideally used
  with SPLATS and a PONCHO, since the poncho protects all but your shoes and
  shins. Now it’s complete, and they’re orange, with Velcro and reflectors.
  They work great. They can’t not.

  Grant  Shoichi Watanabe are thinking along the same lines:

 http://gallery.mailchimp.com/2090e897f8c7f8d7170a52bbd/images/120406_...
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/guuwatanabe/7044686879/in/photostream

  I love Mr. Watanabe's captions:
  against trouser's bottom edge flappin',muddy.
  shoes transfoam into boots :D
  byebye sodden trousers

  - David G, Madison WI

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[RBW] Re: Slightly OT: Cajun music: Starters.

2012-04-07 Thread EricP
Really don't know a whole lot of cajun myself (yet), but would recommend 
the Rounder Records cajun anthology on iTunes, along with stuff by the 
Balfa Brothers and Balfa Toujours.  The Balfa Brothers are pretty close to 
the standard, if there is such a thing in cajun music.  If you hunt 
around online, there may be some free stuff out there to download, although 
I haven't looked.
 
(Boring aside - a couple of the fiddlers I play with are into cajun music 
so I am trying to learn proper guitar backup.)
 
Only stretch I could figure for Riv connection is Bob Dylan has written and 
played a few cajun type tunes and Grant likes Dylang.
 
Have fun learning about the music!
 
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
 

On Friday, April 6, 2012 9:34:30 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 Is Michael Doucet and band representative? For a starter collection
 from iTunes, who to choose? 

 I love this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxCejZOGNSo 

 Patrick Moore, anglo/irish/filipino and now cajun. 

 Reply offllist, please 

 -- 
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

  

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[RBW] Re: Slightly OT: Cajun music: Starters.

2012-04-07 Thread George Schick
I second what Eric says.  A good place to start would be with Dewey
Balfa.  If you want to see glimpses of him playing live rent yourself
a copy of a rather poor move named Southern Comfort.  It has a
stupid plot and is more or less worthless, IMO, but near the end they
show Balfa playing with his band, while he was still with us.

On Apr 7, 7:45 am, EricP ericpl...@aol.com wrote:
 Really don't know a whole lot of cajun myself (yet), but would recommend
 the Rounder Records cajun anthology on iTunes, along with stuff by the
 Balfa Brothers and Balfa Toujours.  The Balfa Brothers are pretty close to
 the standard, if there is such a thing in cajun music.  If you hunt
 around online, there may be some free stuff out there to download, although
 I haven't looked.

 (Boring aside - a couple of the fiddlers I play with are into cajun music
 so I am trying to learn proper guitar backup.)

 Only stretch I could figure for Riv connection is Bob Dylan has written and
 played a few cajun type tunes and Grant likes Dylang.

 Have fun learning about the music!

 Eric Platt
 St. Paul, MN







 On Friday, April 6, 2012 9:34:30 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
  Is Michael Doucet and band representative? For a starter collection
  from iTunes, who to choose?

  I love this:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxCejZOGNSo

  Patrick Moore, anglo/irish/filipino and now cajun.

  Reply offllist, please

  --
  Patrick Moore
  Albuquerque, NM
  For professional resumes, contact
  Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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[RBW] Re: A new tent for bicycle camping?

2012-04-07 Thread Beth H
On my last bike campout, I used a very small child's tent --
originally from Walmart but I got mine for four dollars at a yard
sale.
Four poles, built-in vinyl floor and tiny permanent ranfly up top.
The whole thing screams cheap; I had to seam-seal everything myself.
But you know what? When rolled up and stuffed in its sack it takes up
remarkably little space; and at no-longer-exactly-5' 7 I fit inside
fully stretched out diagonally, with my stuff on either side of me in
the corners. It's the perfect little tent for solo bike-camping.
Beth in PDX

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[RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread b hamon
Fellow Riv-freaks: 
As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become evident. 
Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two the most:
1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and2. My 
1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several years ago).
The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs, not 
to mention groceries.The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the 
previous owner that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically 
what I've been doing since I set it up for city riding.
I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore. One is the 
singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three years, and since I'm 
fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees can't really handle 
singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the former bike will 
probably go this year. The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had 
since 1999 and which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am 
more emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to 
hear from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When 
did you do it and why?
Beth in PDX

http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon

http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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Re: [RBW] Re: Slightly OT: Cajun music: Starters.

2012-04-07 Thread Lyle Bogart
Hey Patrick,

Try this link:

http://www.folkways.si.edu/searchresults.aspx?sPhrase=CajunsType=cat

Whenever I'm looking for something perhaps not quite mainstream (a
Rivendellian tie-in) this is where I first look. Of course, you can sample
each cut here (as you can in many places).

Cheers!

lyle

On 7 April 2012 10:03, George Schick bhim...@gmail.com wrote:

 I second what Eric says.  A good place to start would be with Dewey
 Balfa.  If you want to see glimpses of him playing live rent yourself
 a copy of a rather poor move named Southern Comfort.  It has a
 stupid plot and is more or less worthless, IMO, but near the end they
 show Balfa playing with his band, while he was still with us.

 On Apr 7, 7:45 am, EricP ericpl...@aol.com wrote:
  Really don't know a whole lot of cajun myself (yet), but would recommend
  the Rounder Records cajun anthology on iTunes, along with stuff by the
  Balfa Brothers and Balfa Toujours.  The Balfa Brothers are pretty close
 to
  the standard, if there is such a thing in cajun music.  If you hunt
  around online, there may be some free stuff out there to download,
 although
  I haven't looked.
 
  (Boring aside - a couple of the fiddlers I play with are into cajun music
  so I am trying to learn proper guitar backup.)
 
  Only stretch I could figure for Riv connection is Bob Dylan has written
 and
  played a few cajun type tunes and Grant likes Dylang.
 
  Have fun learning about the music!
 
  Eric Platt
  St. Paul, MN
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  On Friday, April 6, 2012 9:34:30 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
   Is Michael Doucet and band representative? For a starter collection
   from iTunes, who to choose?
 
   I love this:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxCejZOGNSo
 
   Patrick Moore, anglo/irish/filipino and now cajun.
 
   Reply offllist, please
 
   --
   Patrick Moore
   Albuquerque, NM
   For professional resumes, contact
   Patrick Moore, ACRW
  http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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-- 
lyle f bogart dpt

156 bradford rd
wiscasset, me 04578
207.882.6494
206.794.6937

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[RBW] VO rack, Camper + SQR, Rudys all claimed.

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Beth: don't precipitously sell the LongLow! You know that I love my 26
wheel Rivs (put some 35 mm Kojaks on the AR) but even in the last few years
my tastes have changed: not that I dislike smaller wheels, but that I no
longer feel that wheel size, for pavement, makes a big difference compared
to other qualities like fit and overall feel. If I were to have replacement
customs made today, I'd probably go with 700c, as much because there are
more tires available than for any other reason. The biggest handicap for
559 and 571 wheels, IME, is the relative lack of tire choice.

So, if the LL feels like a Riv ought to -- a sort of amalgam of fit,
positioning, handling, spriteliness, then, if I were you, I'd hold on to
it until I was very sure that I no longer really wanted it.

I have suffered much by precipitously selling bikes and parts that I later
regretted losing.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several
 years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs,
 not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Re: Further anxious worrying about very small rings and cogs: 36/24 X bastard 11 or 12-32 or 36

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
As Steve said, for loads and long hills and long rides. I rarely climb
in anything under a 35 or so, but if I ever (hah!) do some loaded
touring in northern NM, the consensus is that some low bailouts might
be very welcome. Further, there are some steep, short sand-bogged
hills around here for which a 20 low might be welcome.

The principal reason for a change is that, with a 36/24 X 9, I can do
99/100 of my riding in the outer ring, while with the current 46/36/24
X 7, one must switch between high and low ranges (46/36) for steep
hills and off road.

And I can put that 48 t cut down ring guard on the 46 position so that
it all does not look so wimpy.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 5:11 AM, Michael Hechmer mhech...@gmail.com wrote:
 Are you trying to ride up the walls of your house?  What exactly do you need
 a 24/36, and how fast do you have to spin that gear to keep the bike
 upright?

 Michael

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:08:14 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:

 1. The stock mini 2-bys seem to have 42 outers. Do any of y'all use 36
 outers?

 2. If so, (a) Do people laugh at you? (b) Do you notice any additional
 friction?

 I think I've scored steel 36 and 24, so wear ought not to be an issue,
 right?

 --
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
FWIW: http://lovelybike.blogspot.com/ -- 4/6 post.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several
 years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs,
 not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Re: Shin Shield Synchronicity

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Wouldn't it make more sense to combine spats and shin covers? Or to
wear rain pants and spats?

