[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Ron Mc
On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 8:17:29 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 There's a definite negative attitude on this list toward racers. 


no there isn't.  
We don't like bike snobs on racing bikes, we don't like an industry  that 
models itself after cutting-edge racing, and 30-something salespersons 
trying to put everybody on a cutting-edge racing bike or a cheap 
cookie-cutter facsimile, and pigeonholing everybody else.  

A nice enough guy otherwise looking over my upright at a water stop last 
weekend - after our in depth conversation was near over - said, so you 
built yourself a cruiser  
I made a point to pass him and leave him in the dust from my Italian Huffy. 
 

Made up for it yesterday on a greenway trail - ran across a fellow Grant 
Kool-Aid imbiber, who was riding a really nice upright built on a Miyata 
Triple Cross.and we shared a great stop  

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Montclair BobbyB
There are lots of similarities between the car industry (and how they 
appeal to individual tastes) and the bike industry... and it shouldn't 
surprise us that the type of person who gravitates towards sleek, fast 
sports cars may also gravitate towards sleek fast sporty bikes, that's 
all...

I drive a Honda Element. I like utility-focused bikes that can do many 
things in all kinds of weather on all kinds of terrain... gee, kinda like 
my car... I'd love to drive someone's Corvette, but I'd never want to own 
one... same as I'd love to take my friend's Pinarello Dogma around the 
block and declare WOW that's so light and so fast... but I'd never want 
to own one.

To each his own, that's the beauty of having a robust and healthy industry 
that can appeal to many different tastes. 

Peace and Love of All Bikes... BB   



On Thursday, July 30, 2015 at 8:26:29 AM UTC-4, Ron Mc wrote:

 On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 8:17:29 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 There's a definite negative attitude on this list toward racers. 


 no there isn't.  
 We don't like bike snobs on racing bikes, we don't like an industry  that 
 models itself after cutting-edge racing, and 30-something salespersons 
 trying to put everybody on a cutting-edge racing bike or a cheap 
 cookie-cutter facsimile, and pigeonholing everybody else.  

 A nice enough guy otherwise looking over my upright at a water stop last 
 weekend - after our in depth conversation was near over - said, so you 
 built yourself a cruiser  
 I made a point to pass him and leave him in the dust from my Italian 
 Huffy.  

 Made up for it yesterday on a greenway trail - ran across a fellow Grant 
 Kool-Aid imbiber, who was riding a really nice upright built on a Miyata 
 Triple Cross.and we shared a great stop  


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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Ron Mc
I'm very glad your friend had a good experience.  I could recommend bike 
shops here that likely sell exactly what he wants and others that can make 
any of us drool.  The people you can't seem to find are out there. I can 
give you a bad bike shop reference if you want. 


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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Ron Mc
and no, the guy didn't hear a word I said

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Ron Mc
and yes, you can find jerks right here

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread 'pb' via RBW Owners Bunch
On Thursday, July 30, 2015 at 5:26:29 AM UTC-7, Ron Mc wrote:

 On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 8:17:29 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 There's a definite negative attitude on this list toward racers. 


 no there isn't.  


Gosh, I sure perceive one, and it started at the source.  It pervaded the 
Reader for years.  I'm not slamming Grant -- he and I have subsequently 
handled this, and we're good.   
 

 We don't like bike snobs on racing bikes, we don't like an industry  that 
 models itself after cutting-edge racing, and 30-something salespersons 
 trying to put everybody on a cutting-edge racing bike or a cheap 
 cookie-cutter facsimile, and pigeonholing everybody else.  


A few months back, after reading a boblist statement along these lines, I 
called every sizeable bike shop within about 15 miles of my house in San 
Diego.  San Diego has a culture of racing, and especially of triathlon, so 
you'd think that might pervade bike shops.  I told the sales people I was 
going to send a friend in, who wanted to start cycling.  I don't remember 
how I described that fictional friend ... a middle-aged normal non-cyclist 
person.  I asked the salespeople what bike they would show such a person, 
and then subsequently I asked what tires the bikes had.

The responses were 100% either touring bikes or hybrids.  Tires were 
typically 32c. Some were 38c.  The shops ranged from Performance to two 
large Specialized dealers and a Trek Superstore.  100%, the responses had 
nothing to do with racy bikes.

