[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-10-10 Thread Mackenzy Albright
This is one of my favorite riv builds on here in a while! it'd be great to 
see some more photo posted. 

On Monday, October 10, 2022 at 12:00:27 PM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald wrote:

> [image: IMG_4215.PNG]
> Thanks for the kind words, all! J and Leah, here is a photo of the 
> drivetrain. 
> On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 6:55:35 PM UTC-5 Joe Bernard wrote:
>
>> I don't know if I could live with no front brake lever to grab in an 
>> emergency stop - what if I forget it's coaster brake only??! - but this is 
>> SO cool. I love the "only what you need and nothing more" look and 
>> vibe..nice work, Matt! 
>>
>> On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 11:54:55 AM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
>>> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
>>> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
>>> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
>>> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
>>> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
>>> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
>>> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
>>> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
>>> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
>>> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
>>> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
>>> simplicity. 
>>>
>>> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
>>> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
>>> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
>>> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
>>> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
>>> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
>>> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
>>> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
>>> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
>>> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
>>> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
>>> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>>>
>>> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
>>> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
>>> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
>>> nailed it. 
>>>
>>> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
>>> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
>>> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
>>> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
>>> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
>>> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
>>> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
>>> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
>>> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
>>> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
>>> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
>>> become second nature. 
>>>
>>> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
>>> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
>>> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
>>> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
>>> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
>>> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
>>> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
>>> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
>>> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
>>> bike heaven. 
>>>
>>> Gratefully, 
>>> Matt in Chicago
>>> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>>>
>>

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[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-10-10 Thread Matt Fitzgerald
[image: IMG_4215.PNG]
Thanks for the kind words, all! J and Leah, here is a photo of the 
drivetrain. 
On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 6:55:35 PM UTC-5 Joe Bernard wrote:

> I don't know if I could live with no front brake lever to grab in an 
> emergency stop - what if I forget it's coaster brake only??! - but this is 
> SO cool. I love the "only what you need and nothing more" look and 
> vibe..nice work, Matt! 
>
> On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 11:54:55 AM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald 
> wrote:
>
>> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
>> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
>> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
>> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
>> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
>> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
>> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
>> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
>> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
>> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
>> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
>> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
>> simplicity. 
>>
>> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
>> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
>> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
>> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
>> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
>> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
>> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
>> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
>> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
>> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
>> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
>> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>>
>> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
>> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
>> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
>> nailed it. 
>>
>> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
>> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
>> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
>> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
>> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
>> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
>> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
>> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
>> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
>> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
>> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
>> become second nature. 
>>
>> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
>> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
>> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
>> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
>> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
>> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
>> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
>> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
>> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
>> bike heaven. 
>>
>> Gratefully, 
>> Matt in Chicago
>> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>>
>

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[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-09-28 Thread Joe Bernard
I don't know if I could live with no front brake lever to grab in an 
emergency stop - what if I forget it's coaster brake only??! - but this is 
SO cool. I love the "only what you need and nothing more" look and 
vibe..nice work, Matt! 

On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 11:54:55 AM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald wrote:

> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
> simplicity. 
>
> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>
> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
> nailed it. 
>
> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
> become second nature. 
>
> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
> bike heaven. 
>
> Gratefully, 
> Matt in Chicago
> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>

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[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-09-28 Thread Bicycle Belle Ding Ding!
Matt, what a treat to read your story and see the bike. (I will echo the 
call for more photos of the Susie, please.) I haven’t seen a Susie like 
this one, ever, and I really like its quirkiness. I was especially 
delighted to read of the Michigan connection - I moved to Michigan in 2021 
and have so enjoyed riding here. A bunch of Rivendell riders will gather 
for a ride in Grand Rapids October 15th, if you can join us with your 
Susie. PM me if you want the details. 