[What about a rubber one-piece garment, with hood and feets?]

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 6:43 AM, John Bennett johnat...@gmail.com wrote:
 Take two Tums and call us in the morning.

 Dr. John @ RBW

 On Apr 6, 10:40 pm, Mojo gjtra...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I am watching Rivendell sail away from my shore. My heart is filled with
 sadness; or maybe it's gas. Hard to tell the difference sometimes.







 On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:59:45 PM UTC-6, David G wrote:

  Got an email from RBW with a photo and description of the new Shin Shields:
  These are nada mas que waterproofed shin-covers that are ideally used
  with SPLATS and a PONCHO, since the poncho protects all but your shoes and
  shins. Now it’s complete, and they’re orange, with Velcro and reflectors.
  They work great. They can’t not.

  Grant  Shoichi Watanabe are thinking along the same lines:

 http://gallery.mailchimp.com/2090e897f8c7f8d7170a52bbd/images/120406_...
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/guuwatanabe/7044686879/in/photostream

  I love Mr. Watanabe's captions:
  against trouser's bottom edge flappin',muddy.
  shoes transfoam into boots :D
  byebye sodden trousers

  - David G, Madison WI

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-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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[RBW] Longboard Legolas

2012-04-07 Thread Mojo
I haven't actually tried the fenders in the rain, but I like them. I have 
used VO metal fenders on other bikes but I wanted tough and cheap fenders 
on this cross bike. Rivendell's installation video on their product page 
was very helpful. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lG_WZVS9SUYfeature=player_embedded  Being 
able to cut the fender stays easily is important. I used some bolt cutters, 
but a dremel would also work. Overall it took me 2.5 hours to install 
including creating a chainstay bridge attachment. I may do a second 
Longboard install on my LHT where the VO metal fenders are cracking at the 
rear brake bridge. It should be quite a bit faster.
 
Now how am I going to transport this bike? It won't fit on my car rack with 
the long front fender. Any suggestions?
 
Here are some pictures of the results:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788553/in/photostream
http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788581/in/photostream/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/6907698114/in/photostream/
 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Slightly OT: Cajun music: Starters.

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Briefly: thanks all; am following up on yer advices. Have already
heard Balfas playing Joli Blon -- very nice!

Back offlist with this!

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Re: [RBW] Longboard Legolas

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Re transport: I had this issue with the long front Honjo on the green
Riv. I ended up amputating 6 and replacing this with a very long (8)
(and flexible) flap.



On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:23 AM, Mojo gjtra...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I haven't actually tried the fenders in the rain, but I like them. I have
 used VO metal fenders on other bikes but I wanted tough and cheap fenders on
 this cross bike. Rivendell's installation video on their product page was
 very helpful.
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lG_WZVS9SUYfeature=player_embedded  Being
 able to cut the fender stays easily is important. I used some bolt cutters,
 but a dremel would also work. Overall it took me 2.5 hours to install
 including creating a chainstay bridge attachment. I may do a second
 Longboard install on my LHT where the VO metal fenders are cracking at the
 rear brake bridge. It should be quite a bit faster.

 Now how am I going to transport this bike? It won't fit on my car rack with
 the long front fender. Any suggestions?

 Here are some pictures of the results:
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788553/in/photostream
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788581/in/photostream/
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/6907698114/in/photostream/


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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Longboard Legolas

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Forgot to add that, having removed the fenders from the Riv because
they don't work well with the minimalist rear rack and fatter, 35 mm
tires, I've found absence of fenders very liberating in many ways,
from not worrying about bashing them against a wall to ease of bike
insertion into the rear of a PT Cruiser.

Reminds me of my first gofast mod on my long-ago Hero roadster:
removing the fenders. Increased speed by over 25%!

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:27 AM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:
 Re transport: I had this issue with the long front Honjo on the green
 Riv. I ended up amputating 6 and replacing this with a very long (8)
 (and flexible) flap.



 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:23 AM, Mojo gjtra...@yahoo.com wrote:
 I haven't actually tried the fenders in the rain, but I like them. I have
 used VO metal fenders on other bikes but I wanted tough and cheap fenders on
 this cross bike. Rivendell's installation video on their product page was
 very helpful.
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lG_WZVS9SUYfeature=player_embedded  Being
 able to cut the fender stays easily is important. I used some bolt cutters,
 but a dremel would also work. Overall it took me 2.5 hours to install
 including creating a chainstay bridge attachment. I may do a second
 Longboard install on my LHT where the VO metal fenders are cracking at the
 rear brake bridge. It should be quite a bit faster.

 Now how am I going to transport this bike? It won't fit on my car rack with
 the long front fender. Any suggestions?

 Here are some pictures of the results:
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788553/in/photostream
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/7053788581/in/photostream/
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79695460@N00/6907698114/in/photostream/


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 --
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html



-- 
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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread cyclotourist
Gosh Beth, that's the cyclist's dilemma... nostalgia vs. needs. I've let go
of two bikes I wish I didn't (Bleriot, Quickbeam) and have two bikes that
don't quite meet my needs but I'm loath to replace (Riv customs). I can't
give you advice about wheel size, but it sounds like you already know what
you need/want. FWIW, you could build up a go-fast 26 wheelset (Compass'
new 26 tires look
awesome!http://www.compasscycle.com/tires_comp_26_175.html)
and keep those for spirited riding events. Sort of the best of both worlds
that way. Of course if you have the space and don't need the liquidity, you
can always keep 'em all.


On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:07 AM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:

 Beth: don't precipitously sell the LongLow! You know that I love my 26
 wheel Rivs (put some 35 mm Kojaks on the AR) but even in the last few years
 my tastes have changed: not that I dislike smaller wheels, but that I no
 longer feel that wheel size, for pavement, makes a big difference compared
 to other qualities like fit and overall feel. If I were to have replacement
 customs made today, I'd probably go with 700c, as much because there are
 more tires available than for any other reason. The biggest handicap for
 559 and 571 wheels, IME, is the relative lack of tire choice.

 So, if the LL feels like a Riv ought to -- a sort of amalgam of fit,
 positioning, handling, spriteliness, then, if I were you, I'd hold on to
 it until I was very sure that I no longer really wanted it.

 I have suffered much by precipitously selling bikes and parts that I later
 regretted losing.


 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several
 years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs,
 not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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 --
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html



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-- 
Cheers,
David
Redlands, CA

**
“I believe in an America where millions of Americans believe in an America
that’s the America millions of Americans believe in. That’s the America I
love.”

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Re: [RBW] Re: Slightly OT: Cajun music: Starters.

2012-04-07 Thread EricP
Oops.  My post to Patrick was supposed to be off-list.  But that didn't 
happen with the new setup for Groups.  My fault.
 
Sorry about that folks.

Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN

On Saturday, April 7, 2012 11:24:16 AM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 Briefly: thanks all; am following up on yer advices. Have already
 heard Balfas playing Joli Blon -- very nice! 

 Back offlist with this!


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[RBW] Re: Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread charlie
I have a garage full of bikes I haven't ridden in years now... :
(  These days my Surly Trucker gets the most use because of the gnarly
700x47 Schwalbes and my generator lighting system. Been thinking of
getting a Hunk or an Atlantis and moving the parts over as my last
good bicycle to ride into the sunset with..the 26 vs. 700c thing
has crossed my mind as the wife rides a 26 (now converted to a cargo
bike) but truthfully, I'm the bike nut in the house and she would/
could ride anything. There is something to be said for having the same
size spare tires, wheels, general parts etc. if you ride all year and
shun autos. I plan to stock up on an extra wheel set, chains, tires,
tubes and other misc. parts that get used up. What I'm really looking
into is a source for either buying or making my own chain lube/cleaner
by the gallon (and cheap) plus learning to build my own wheels. When
you really put on the miles maintenance has to be fairly routine and
thorough or else you end up buying a whole new set of parts. My head
has been in the same place it seems trying to consolidate my rides
into what I really need and will actually use. The same goes for other
aspects in my life so yea downsizing can be a liberating thing but
I think its okay to keep a show bike that you only use on super nice
sunny days..on the flip side, for me, I've noticed as I get older
that I'm wanting less stuff in general and look forward to more life
experiencestoo many things to take care of seem to get in the way
of that.

On Apr 7, 8:33 am, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:
 Fellow Riv-freaks:
 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become 
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two 
 the most:
 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and2. My 
 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several years 
 ago).
 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs, not 
 to mention groceries.The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised 
 the previous owner that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is 
 basically what I've been doing since I set it up for city riding.
 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore. One is the 
 singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three years, and since 
 I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees can't really handle 
 singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the former bike will 
 probably go this year. The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had 
 since 1999 and which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am 
 more emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to 
 hear from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When 
 did you do it and why?
 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon

 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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[RBW] Re: A new tent for bicycle camping?