So where are these bike snobs?  Where are these salespersons?  I suggest 
(1) it's a generalization that is perpetuated by a group which tends to 
have a certain set of opinions (gee, that sounds like religion or 
politics), and (2) when you go out in the world, you often encounter what 
you are pretty sure you are going to encounter.  
 

 A nice enough guy otherwise looking over my upright at a water stop last 
 weekend - after our in depth conversation was near over - said, so you 
 built yourself a cruiser  
 I made a point to pass him and leave him in the dust from my Italian 
 Huffy.  


Why?  After a pleasant, in-depth conversation, you didn't like one word he 
chose, so You. Showed. Him.  Wasn't he giving you the opportunity to tell 
him why you liked your arrangement?

Made up for it yesterday on a greenway trail - ran across a fellow Grant 
 Kool-Aid imbiber, who was riding a really nice upright built on a Miyata 
 Triple Cross.and we shared a great stop 


Well, that makes things easy.  No cross-pollination.  Nice, safe, 
comfortable, bicycle apartheid.

Conversations like this remind me of a time a couple years back when I was 
entering my own neighborhood in the evening.  I was on a fully racy carbon 
Look, and I'd just ridden the 45 miles/3500 feet of elevation, home from a 
long day of work at the office.  I'd also ridden to work that morning, 
leaving  the house at 5:15 a.m.  I had office clothes and shoes and a 
laptop in my Timbuktu bag, and I was moving quite slowly, because I was 
three blocks from home, and, as the Brits say, thoroughly knackered.  A 
20-something fellow in street clothes on a Surly with an upright 
set-up caught me and passed me quite emphatically.  He said nothing, and 
looked straight ahead with a grin.  Yanno, when I pass other cyclists, 
especially if I am moving much faster than they are, I usually pass slowly 
and say hello, because I don't want to be perceived as being an a*e, 
because I hate to startle people, and because I want other cyclists to feel 
happy and encouraged. 

So, did he go home and post online, you should'a seen the stupid racer 
dude on the Look I smoked with my Surly today?  I don't know -- maybe he 
didn't even notice me.  Regardless, every group of people has about the 
same percentage of jerks and the same percentage of regular folks, and the 
choice of which side to be on is always available.  :-) 

Peter 

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Garth

   Laughing . Oh No !  .  . .  . there's attitudes here ?   Implying 
one attitude is somehow better or worse than another ?   How silly am I 
!So I ask myself . .  .. when I detect an attitude , or a jerk , or 
see snobs on the road and in all walks of life  . . . . .  can I even 
recognize these negatives without being that negative myself ?  HaH !   
I cannot !  So who would have the attitude , who' would be the jerk , 
but me ?  Laughing . . . .Say it ain't so datty-Oh !  

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Re: [RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Eric Norris
Well said. 

“I think he doesn’t like me, so I don’t like him” did a lot to get this world 
where it is today. 

Everybody has problems, and everybody thinks they’re right. Keep that in mind 
when you’re snobbing on someone who’s different from you.

--Eric Norris
campyonly...@me.com
www.campyonly.com
campyonlyguy.blogspot.com

 On Jul 30, 2015, at 11:47 AM, Garth garth...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
Laughing . Oh No !  .  . .  . there's attitudes here ?   Implying 
 one attitude is somehow better or worse than another ?   How silly am I !   
  So I ask myself . .  .. when I detect an attitude , or a jerk , or see 
 snobs on the road and in all walks of life  . . . . .  can I even recognize 
 these negatives without being that negative myself ?  HaH !   I cannot !  
 So who would have the attitude , who' would be the jerk , but me ?  
 Laughing . . . .Say it ain't so datty-Oh !  
 
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Re: [RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-30 Thread Patrick Moore
The young pup still has to learn how to pass someone with credit. First,
you blow past at *at least* a 5 mph differential; second, you control your
panting so that you can keep your mouth closed and nose breath as you go
by. Third, you must be in the hooks. Fourth, you casually lift your *right
forefinger* in greeting with a very brief sideways glance -- angle of head
turn *no more* than 30*. Fifth, in a *very casual, conversational voice* you
say, Nice bike. Lastly, and most important, *you turn off no more than
400 yards ahead and disappear* before you start puking up your guts.

