my friend was deadset on an atlantis and when i took him to rivendell, he
test drove pretty much everything they had. at the end he was like, "i
really wanted to like the atlantis the most but man when i was on that
hunqapillar i felt i could take it anywhere" or something like that. i have
a
adios Atlantis, MB-1...
On Tuesday, May 30, 2017 at 5:36:20 PM UTC-7, Davey Two Shoes wrote:
>
> Well thats it then. You need to get a Hunq
>
> On Tuesday, May 30, 2017 at 1:20:02 AM UTC-4, Dylan Green pdx wrote:
>>
>> I appreciate the input! I am downsizing as well, and while yeah they'll
>> do
Well thats it then. You need to get a Hunq
On Tuesday, May 30, 2017 at 1:20:02 AM UTC-4, Dylan Green pdx wrote:
>
> I appreciate the input! I am downsizing as well, and while yeah they'll do
> basically the same thing, there was a certain feeling I had when I was
> riding the Hunq through the
I appreciate the input! I am downsizing as well, and while yeah they'll do
basically the same thing, there was a certain feeling I had when I was
riding the Hunq through the California hills.
On Monday, May 29, 2017 at 10:03:22 AM UTC-7, drew wrote:
>
> I tend to agree. A 58 Atlantis and a
Whichever you build up first, practice contentment for three years. You'll
be delighted you did!
With abandon,
Patrick
On Monday, May 29, 2017 at 1:57:33 PM UTC-6, dougP wrote:
>
> While I agree in general with the view that the grass is always greener,
> the answer depends somewhat on your
While I agree in general with the view that the grass is always greener,
the answer depends somewhat on your intended use. The 95% overlap may be
true. There are a few list members who have one of each so they'd be a
good source of info. IIRC, the Hunq takes fatter tires, if maximizing tire
I tend to agree. A 58 Atlantis and a 54/700c hunq are gonna do about 95% of the
same work.
That being said, I am currently pondering spacially and financially downsizing
from a hunq and a Sam and a vintage trek, to a single 650b Atlantis. Logic says
to just keep the hunq and sell the
You just bought a great bike, and probably at a great price. The ego wants
wanting more than it wants having. Proof: as soon as we get something we
start wanting something else. Joy isn't something we get out of things;
it's something we put into things. In-joy the great bike that you have.