2012-04-07 Thread charlie
Right on, sometimes less actually is moreand four bucks,
awesome!

On Apr 7, 8:25 am, Beth H periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:
 On my last bike campout, I used a very small child's tent --
 originally from Walmart but I got mine for four dollars at a yard
 sale.
 Four poles, built-in vinyl floor and tiny permanent ranfly up top.
 The whole thing screams cheap; I had to seam-seal everything myself.
 But you know what? When rolled up and stuffed in its sack it takes up
 remarkably little space; and at no-longer-exactly-5' 7 I fit inside
 fully stretched out diagonally, with my stuff on either side of me in
 the corners. It's the perfect little tent for solo bike-camping.
 Beth in PDX

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread John Blish
Hi Beth,

Your note resonates with me.  I am also recently more in touch with what I
like to ride and what style works best for me now.

I sold 4 bikes last summer, all 700, 3 of them Rivs.  My wife asked me to
reduce the fleet and those were the bikes that I believed would bring the
most return and some of them were similar to each other and to bikes that I
still have so I didn't lose anything unique - except my QuickBeam.  It has
gone to a good home nearby where it is fully appreciated.  I can visit if I
want.  I have made my peace with that but I missed it immediately and
started riding my 26 single speed RedLine MonoCog, which had sat mostly
idle for a few years.

https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5708720188748611345/5728705989593648738

I put on new bars, pedals, Dos Eno cog, Schwalbe Fat Franks 26 x 2.35 and
re-cabled and it seemed like a new bike.  The fat 26s are a treat.
Obviously not a QuickBeam but a good single speed ride.

I liked the result of that revival so much I redid my 26 1991 Bridgestone
MB-1 with Schwalbe 26 x 2.15 Big Apples, new bars, new saddle, new pedals,
V-brakes, new cables and new wheels with a switch from freewheel to
cassette, still 7 speed triple.

https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5724265447661313041/5724604809168276370

The Bridgestone cleaned up better than I thought it would and it seemed
like another new bike.  Wow.  I had two (new) bikes in my garage waiting to
be (re)discovered.  Cool.

I knew these were good bikes but it was only by letting some other bikes go
that I appreciated these 26 bikes more.  These bikes may be more my
present style than a Rivendell.  I mean no offense to anyone by that
statement and I personally consider the MB-1 to be the Father of Rivendell
and therefore a sacred device.  The statement is not about Rivendells,
which are the finest bikes available, but about me and what I like now.  It
was a little tough to take the MB-1 so far from its stock parts but I am
happy I did it.

In making these changes I realize what you implied - a person's bicycling
style, needs and preferences are not fixed.  They are changing as time goes
on and when the opportunity presents itself, and if the funds are
available, certain changes, even to less expensive and less refined bikes,
can be rewarding.  I am in complete agreement with you and also with
Charlie.

John


On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several
 years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs,
 not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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Minneapolis MN USA

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread Bruce Herbitter
Beth  John:

I sold my last 700c size bike in 2007, to raise $ for a 26 wheel size
Rambouillet. My other bikes are now all 650B, which is a 26 size, but
rides somewhere between 26 and 700.  I rode the Ram today with its heavy
duty 26 wheelset (some CX Rich built wheels) and 37 mm tires at 60 psi.
Very comfy on coarse roads and quick enough on smooth. I still have the
original Ram wheelset, which is lighter, but sees less ride time.

I find that at 5' - 6 and a 29 1/2 inseam, I get better bike geometry in
a larger frame size, and the smaller wheels let me ride it. I am very happy
in the 26 world, and the fatter the tire, the better.

Bruce

(PS Beth, didn't know you played guitar. Youtube videos?)

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:46 PM, John Blish jbl...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beth,

 Your note resonates with me.  I am also recently more in touch with what I
 like to ride and what style works best for me now.

 I sold 4 bikes last summer, all 700, 3 of them Rivs. ...  The fat 26s are
 a treat

 I liked the result of that revival so much I redid my 26 1991 Bridgestone
 MB-1 with Schwalbe 26 x 2.15 Big Apples, new bars, new saddle, new pedals,
 V-brakes, new cables and new wheels with a switch from freewheel to
 cassette, still 7 speed triple.



 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:


  I'd like to hear from other folks who have become fans of an
 all-26-wheeled stable. When did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX
 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon




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[RBW] What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread Bruce Herbitter
I mentioned last week that a new Brooks B17 finally gave that ahh, it's
broken in feeling after about 300 miles. As it happens, last week was also
my 1st century ride in un-padded shorts. The ride was so comfortable, I got
out a scapel from the college dissecting kit and cut the threads to remove
pads from two pr of Ibex Duo shorts. Rode 50 miles today with one of them
them on (this was on a Selle Anatomica) and can report that they are very
comfortable sans pad on a leather seat. If you haven't tried it, test the
ride out on a 20 mile spin. No chamois means no need for chamois cream
either.

Happy riding!

Bruce

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[RBW] iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread Philip Williamson
I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with 
it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what 
I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I 
don't care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to 
think about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use 
offline with GPS is something I could use today.

Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the 
iPad? If I made some, is there any interest? 

I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work, 
but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express) 
and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone 
(Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about? 

Just curious and excited, 
 Philip

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread John Blish
Sorry.  I have now unlocked the photo of the MB-1 and made it available.

And thanks, Bruce.  We are in agreement.

-jb

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:46 PM, John Blish jbl...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beth,

 Your note resonates with me.  I am also recently more in touch with what I
 like to ride and what style works best for me now.

 I sold 4 bikes last summer, all 700, 3 of them Rivs.  My wife asked me to
 reduce the fleet and those were the bikes that I believed would bring the
 most return and some of them were similar to each other and to bikes that I
 still have so I didn't lose anything unique - except my QuickBeam.  It has
 gone to a good home nearby where it is fully appreciated.  I can visit if I
 want.  I have made my peace with that but I missed it immediately and
 started riding my 26 single speed RedLine MonoCog, which had sat mostly
 idle for a few years.


 https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5708720188748611345/5728705989593648738

 I put on new bars, pedals, Dos Eno cog, Schwalbe Fat Franks 26 x 2.35 and
 re-cabled and it seemed like a new bike.  The fat 26s are a treat.
 Obviously not a QuickBeam but a good single speed ride.

 I liked the result of that revival so much I redid my 26 1991 Bridgestone
 MB-1 with Schwalbe 26 x 2.15 Big Apples, new bars, new saddle, new pedals,
 V-brakes, new cables and new wheels with a switch from freewheel to
 cassette, still 7 speed triple.


 https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5724265447661313041/5724604809168276370

 The Bridgestone cleaned up better than I thought it would and it seemed
 like another new bike.  Wow.  I had two (new) bikes in my garage waiting to
 be (re)discovered.  Cool.

 I knew these were good bikes but it was only by letting some other bikes
 go that I appreciated these 26 bikes more.  These bikes may be more my
 present style than a Rivendell.  I mean no offense to anyone by that
 statement and I personally consider the MB-1 to be the Father of Rivendell
 and therefore a sacred device.  The statement is not about Rivendells,
 which are the finest bikes available, but about me and what I like now.  It
 was a little tough to take the MB-1 so far from its stock parts but I am
 happy I did it.

 In making these changes I realize what you implied - a person's bicycling
 style, needs and preferences are not fixed.  They are changing as time goes
 on and when the opportunity presents itself, and if the funds are
 available, certain changes, even to less expensive and less refined bikes,
 can be rewarding.  I am in complete agreement with you and also with
 Charlie.

 John



 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak several
 years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to gigs,
 not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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 Minneapolis MN USA






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[RBW] Re: What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread Philip Williamson
I've only ever just worn 'street' underwear, or unpadded lycra shorts under 
cargo shorts, even when 30-50 mile rides were a regular part of my 
schedule. I have a Brooks, but it works on my leather-covered plastic 
saddles as well. I did buy a pair of Andiamos from Rivendell, and tried 
them a couple times. They were a no-go. They're in a weird limbo - too 
uncomfortable to wear, too new to throw away, and too embarrassing to sell. 
Do I really want to be the guy that sells used underwear on the internet? 

Anyway - 100% cotton 'boxer briefs' from the usual mass-market suspects.