Patrick Moore, going out right now to chase down some roadies on his Fargo
in humid ABQ, NM (who finds local roadies pleasant, and finds this list
pretty forgiving in fact).

On Thu, Jul 30, 2015 at 12:10 PM, 'pb' via RBW Owners Bunch 
rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com wrote:
Conversations like this remind me of a time a couple years back when I was
entering my own neighborhood in the evening.  I was on a fully racy carbon
Look, and I'd just ridden the 45 miles/3500 feet of elevation, home from a
long day of work at the office.  I'd also ridden to work that morning,
leaving  the house at 5:15 a.m.  I had office clothes and shoes and a
laptop in my Timbuktu bag, and I was moving quite slowly, because I was
three blocks from home, and, as the Brits say, thoroughly knackered.  A
20-something fellow in street clothes on a Surly with an upright
set-up caught me and passed me quite emphatically.  He said nothing, and
looked straight ahead with a grin.  Yanno, when I pass other cyclists,
especially if I am moving much faster than they are, I usually pass slowly
and say hello, because I don't want to be perceived as being an a*e,
because I hate to startle people, and because I want other cyclists to feel
happy and encouraged. 

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-29 Thread Doug Williams
I just think that racing has a negative impact on bike design for the 
general public. Keep BORAF and races like that if you want, but I would 
like to see many more real world races on real world bikes which would 
influence bicycle purchases in a POSITIVE rather than a negative manner. 
Current races glamorize super lightweight, super fragile bikes. Have 
equipment endurance racing events (or whatever you want to call them) and 
make the racers start and finish on the SAME bike, carry all their tools 
and spare parts, and make all their own in race repairs.This would 
glamorize USEFUL bikes and encourage bike makers to make useful bikes 
available to the public, instead of the ridiculously impractical bikes 
glamorized in most races. Who goes on their daily ride with a van with 3 
spare bikes, spare parts, and a mechanic following? Why would you want to 
buy and ride a bike that requires that logistics trail?

True, we all know about RBW and other such bikes on this list. But I bet 
that the average bike purchaser does NOT. Equipment Endurance type races on 
durable and repairable bikes would help educate the buying public and steer 
them onto a bike that would be much better for them than the typical MCRB. 
Again, the only race rules would be:
(1) Start and finish on the same bike.
(2) Carry all your own repair parts and tools.
(3) Make all your own in race repairs.

No other design rules would be necessary. Bike manufacturers would be 
encouraged to manufacture and advertise bikes that would be useful to the 
public. 

Doug

On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 6:17:29 PM UTC-7, Patrick Moore wrote:

 There's a definite negative attitude on this list toward racers. Me, I 
 like watching racers in a well-coordinated paceline or climbing efficiently 
 or descending skillfully; never raced worth mentioning myself. Our local 
 roadies are friendly, and I think 40 year old racing bikes have much to 
 recommend them as road-biased all rounders.

 That said, I rode my (modestly racer-like, albeit fixed gear) gofast to 
 Fat Tire Bicycles this afternoon to pick up a new (black, clamp on, 1 1/8) 
 stem for the Fargo (new, longer reach bar) and a tandem rd cable (running 
 the housing along the bar to exit with brake housing near stem). The young 
 man at the register saw the '99 Joe and praised it and described the 
 Legolas he races local cross on. He installed a straight bar because his 
 background is downhill mtb racing, but he finds it much more comfortable 
 than his CF cross bike, and says that it doesn't slow him down (he loses 
 ground to roadies on the flats/straights, but gets ahead on twisties thanks 
 to his mtb handling skills.

 So, there. 

 -- 
 Resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, and letters that get interviews.
 By-the-hour resume and LinkedIn coaching.
 Other professional writing services.
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 Patrick Moore
 Alburquerque, Nouvelle Mexique,  Vereinigte Staaten

 *
 *The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a 
 circumference on the rim of which all conditions, distinctions, and 
 individualities revolve. *Chuang Tzu

 *Kinei hos eromenon. It moves as the being-loved. *Aristotle

 *The Love that moves the Sun and all the other stars. *Dante  
  

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Re: [RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-29 Thread Patrick Moore
Make that: If you were on a Clem, you'd be done by now.