I know what it is to get the bike you want exactly, and the childhood 
connection is especially meaningful. Thank you for an enjoyable read, and I 
hope I get to see your bike in person next month!
Leah

On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 2:54:55 PM UTC-4 Matt Fitzgerald wrote:

> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
> simplicity. 
>
> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>
> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
> nailed it. 
>
> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
> become second nature. 
>
> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
> bike heaven. 
>
> Gratefully, 
> Matt in Chicago
> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>

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[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-09-28 Thread J Imler
Requesting more drivetrain pics.
On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 11:54:55 AM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald wrote:

> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
> simplicity. 
>
> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>
> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
> nailed it. 
>
> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
> become second nature. 
>
> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
> bike heaven. 
>
> Gratefully, 
> Matt in Chicago
> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>

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[RBW] Re: my new 2 speed coaster brake Susie

2022-09-28 Thread Paul Choi
Bike looks simple and fun. Appreciate the backstory on the Sting Ray. I 
have fond memories of riding my orange Raleigh Chopper down the street of 
East Lansing MI in 1978. I then switched to BMX racing with a gold FMF 
bike. Now I ride a Rosco. 
Good times! Enjoy the new Riv. Such a great time to be able to ride these 
great bikes. 

On Wednesday, September 28, 2022 at 11:54:55 AM UTC-7 Matt Fitzgerald wrote:

> I've had my new Susie since June, but ordered the frame months earlier. 
> This gave me a lot of time to consider the dream setup, and time to sell 
> the Clem H I'd been riding for a couple of years. I loved that bike, but it 
> was a bit too much of a Lincoln Town Car to qualify as the dream bike I 
> dreamt of. This one fits the bill. It is a XL Susie in the green color. As 
> I purchased parts, I realized I was pursuing an idealized version of my 
> childhood bike. I grew up in the 1970's in northern michigan, riding a 
> green Schwinn sting ray that my father refashioned into a "bmx" when that 
> craze hit. The bike had a wild frame, fat tires, a coaster brake, single 
> speed, with black handlebars, a black saddle, and green pedals. As an 
> adult, my favorite (stolen) bike had been a Surly Cross Check set up as a 
> single speed, with rim brakes and north road bars. I loved that bike's 
> simplicity. 
>
> I'd never built a bike up from the frame before buying the Susie, but 
> youtube is my friend. While waiting on the frame, I bought a 2 speed 
> kickback sturmey archer hub, a salsa gordo front wheel with a black rim and 
> shimano dynamo hub, a black sugino RD2 crankset, a black seatpost, cheap 
> green oversized mb pedals, a black quill stem, a dynamo headlight, black 
> handlebar tape, and chunky black grips. All of these items were used but 
> the rear hub. I had a brooks cambium saddle, Surly ET tires, and an older 
> Nitto albatross handlebar on a bike I put together for my son. I switched 
> these out for stuff in our garage and he hasn't yet complained. The photo 
> below is of the bike with the Salsa sparrow handlebars I switched out for 
> the nittos. When the rear hub arrived, I took it to the wonderful folks at 
> Boulevard Bikes (I live in Chicago) and asked them to build a rear wheel. 
>
> And then, when the frame was delivered I realized how difficult it is to 
> set up a bike with vertical dropouts as a single speed! I bought a couple 
> of chains, a chain tool, and a pile of rear cogs. After 500,000 attempts, I 
> nailed it. 
>
> My first ride was from our place on the north side, down through various 
> paths in Lincoln Park, to State Street in the Gold Coast, into the loop, 
> then South on Michigan to Hyde Park, and back home along the Lakefront. It 
> was a gorgeous evening in mid-June, warm but not hot. The bike took me 
> straight back to childhood. It was geared way too high, so each turn of the 
> pedals rushed me forward. I've been riding a coaster brake Raleigh 20 for 
> years, and am very comfortable with that setup. For city riding, it 
> requires focus and a lot of anticipation, which are good practices 
> regardless of how you stop. The 2 speed kickback wasn't immediately 
> intuitive, but I immediately loved both the limitation it imposes, and the 
> option it provides. After a few months, switching between the two gears has 
> become second nature. 
>
> We spent a month up in Michigan this summer. Before leaving, I took the 
> bike back to Boulevard to make sure I hadn't done anything that would kill 
> me. I asked them to switch the gearing, anticipating a lot of hills in 
> Michigan. It didn't take them nearly as long as it took me, and they set up 
> a perfect gear ratio. I rode a mix of pavement, dirt roads and forest 
> trails daily, and grew to love the bike more with each ride. It is 
> comfortable and aggressive, quite relaxed, but able to burst and leap. The 
> hills made my legs stronger. I'll probably switch to a more conventional 
> setup with rim brakes and a rear derailer eventually, but for now, I'm in 
> bike heaven. 
>
> Gratefully, 
> Matt in Chicago
> [image: IMG_1873.JPG]
>

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