 Philip

Philip Williamson
www.biketinker.com



On Saturday, April 7, 2012 11:03:41 AM UTC-7, Fullylugged wrote:

 I mentioned last week that a new Brooks B17 finally gave that ahh, it's 
 broken in feeling after about 300 miles. As it happens, last week was also 
 my 1st century ride in un-padded shorts. The ride was so comfortable, I got 
 out a scapel from the college dissecting kit and cut the threads to remove 
 pads from two pr of Ibex Duo shorts. Rode 50 miles today with one of them 
 them on (this was on a Selle Anatomica) and can report that they are very 
 comfortable sans pad on a leather seat. If you haven't tried it, test the 
 ride out on a 20 mile spin. No chamois means no need for chamois cream 
 either.

 Happy riding!

 Bruce


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[RBW] Re: iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread Rambouilleting Utahn
I'm a big fan of Cyclemeter, use it for riding and walking. It logs
your route (via GPS) and gives you distance, elevation gain, average
speed and fastest speed and if you ride the same route often it
compares your latest ride to you average time for that particular
ride.

I have Cychosis but don't use it as much as I should as it requires
manually inputting your ride data which I usually forget to do.

Strava seems pretty popular with the go fast crowd.

On Apr 7, 12:30 pm, Philip Williamson philip.william...@gmail.com
wrote:
 I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
 it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
 I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I
 don't care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to
 think about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use
 offline with GPS is something I could use today.

 Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
 iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

 I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
 but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
 and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
 (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

 Just curious and excited,
  Philip

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Re: [RBW] iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
I've used both Endomodo and Cyclemeter for the iPhone and the latter
is far better -- far less prone to re-setting itself and turning
itself off when the phone is in your pocket, at least as was the case
in my pockets. Cyclemeter (note: not Cyclo ...) also seems to use
less electricity: Endomodo would drain a full battery in under 3
hours. Also, Endo had an annoying robot encourager and distance
marker voice that would annoyingly turn itself on and startle you with
a weird voice from your pocket.

You can hook the phone up to a heartrate monitor and improve the
readout accuracies.

There are all sorts of interesting if not very useful features such as
auto route maps (you can scroll along your entire route!) in map and
satellite view; statistics tho' I expect much of this is very
approximate; speed and elevation charts (though on an out and back I
always find my descent measurement is different from my ascent one).

Patrick Moore, who -- per Cyclemeter -- just rode 12 hilly up and down
miles with 27 lb of groceries in a 72 gear between 5,300 and 6,000
feet in Rio Rancho, NM.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:30 PM, Philip Williamson
philip.william...@gmail.com wrote:
 I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
 it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
 I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I don't
 care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to think
 about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use offline
 with GPS is something I could use today.

 Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
 iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

 I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
 but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
 and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
 (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

 Just curious and excited,
  Philip

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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
... forgot to add: and burned 946 putative calories at 8.34 mph
because he didn't turn the device off when walking around the library
and grocery store (you can set it for auto stop), but per Cyclemeter
hit 48 mph which is nonsense.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 2:02 PM, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:
 I've used both Endomodo and Cyclemeter for the iPhone and the latter
 is far better -- far less prone to re-setting itself and turning
 itself off when the phone is in your pocket, at least as was the case
 in my pockets. Cyclemeter (note: not Cyclo ...) also seems to use
 less electricity: Endomodo would drain a full battery in under 3
 hours. Also, Endo had an annoying robot encourager and distance
 marker voice that would annoyingly turn itself on and startle you with
 a weird voice from your pocket.

 You can hook the phone up to a heartrate monitor and improve the
 readout accuracies.

 There are all sorts of interesting if not very useful features such as
 auto route maps (you can scroll along your entire route!) in map and
 satellite view; statistics tho' I expect much of this is very
 approximate; speed and elevation charts (though on an out and back I
 always find my descent measurement is different from my ascent one).

 Patrick Moore, who -- per Cyclemeter -- just rode 12 hilly up and down
 miles with 27 lb of groceries in a 72 gear between 5,300 and 6,000
 feet in Rio Rancho, NM.

 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:30 PM, Philip Williamson
 philip.william...@gmail.com wrote:
 I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
 it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
 I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I don't
 care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to think
 about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use offline
 with GPS is something I could use today.

 Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
 iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

 I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
 but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
 and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
 (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

 Just curious and excited,
  Philip

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 --
 Patrick Moore
 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRW
 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html



-- 
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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Re: iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Utahn (??):

As I said, I always get very weird readings for fastest speed (47.87
mph on today's 12 mile ride -- yeah, right). How do you adjust to get
an accurate reading? Ditto for ascent and descent measurements?

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 1:58 PM, Rambouilleting Utahn glam...@gmail.com wrote:
 I'm a big fan of Cyclemeter, use it for riding and walking. It logs
 your route (via GPS) and gives you distance, elevation gain, average
 speed and fastest speed and if you ride the same route often it
 compares your latest ride to you average time for that particular
 ride.

 I have Cychosis but don't use it as much as I should as it requires
 manually inputting your ride data which I usually forget to do.

 Strava seems pretty popular with the go fast crowd.

 On Apr 7, 12:30 pm, Philip Williamson philip.william...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
 it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
 I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I
 don't care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to
 think about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use
 offline with GPS is something I could use today.

 Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
 iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

 I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
 but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
 and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
 (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

 Just curious and excited,
  Philip

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-- 
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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Ahhh, the pleasure of a well set up and ass-compatible saddle! I never
wear chamois for rides under 35 miles (which is all the time for me),
tho' I have a coupla pairs of nice Kucharik and Swobo wool chamois'd
shorts. Saddle and setup is the mantra.

Tangent: some months ago I inquired for suggestions for winter tights
that didn't look obscene on someone over 28. Many recommended the Riv
wool tights, but just as I was about to spring for a pair I saw that
Gnashbar was remaindering their Cargo pants for $28/pair -- 57% off. I
bought two pairs -- tho' had to buy Large because they were out of the
Meds (32-34); the Large (claimed 35-37 waist) is too big but with
the included cinch belt and suspenders they feel fine (the big size
has the advantage of letting me wear them higher, which helps prevent
that annoying cold draft between jersey bottom and pants top).

They come down about 4 below the knee, where they are tapered, and
have velcro to cinch things down.

They are heavy nylon that feels like good cotton, well stitched and
well-featured. According to the catalogue I just rec'd, Nashbar still
has the L on sale.

They feel heavy enough to be comfortable (with Bicycle Fixation's wool
knicker socks) down to at least 40F and, today, were not annoyingly
clammy at 80F (moderate humidity at 6%).

I like these because, beside the good price, they are more versatile
than tights, even Riv tights. They don't look as twee as some knickers
-- they are black and cut more trimly -- yet they are loose enough to
be comfortable and to not cling.

Recommended.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:03 PM, Bruce Herbitter
bruce.herbit...@gmail.com wrote:
 I mentioned last week that a new Brooks B17 finally gave that ahh, it's
 broken in feeling after about 300 miles. As it happens, last week was also
 my 1st century ride in un-padded shorts. The ride was so comfortable, I got
 out a scapel from the college dissecting kit and cut the threads to remove
 pads from two pr of Ibex Duo shorts. Rode 50 miles today with one of them
 them on (this was on a Selle Anatomica) and can report that they are very
 comfortable sans pad on a leather seat. If you haven't tried it, test the
 ride out on a 20 mile spin. No chamois means no need for chamois cream
 either.

 Happy riding!

 Bruce

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Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW
http://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Kewl. I had a Monocog 29er on which I ran 722 BAs.

Questions:

What gearing?

What is that rack?



On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:49 PM, John Blish jbl...@gmail.com wrote:

 Sorry.  I have now unlocked the photo of the MB-1 and made it available.

 And thanks, Bruce.  We are in agreement.

 -jb

 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 12:46 PM, John Blish jbl...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Beth,

 Your note resonates with me.  I am also recently more in touch with what
 I like to ride and what style works best for me now.

 I sold 4 bikes last summer, all 700, 3 of them Rivs.  My wife asked me to
 reduce the fleet and those were the bikes that I believed would bring the
 most return and some of them were similar to each other and to bikes that I
 still have so I didn't lose anything unique - except my QuickBeam.  It has
 gone to a good home nearby where it is fully appreciated.  I can visit if I
 want.  I have made my peace with that but I missed it immediately and
 started riding my 26 single speed RedLine MonoCog, which had sat mostly
 idle for a few years.


 https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5708720188748611345/5728705989593648738

 I put on new bars, pedals, Dos Eno cog, Schwalbe Fat Franks 26 x 2.35 and
 re-cabled and it seemed like a new bike.  The fat 26s are a treat.
 Obviously not a QuickBeam but a good single speed ride.