On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 10:52 PM, Lungimsam john11.2...@gmail.com wrote:

 The pro cycling people must have very good reasons to ride what they ride.
 I don't think these people are dummies.

 While I am not enamoured with them, I have respect for people who can go
 20+mph average speeds and pump out sustained 400+ watts on mountain climbs
 for 40+ minutes at a time. They worked awfully hard for it. And while speed
 isn't everything in the whole picture of bike riding, I think it is a valid
 form of bicycle use. and it is quite an accomplishment to be able to ride
 like that.

 But I do think it would be fun to kid them though in some good-natured,
 chiding-fun way by stationing people with signs 2/3rds along the TdeF
 routes that say: If you were on a Roadeo, you'de be done by now..

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*
*The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a
circumference on the rim of which all conditions, distinctions, and
individualities revolve. *Chuang Tzu

*Kinei hos eromenon. It moves as the being-loved. *Aristotle

*The Love that moves the Sun and all the other stars. *Dante

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-29 Thread Mark Reimer
I'm another Riv rider who loves racing. I'm actually a co-organizer of the 
Canadian Cyclocross National Championships for the past two years, and also 
race the odd road race and (gasp) even a crit or two. Racing can be a LOT 
of fun. Not racing is super fun too. Point being, riding bikes rules, 
period. 

On Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 8:17:29 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:

 There's a definite negative attitude on this list toward racers. Me, I 
 like watching racers in a well-coordinated paceline or climbing efficiently 
 or descending skillfully; never raced worth mentioning myself. Our local 
 roadies are friendly, and I think 40 year old racing bikes have much to 
 recommend them as road-biased all rounders.

 That said, I rode my (modestly racer-like, albeit fixed gear) gofast to 
 Fat Tire Bicycles this afternoon to pick up a new (black, clamp on, 1 1/8) 
 stem for the Fargo (new, longer reach bar) and a tandem rd cable (running 
 the housing along the bar to exit with brake housing near stem). The young 
 man at the register saw the '99 Joe and praised it and described the 
 Legolas he races local cross on. He installed a straight bar because his 
 background is downhill mtb racing, but he finds it much more comfortable 
 than his CF cross bike, and says that it doesn't slow him down (he loses 
 ground to roadies on the flats/straights, but gets ahead on twisties thanks 
 to his mtb handling skills.

 So, there. 

 -- 
 Resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, and letters that get interviews.
 By-the-hour resume and LinkedIn coaching.
 Other professional writing services.
 http://www.resumespecialties.com/
 www.linkedin.com/in/patrickmooreresumespec/
 Patrick Moore
 Alburquerque, Nouvelle Mexique,  Vereinigte Staaten

 *
 *The point which is the pivot of the norm is the motionless center of a 
 circumference on the rim of which all conditions, distinctions, and 
 individualities revolve. *Chuang Tzu

 *Kinei hos eromenon. It moves as the being-loved. *Aristotle

 *The Love that moves the Sun and all the other stars. *Dante  
  

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-28 Thread George Millwood
I love watching the BORAF.  Here in Oz, I have to sit up to 02:00 to watch 
the live broadcast on free to air.The scenery is fabulous, the photography 
is stunning and the peleton is a riot of colour and movement.  What's not 
to like?  This year there seemed to be some human frailty in the riders and 
a genuine contest but I was really watching for the aerial shots of twenty 
one (21) corner switchbacks.  We also get a chef doing an insert on the 
gastronomic specialities of the region they are visiting that night/day and 
the commentary gives the lowdown on the Chateaux and villages the route 
passes. 


 

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[RBW] Re: Racer loves Rivendell

2015-07-28 Thread Lungimsam
The pro cycling people must have very good reasons to ride what they ride. I 
don't think these people are dummies.

While I am not enamoured with them, I have respect for people who can go 20+mph 
average speeds and pump out sustained 400+ watts on mountain climbs for 40+ 
minutes at a time. They worked awfully hard for it. And while speed isn't 
everything in the whole picture of bike riding, I think it is a valid form of 
bicycle use. and it is quite an accomplishment to be able to ride like that.

But I do think it would be fun to kid them though in some good-natured, 
chiding-fun way by stationing people with signs 2/3rds along the TdeF routes 
that say: If you were on a Roadeo, you'de be done by now..

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