 I liked the result of that revival so much I redid my 26 1991
 Bridgestone MB-1 with Schwalbe 26 x 2.15 Big Apples, new bars, new saddle,
 new pedals, V-brakes, new cables and new wheels with a switch from
 freewheel to cassette, still 7 speed triple.


 https://plus.google.com/photos/111838829033930119881/albums/5724265447661313041/5724604809168276370

 The Bridgestone cleaned up better than I thought it would and it seemed
 like another new bike.  Wow.  I had two (new) bikes in my garage waiting to
 be (re)discovered.  Cool.

 I knew these were good bikes but it was only by letting some other bikes
 go that I appreciated these 26 bikes more.  These bikes may be more my
 present style than a Rivendell.  I mean no offense to anyone by that
 statement and I personally consider the MB-1 to be the Father of Rivendell
 and therefore a sacred device.  The statement is not about Rivendells,
 which are the finest bikes available, but about me and what I like now.  It
 was a little tough to take the MB-1 so far from its stock parts but I am
 happy I did it.

 In making these changes I realize what you implied - a person's bicycling
 style, needs and preferences are not fixed.  They are changing as time goes
 on and when the opportunity presents itself, and if the funds are
 available, certain changes, even to less expensive and less refined bikes,
 can be rewarding.  I am in complete agreement with you and also with
 Charlie.

 John



 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:33 AM, b hamon periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Fellow Riv-freaks:

 As my life and my bicycling style both evolve, some things have become
 evident. Chief among them is that, of all my bikes, I tend to ride just two
 the most:

 1. My Surly Big Dummy (no matter what BQ says, I really like mine); and
 2. My 1999 Riv All-Rounder (an acquisiting from another Riv-freak
 several years ago).

 The former is absolutely necessary for hauling my guitar and amp to
 gigs, not to mention groceries.
 The latter is my daily transportation. I had promised the previous owner
 that I would ride the crap out of it, and that is basically what I've
 been doing since I set it up for city riding.

 I have two other bikes that I don't ride so much anymore.
 One is the singlespeed mountain bike I've raced on for the last three
 years, and since I'm fairly certain I won't be racing anymore (my knees
 can't really handle singlespeed and I don't want to race anything else) the
 former bike will probably go this year.
 The latter is my 700c-wheeled LongLow, a bike I've had since 1999 and
 which I ride less and less as my style and needs change. I am more
 emotionally attached to this bike than practically so, and I'd like to hear
 from other folks who have become fans of an all-26-wheeled stable. When
 did you do it and why?

 Beth in PDX

 http://www.reverbnation.com/bethhamon
 http://beth-hamon.blogspot.com/

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 Minneapolis MN USA






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 Minneapolis MN USA



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Re: [RBW] Re: Further anxious worrying about very small rings and cogs: 36/24 X bastard 11 or 12-32 or 36

2012-04-07 Thread Michael Hechmer
Patrick, I have not yet ridden in NM, but we have mountains in Vermont too. 
 My sense is that the climbs in the West are considerably longer than in 
the East, but every mountain pass in VT has at least a couple of kilometers 
of 20-25%.  I try to avoid carrying more than a couple of pounds of gear on 
rides with one or two of those!  Back(dirt) roads here, where I do most of 
my riding, often have sections and ramps in the 20 - 25% range that are 
just long enough to seriously bog down in.  My Rambouillet has a White Ind 
crank with a 44/30 and a 9 speed 11-28.   My Ebisu touring bike has a 
48/34/26 with a 12-27, but I throw a 24 on when I go to my sisters, which 
involves crossing White Face Mt in NY, a 5 mile climb at an absolutely 
relentless 10-14%, perhaps that's more like NM. With a 24 gear it takes 
one day shorter than forever!  Even touring on  the tandem, my wife and I 
don't get up to 40 lbs of gear.  Just us, the bike, racks and water gets to 
400lbs, so we run a 26/32 with 26 wheels.   

Generally I prefer to run closely spaced gears for most of my riding and 
then switch to something more helpful when I know my old body will need it.

On Saturday, April 7, 2012 12:12:19 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:

 As Steve said, for loads and long hills and long rides. I rarely climb
 in anything under a 35 or so, but if I ever (hah!) do some loaded
 touring in northern NM, the consensus is that some low bailouts might
 be very welcome. Further, there are some steep, short sand-bogged
 hills around here for which a 20 low might be welcome.

 The principal reason for a change is that, with a 36/24 X 9, I can do
 99/100 of my riding in the outer ring, while with the current 46/36/24
 X 7, one must switch between high and low ranges (46/36) for steep
 hills and off road.

 And I can put that 48 t cut down ring guard on the 46 position so that
 it all does not look so wimpy.

 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 5:11 AM, Michael Hechmer mhech...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
  Are you trying to ride up the walls of your house?  What exactly do you 
 need
  a 24/36, and how fast do you have to spin that gear to keep the bike
  upright?
 
  Michael
 
  On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:08:14 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
 
  1. The stock mini 2-bys seem to have 42 outers. Do any of y'all use 36
  outers?
 
  2. If so, (a) Do people laugh at you? (b) Do you notice any additional
  friction?
 
  I think I've scored steel 36 and 24, so wear ought not to be an issue,
  right?
 
  --
  Patrick Moore
  Albuquerque, NM
  For professional resumes, contact
  Patrick Moore, ACRW
  http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
 
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 http://resumespecialties.com/index.html



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[RBW] Re: iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread Rambouilleting Utahn
I've found that if it is in my pocket I get the most weird readings, I
think it has to do with the accelerometer in the phone.

I keep a microfiber sunglass bag in my saddlebag and place the phone
in there to reduce up and down motion of the phone while riding.

On Apr 7, 2:06 pm, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:
 Utahn (??):

 As I said, I always get very weird readings for fastest speed (47.87
 mph on today's 12 mile ride -- yeah, right). How do you adjust to get
 an accurate reading? Ditto for ascent and descent measurements?









 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 1:58 PM, Rambouilleting Utahn glam...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
  I'm a big fan of Cyclemeter, use it for riding and walking. It logs
  your route (via GPS) and gives you distance, elevation gain, average
  speed and fastest speed and if you ride the same route often it
  compares your latest ride to you average time for that particular
  ride.

  I have Cychosis but don't use it as much as I should as it requires
  manually inputting your ride data which I usually forget to do.

  Strava seems pretty popular with the go fast crowd.

  On Apr 7, 12:30 pm, Philip Williamson philip.william...@gmail.com
  wrote:
  I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
  it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
  I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I
  don't care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to
  think about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use
  offline with GPS is something I could use today.

  Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
  iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

  I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
  but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
  and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
  (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

  Just curious and excited,
   Philip

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 Albuquerque, NM
 For professional resumes, contact
 Patrick Moore, ACRWhttp://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Re: iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread Philip Williamson
Thanks! I'm installing the cyclemeter app, and I have a GPS app
recommendation as well, in case that doesn't do the job.
Riv-related content: I bought the iPad with the proceeds of the Readers,
BQs and knickers I sold here recently.

Thanks again,
 Philip


On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 1:49 PM, Rambouilleting Utahn glam...@gmail.comwrote:

 I've found that if it is in my pocket I get the most weird readings, I
 think it has to do with the accelerometer in the phone.

 I keep a microfiber sunglass bag in my saddlebag and place the phone
 in there to reduce up and down motion of the phone while riding.

 On Apr 7, 2:06 pm, PATRICK MOORE bertin...@gmail.com wrote:
  Utahn (??):
 
  As I said, I always get very weird readings for fastest speed (47.87
  mph on today's 12 mile ride -- yeah, right). How do you adjust to get
  an accurate reading? Ditto for ascent and descent measurements?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 1:58 PM, Rambouilleting Utahn glam...@gmail.com
 wrote:
   I'm a big fan of Cyclemeter, use it for riding and walking. It logs
   your route (via GPS) and gives you distance, elevation gain, average
   speed and fastest speed and if you ride the same route often it
   compares your latest ride to you average time for that particular
   ride.
 
   I have Cychosis but don't use it as much as I should as it requires
   manually inputting your ride data which I usually forget to do.
 
   Strava seems pretty popular with the go fast crowd.
 
   On Apr 7, 12:30 pm, Philip Williamson philip.william...@gmail.com
   wrote:
   I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have
 with
   it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know
 exactly what
   I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I
   don't care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to
   think about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and
 use
   offline with GPS is something I could use today.
 
   Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for
 the
   iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?
 
   I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from
 work,
   but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS
 Express)
   and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
   (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?
 
   Just curious and excited,
Philip
 
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 Groups RBW Owners Bunch group.
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 .
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  --
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  Albuquerque, NM
  For professional resumes, contact
  Patrick Moore, ACRWhttp://resumespecialties.com/index.html

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Re: [RBW] Re: Further anxious worrying about very small rings and cogs: 36/24 X bastard 11 or 12-32 or 36

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Michael: interesting. I've driven through VT and NH and find the
terrain like a doll-house NM*: small and steep: little valleys and
abrupt, small hills.

* North central NM is pretty green, unlike south-of-Santa Fe; tho' not
so much as NE and the east generally. Again, the green, like the ups
and downs, is more spread out -- diluted.

Years ago I used to obsess about gearing and insisted on a relatively
wide range (say, 30 to 100) with steps of about 5 gear inches
between each gear -- used close ratio rear clusters with front
triples. After riding fixed and ss exclusively for a number of years,
I found, when I went back to multiple gears, that I like a series of
close ratios in the middle cruising ranges (say, 60 to 75 for
pavement, 50 to 65 for dirt) and some big jumps to small and large
gears on either side. I also find that I shift far, far less than I
did years ago: interesting: I ride with my brother who, himself, is
rather blase' about gearing, and, riding behind him as I usually do
(because he sets a slow pace that I am psychologically incapable of
doing) I notice that even he shifts about three or four times for each
of my one. I tend to leave things in the, say, 70 gear until it hurts
to stand, then bail to a 40 or 35 gear.

At any rate, the hoped-for new 36/24 X 9 systems (11-30 or so for the
road, 12-34 or so for the dirt) will give me these few close ratios in
the middle while giving me ample high and low end gears for the
exceptions (tho' I rarely bother to pedal downhill, nowadays).

Man, I love climbing, at least on = 1 mile hills of  10% -- had fun
doing so this afternoon on the grocery-loaded 72 fixie. Downhills, I
can tolerate those.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 2:48 PM, Michael Hechmer mhech...@gmail.com wrote:
 Patrick, I have not yet ridden in NM, but we have mountains in Vermont too.
  My sense is that the climbs in the West are considerably longer than in the
 East, but every mountain pass in VT has at least a couple of kilometers of
 20-25%.  I try to avoid carrying more than a couple of pounds of gear on
 rides with one or two of those!  Back(dirt) roads here, where I do most of
 my riding, often have sections and ramps in the 20 - 25% range that are just
 long enough to seriously bog down in.  My Rambouillet has a White Ind crank
 with a 44/30 and a 9 speed 11-28.   My Ebisu touring bike has a 48/34/26
 with a 12-27, but I throw a 24 on when I go to my sisters, which involves
 crossing White Face Mt in NY, a 5 mile climb at an absolutely relentless
 10-14%, perhaps that's more like NM. With a 24 gear it takes one day
 shorter than forever!  Even touring on  the tandem, my wife and I don't get
 up to 40 lbs of gear.  Just us, the bike, racks and water gets to 400lbs, so
 we run a 26/32 with 26 wheels.

 Generally I prefer to run closely spaced gears for most of my riding and
 then switch to something more helpful when I know my old body will need it.

 On Saturday, April 7, 2012 12:12:19 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:

 As Steve said, for loads and long hills and long rides. I rarely climb
 in anything under a 35 or so, but if I ever (hah!) do some loaded
 touring in northern NM, the consensus is that some low bailouts might
 be very welcome. Further, there are some steep, short sand-bogged
 hills around here for which a 20 low might be welcome.

 The principal reason for a change is that, with a 36/24 X 9, I can do
 99/100 of my riding in the outer ring, while with the current 46/36/24
 X 7, one must switch between high and low ranges (46/36) for steep
 hills and off road.

 And I can put that 48 t cut down ring guard on the 46 position so that
 it all does not look so wimpy.

 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 5:11 AM, Michael Hechmer mhech...@gmail.com
 wrote:
  Are you trying to ride up the walls of your house?  What exactly do you
  need
  a 24/36, and how fast do you have to spin that gear to keep the bike
  upright?
 
  Michael
 
  On Friday, April 6, 2012 8:08:14 PM UTC-4, Patrick Moore wrote:
 
  1. The stock mini 2-bys seem to have 42 outers. Do any of y'all use 36
  outers?
 
  2. If so, (a) Do people laugh at you? (b) Do you notice any additional
  friction?
 
  I think I've scored steel 36 and 24, so wear ought not to be an issue,
  right?
 
  --
  Patrick Moore
  Albuquerque, NM
  For professional resumes, contact
  Patrick Moore, ACRW
  http://resumespecialties.com/index.html
 
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 For professional resumes, contact
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Re: [RBW] Re: iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread PATRICK MOORE
Thanks; must try this. I have a home-made leather slip cover for the
phone and can slip it into my saddlebag or pannier.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Rambouilleting Utahn glam...@gmail.com wrote:
 I've found that if it is in my pocket I get the most weird readings, I
 think it has to do with the accelerometer in the phone.

 I keep a microfiber sunglass bag in my saddlebag and place the phone
 in there to reduce up and down motion of the phone while riding.


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Re: [RBW] iPad apps for bicycling?

2012-04-07 Thread robert zeidler
+1 more on Cyclemeter.  Finally a bike computer for any bike, any time.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 2:30 PM, Philip Williamson
philip.william...@gmail.com wrote:
 I just got an iPad, and I wonder how much bike-related fun I can have with
 it. It's the LTE version, so it should have GPS (sure, I know exactly what
 I bought). Are there any must-have iPhone or iPad apps for cycling? I don't
 care about training or calories, but I might if I didn't have to think
 about. Mapping would be cool. Terrain maps I can download and use offline
 with GPS is something I could use today.

 Is there such a thing as a rando bag with a waterproof top pocket for the
 iPad? If I made some, is there any interest?

 I've never had a phone, and I've been borrowing an original iPad from work,
 but this is the first one that's all mine. I'm a photographer (PS Express)
 and artist (sketchbook pro), and I plan to use the iPad as a phone
 (Talkatone or Line2?). Anything else I should know about?

 Just curious and excited,
  Philip

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[RBW] Re: Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread Beth H
Fellas -- thanks for the feedback. I should've included a few more
tidbits:

a. Space is much more of a consideration than money, though money may
become a consideration in the next year as my career situation
evolves.

b. I generally live car-free, though I will sometimes ride as a
passenger in my partner's automobile and actually help spell her on
long drives (i.e., outta state, which happenes once or twice a year).
In the city I don't drive a car. Ever.

c. In the last dozen years, I've gone from being a transportational
cyclist to being a tourist, a randonneuse and a racer, and now I feel
myself heading back into utilitarian cycling again and loving it. The
thought of training holds little appeal; The idea of signing up for
a ride to beat the clock holds even less; and paying to ride or race
my bike makes less and less sense as I evolve as a cyclist. The things
I continue to relish are my commutes, my cargo-hauling errands, and my
leisurely weekend jaunts, all done by bicycle.

d. How many bikes I own -- and all the seemingly-requisite gear that
goes with them -- feels far less important to me now. (No matter how
many bikes I own, I still have only one butt.)

As space and money are increasingly important considerations, it
becomes clearer to me that a serious winnowing-down is probably in
order. And because I rely on bikes for transportation, it makes such
excellent sense for me to have a smaller stable which all utilize the
same wheel size. Fewer bikes, fewer spare parts, more space.

So yeah, I will probably think about selling the two bikes I ride the
least, sometime in the next year or less. Thanks again for the
feedback. --Beth

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[RBW] Re: What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
Cheap cotton boxers from Target for me, under MUSA shorts when temps are 
above 40F. The boxers have to be broken in (ten or so wearings/washings) 
before I wear them on longer rides. When new, the fabric is a little too 
stiff. I tried padded shorts half a dozen times, and I found them horrible 
(hot,sweaty, squishy, etc) in a short time. I've also tried going 
commando, but that was somewhat uncomfortable and carried an almost 
intolerable degree of blowout risk. These days I ride B67 saddles on 
everything. I just sold my long-loved but no longer ridden B17 Champ Spec, 
which I miss mostly because of the beausage.

On Saturday, April 7, 2012 1:03:41 PM UTC-5, Fullylugged wrote:

 I mentioned last week that a new Brooks B17 finally gave that ahh, it's 
 broken in feeling after about 300 miles. As it happens, last week was also 
 my 1st century ride in un-padded shorts. The ride was so comfortable, I got 
 out a scapel from the college dissecting kit and cut the threads to remove 
 pads from two pr of Ibex Duo shorts. Rode 50 miles today with one of them 
 them on (this was on a Selle Anatomica) and can report that they are very 
 comfortable sans pad on a leather seat. If you haven't tried it, test the 
 ride out on a 20 mile spin. No chamois means no need for chamois cream 
 either.

 Happy riding!

 Bruce


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Re: [RBW] What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread Tim McNamara
On Apr 7, 2012, at 3:17 PM, PATRICK MOORE wrote:

snip

 (moderate humidity at 6%)

These things are relative.  Around here that would be considered bone dry and 
there'd be fire hazard alerts. 

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[RBW] Re: What's in YOUR shorts?

2012-04-07 Thread EricP
And I'm probably one of the few to consistently get saddle sores from 
Brooks saddles.  Both with and without padded shorts.  For today, put a 
Brooks back on the Hillborne and rode about 30 miles today, about half in 
the rain.  Including an extended stop at Hiawatha Cyclery.  Sitting in 
front of the computer, can certainly tell I was on a Brooks.  And, no, I 
have not ridden that much this year.  Just a bit above 1,000 miles so far.  
So it could be my lack of riding and/or fitness.
 
Frustrating, but it appears that the area around where the cantle and rail 
meet rub me the wrong way.  So to speak.  Not just on one Brooks, but on at 
least 3 different B-17s.
 
But to the original poster - for rides up to about 20 miles, I find boxers 
just fine.  Even on Terry saddles.  
 
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
 

On Saturday, April 7, 2012 5:06:27 PM UTC-5, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery 
wrote:

 Cheap cotton boxers from Target for me, under MUSA shorts when temps are 
 above 40F. The boxers have to be broken in (ten or so wearings/washings) 
 before I wear them on longer rides. When new, the fabric is a little too 
 stiff. I tried padded shorts half a dozen times, and I found them horrible 
 (hot,sweaty, squishy, etc) in a short time. I've also tried going 
 commando, but that was somewhat uncomfortable and carried an almost 
 intolerable degree of blowout risk. These days I ride B67 saddles on 
 everything. I just sold my long-loved but no longer ridden B17 Champ Spec, 
 which I miss mostly because of the beausage.

  



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[RBW] Re: Project Help my Build my Atlantis

2012-04-07 Thread dr...@charter.net
Thanks william Yes I have a brifter. I probably did say all the parts
were worn out- what I mean where the cassettes and chainrings. I was
trying to figure out how much weight I would save by changing to a
double , then I got all side tracked wondering how much better the
bike could be for not too much extra cost. One lb is not that much and
it does add a lot of cost to redo the whole thing unnecessaril.

On Apr 6, 9:31 pm, William tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:
 A 'brifter' is a shifter that is part of the brake lever.
 Brake-lever-shifter = Brifter.  If your brakelevers and shiftlevers are
 integrated into the same unit, you have brifters.

 The group might have taken you sideways into a million dollar project in
 part because your original post said:

 I want to rebuild it from the bottom up, as the
 components were completely worn out. 

 If only your drivetrain parts are worn out, and you love everything about
 your bike otherwise, then by all means get a new cassette the same size as
 you have now, get three new chainrings, and a new chain, and be happy.
 100-200 in parts, plus labor, maybe get cables and housing and handlebar
 tape and brakepads and it will feel and look like a new bike.

 If you want to totally reconfigure your drivetrain to a double in front,
 there may be weight savings, but it will almost certainly be less than a
 pound of savings, and could easily add another $200-$500 to the project,
 and might force you into shifter choices that you regret if you've loved
 what you have been running.



 On Friday, April 6, 2012 6:37:37 PM UTC-7, dr...@charter.net wrote:

  Well I want my bike to be beautiful too. I want indexed shifters, not
  bar end as I am used to them. I am thinking about going to a double
  crank. From everything I have read here is would be lighter, and I
  could still get a good gear range for  touring,a lthough I would have
  to get a rear MB derailer. It is hard for me to conceive that with a
  42 front ring that I could get a high enough gear for flats to cruise
  on.. but from what i can tell it seems that you all think a triple
  chain ring in the front is very repetitive. Am still not sure if I
  have to replace my 105 Shimano indexed shifters if I just decide to
  change to a double crank and different rear cassette. Can you clarify
  please.? What is a brifter?I think the first thing to decide is double
  or triple crank and rear cassette and then figure out if I have to
  replace   my current derailers and shifters if I do that.  The rings
  were  the reason that I took the bike apart in the first place, as
  they were the only parts that were really worn out.. now here I am
  with half my bike sitting next to this computer desk in a big pile and
  this is turning into a million dollar project. I can probably afford
  to redo the whole thing, but do not necessarily feel the need to do
  that. I kind of like to use things up and recycle etc.

  On Apr 6, 9:17 am, islaysteve alkire...@verizon.net wrote:
   dr (original poster):  I agree you have a lot to consider and digest
  here.
   You a debating compact double vs. triple cranks, for one thing.  As for
   myself, I've always had a double, and used 105 STI 'brifters'.  They
  have
   performed so well for me that I see no reason to leave them.  The
  mainline
   Rivendell philosophy favors non-indexed bar-end shifters, and lots of
  folks
   here go that way.  However one good thing about Riv and this forum is
  that
   there's a wide tolerance for individuality and using what works for you.
   Along those lines, I'd suggest that you may first want to decide on your
   shifting system.  I believe that you have been using STI?  If you like
  it,
   you'll likely not want to change.  I've heard (and not confirmed, and
   others here may correct me) that triples are a bit more finicky for
   brifters.  But you were running a triple anyway, so would have your own
   experience.  As Jim and others have mentioned, you can go to a compact
   double and still have a wide gear range.  That's what I am going to work
   toward on my bike.  I also admit to considering it an object of beauty
   and consider that when choosing parts.  I got a very nice-looking Sugino
   Alpina compact double and that's what I'm sticking with.  You may not be
   able to keep your 105 RD if you opt for a larger cassette; but as
  mentioned
   above, you can get a good Shimano mtn derailleur that will handle the
   larger cogs and should be just as reliable as what you are used to.
   Good
   luck, Steve

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[RBW] Re: Project Help my Build my Atlantis

2012-04-07 Thread dr...@charter.net
Thanks you too, this is practical advice that I am looking for. I will
decide next week about all of this, and most likely stick to my
original plan of replacing the parts that were worn out/drivetrain
instead of the whole thing.  I know it is never going to be light - I
always tell people it is like riding a Cadillac.

On Apr 6, 10:28 pm, dougP dougpn...@cox.net wrote:
 The rings were  the reason that I took the bike apart in the first
 place, as

  they were the only parts that were really worn out..

 The odds are good that only the middle  outer ring were shot.  The
 little inner ones don't usually see a lot of use and it may even be
 steel (mine is  has 9 yrs use).  If everything else was working fine,
 and doing what you need the bike to do, I'd go for a pair of rings,
 new chain  cassette and not let this turn into a high dollar
 effort.

 As to reducing weight, saving a pound or two here'n'there on an
 Atlantis won't be noticeable.  The bike is built stout to take heavy
 loads, so it would be tough to get it down to a sporty weight.  My 58
 cm tips the scales at around 26-27 lbs with no racks or bags (a rare
 condition).  In my standard set-up (Nitto big back rack, mini-front 
 Acorn boxy bag) it's well north of 30 lbs.

 dougP

 On Apr 6, 6:37 pm, dr...@charter.net dr...@charter.net wrote:



  Well I want my bike to be beautiful too. I want indexed shifters, not
  bar end as I am used to them. I am thinking about going to a double
  crank. From everything I have read here is would be lighter, and I
  could still get a good gear range for  touring,a lthough I would have
  to get a rear MB derailer. It is hard for me to conceive that with a
  42 front ring that I could get a high enough gear for flats to cruise
  on.. but from what i can tell it seems that you all think a triple
  chain ring in the front is very repetitive. Am still not sure if I
  have to replace my 105 Shimano indexed shifters if I just decide to
  change to a double crank and different rear cassette. Can you clarify
  please.? What is a brifter?I think the first thing to decide is double
  or triple crank and rear cassette and then figure out if I have to
  replace   my current derailers and shifters if I do that.  The rings
  were  the reason that I took the bike apart in the first place, as
  they were the only parts that were really worn out.. now here I am
  with half my bike sitting next to this computer desk in a big pile and
  this is turning into a million dollar project. I can probably afford
  to redo the whole thing, but do not necessarily feel the need to do
  that. I kind of like to use things up and recycle etc.

  On Apr 6, 9:17 am, islaysteve alkire...@verizon.net wrote:

   dr (original poster):  I agree you have a lot to consider and digest here.
   You a debating compact double vs. triple cranks, for one thing.  As for
   myself, I've always had a double, and used 105 STI 'brifters'.  They have
   performed so well for me that I see no reason to leave them.  The mainline
   Rivendell philosophy favors non-indexed bar-end shifters, and lots of 
   folks
   here go that way.  However one good thing about Riv and this forum is that
   there's a wide tolerance for individuality and using what works for you.
   Along those lines, I'd suggest that you may first want to decide on your
   shifting system.  I believe that you have been using STI?  If you like it,
   you'll likely not want to change.  I've heard (and not confirmed, and
   others here may correct me) that triples are a bit more finicky for
   brifters.  But you were running a triple anyway, so would have your own
   experience.  As Jim and others have mentioned, you can go to a compact
   double and still have a wide gear range.  That's what I am going to work
   toward on my bike.  I also admit to considering it an object of beauty
   and consider that when choosing parts.  I got a very nice-looking Sugino
   Alpina compact double and that's what I'm sticking with.  You may not be
   able to keep your 105 RD if you opt for a larger cassette; but as 
   mentioned
   above, you can get a good Shimano mtn derailleur that will handle the
   larger cogs and should be just as reliable as what you are used to.  Good
   luck, Steve- Hide quoted text -

  - Show quoted text -

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Re: [RBW] Re: Feeler Sale of my Hillborne

2012-04-07 Thread Joe Bernard
HA! You were thinking about the New Bleu Hillborne you're gonna replace it 
with. ;-)

On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:52:05 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Damn it,  too tired today.  It is of course a Hilsen. 
 On Apr 6, 2012 7:49 PM, William tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:

 Um, your Hillborne looks like a Hilsen.  

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:38:50 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Not sure if I am gonna sell this or not but wanted to put out a feeler 
 to see if anyone is interested. As mentioned earlier I am not getting 
 any lighter and wanted to haul myself and some stuff around this 
 summer so was looking to get a bike that is a bit more stout. Mine is 
 a 54cm Hillborne with custom paint, kinda like a silver green 
 metallic. Frameset w/headset for sale only but will include 113mm BB 
 if someone wants it. Frame has only one small paint chip, I have 
 twined and wrapped chainstay and made sure to use electrical tape 
 behind it, it comes off easily enough if you dont like it.  As 
 mentioned earlier this is actually one of the Hiluki's out there with 
 a serial No.  SA 0193.  Pictures show you can run Hetres and fenders 
 on this no problem.  I really would hate to lose it but after paying 
 off tax man my wife will not let me get a new bike until I sell one. 
 I paid $1250 shipped but could let it go for $1150 shipped if that 
 seems failr. If anyone has any questions let me know. Thanks for 
 bearing with my complete indicisiveness. Link to Flikr page with 
 pics.  http://www.flickr.com/photos/**67889635@N06/sets/**
 72157629272888155/http://www.flickr.com/photos/67889635@N06/sets/72157629272888155/

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Re: [RBW] Re: Feeler Sale of my Hillborne

2012-04-07 Thread Peter Morgano
Ha, busted...still torn though, it is one beautiful bike.

On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:43 PM, Joe Bernard joerem...@gmail.com wrote:

 HA! You were thinking about the New Bleu Hillborne you're gonna replace it
 with. ;-)

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:52:05 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Damn it,  too tired today.  It is of course a Hilsen.
 On Apr 6, 2012 7:49 PM, William tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:

 Um, your Hillborne looks like a Hilsen.

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:38:50 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Not sure if I am gonna sell this or not but wanted to put out a feeler
 to see if anyone is interested. As mentioned earlier I am not getting
 any lighter and wanted to haul myself and some stuff around this
 summer so was looking to get a bike that is a bit more stout. Mine is
 a 54cm Hillborne with custom paint, kinda like a silver green
 metallic. Frameset w/headset for sale only but will include 113mm BB
 if someone wants it. Frame has only one small paint chip, I have
 twined and wrapped chainstay and made sure to use electrical tape
 behind it, it comes off easily enough if you dont like it.  As
 mentioned earlier this is actually one of the Hiluki's out there with
 a serial No.  SA 0193.  Pictures show you can run Hetres and fenders
 on this no problem.  I really would hate to lose it but after paying
 off tax man my wife will not let me get a new bike until I sell one.
 I paid $1250 shipped but could let it go for $1150 shipped if that
 seems failr. If anyone has any questions let me know. Thanks for
 bearing with my complete indicisiveness. Link to Flikr page with
 pics.  http://www.flickr.com/photos/67889635@N06/sets/**
 721576292728**88155/http://www.flickr.com/photos/67889635@N06/sets/72157629272888155/

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Re: [RBW] Re: Feeler Sale of my Hillborne

2012-04-07 Thread Joe Bernard
I hear ya, I never would have sold it if I didn't need more standover.
 

On Saturday, April 7, 2012 8:27:02 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Ha, busted...still torn though, it is one beautiful bike. 

 On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:43 PM, Joe Bernard joerem...@gmail.com wrote:

 HA! You were thinking about the New Bleu Hillborne you're gonna replace 
 it with. ;-)

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:52:05 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Damn it,  too tired today.  It is of course a Hilsen. 
 On Apr 6, 2012 7:49 PM, William tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:

 Um, your Hillborne looks like a Hilsen.  

 On Friday, April 6, 2012 4:38:50 PM UTC-7, Peter M wrote:

 Not sure if I am gonna sell this or not but wanted to put out a feeler 
 to see if anyone is interested. As mentioned earlier I am not getting 
 any lighter and wanted to haul myself and some stuff around this 
 summer so was looking to get a bike that is a bit more stout. Mine is 
 a 54cm Hillborne with custom paint, kinda like a silver green 
 metallic. Frameset w/headset for sale only but will include 113mm BB 
 if someone wants it. Frame has only one small paint chip, I have 
 twined and wrapped chainstay and made sure to use electrical tape 
 behind it, it comes off easily enough if you dont like it.  As 
 mentioned earlier this is actually one of the Hiluki's out there with 
 a serial No.  SA 0193.  Pictures show you can run Hetres and fenders 
 on this no problem.  I really would hate to lose it but after paying 
 off tax man my wife will not let me get a new bike until I sell one. 
 I paid $1250 shipped but could let it go for $1150 shipped if that 
 seems failr. If anyone has any questions let me know. Thanks for 
 bearing with my complete indicisiveness. Link to Flikr page with 
 pics.  http://www.flickr.com/photos/67889635@N06/sets/**
 721576292728**88155/http://www.flickr.com/photos/67889635@N06/sets/72157629272888155/

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[RBW] Re: Contemplating herd thinning to all-26

2012-04-07 Thread rob markwardt
Bikes come and go.  If I bought or kept every one that I've liked I'd
have over a thousand.

PS...Your music is fantastic.

On Apr 7, 2:52 pm, Beth H periwinkle...@yahoo.com wrote:
 Fellas -- thanks for the feedback. I should've included a few more
 tidbits:

 a. Space is much more of a consideration than money, though money may
 become a consideration in the next year as my career situation
 evolves.

 b. I generally live car-free, though I will sometimes ride as a
 passenger in my partner's automobile and actually help spell her on
 long drives (i.e., outta state, which happenes once or twice a year).
 In the city I don't drive a car. Ever.

 c. In the last dozen years, I've gone from being a transportational
 cyclist to being a tourist, a randonneuse and a racer, and now I feel
 myself heading back into utilitarian cycling again and loving it. The
 thought of training holds little appeal; The idea of signing up for
 a ride to beat the clock holds even less; and paying to ride or race
 my bike makes less and less sense as I evolve as a cyclist. The things
 I continue to relish are my commutes, my cargo-hauling errands, and my
 leisurely weekend jaunts, all done by bicycle.

 d. How many bikes I own -- and all the seemingly-requisite gear that
 goes with them -- feels far less important to me now. (No matter how
 many bikes I own, I still have only one butt.)

 As space and money are increasingly important considerations, it
 becomes clearer to me that a serious winnowing-down is probably in
 order. And because I rely on bikes for transportation, it makes such
 excellent sense for me to have a smaller stable which all utilize the
 same wheel size. Fewer bikes, fewer spare parts, more space.

 So yeah, I will probably think about selling the two bikes I ride the
 least, sometime in the next year or less. Thanks again for the
 feedback. --Beth

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[RBW] Done talking myself into like the moustache.

2012-04-07 Thread Scotty
I have given myself about a year to like my moustache handlebars. I really 
want to like them, they look so freaking good on my bike, but I dont. Now I 
am just not sure what direction I want to go, but I know that I want to be 
more upright, and I dont want to replace the whole cockpit. I want bars 
that will take my roadbike brake levers and bar end shifters. Even with the 
dirt drop stem I feel I am leaning forward too far in the position where 
the brakes are. I could use some suggestions for bars that give me a closer 
flat section near the brakes that wont force me to buy everything new. Just 
the bar. Am I dreaming?

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