Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-10-02 Thread grrlyrida
I knew once you rode one, you would be sold. The same thing happened to me 
when I rode a Betty Foy for the first time. There was no way I could stay 
satisfied with my 2006 2200 Aluminum/carbon Trek. I wanted 40's on my bike, 
so I went with a custom mixte. I've had it for a year now and I've ridden 
the Trek one time. It's now for sell. I also have a 85 Bridgestone which 
I've been using like a cargo bike and as a bike I'll lock up in downtown 
LA. I put a porteur rack on it and have transported everything for Xmas 
trees to DVR's on it. Maybe you can use the Schwinn as a cargo or grocery 
getter.

On Sunday, September 28, 2014 6:12:28 PM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 Thanks again for posting the Ebay Sam frame offer and for everyone's 
 thoughtful help. Yesterday afternoon I went to the seller's house. He 
 showed me his stable, complete with the frame for sale and his three built 
 up Sams. They were all 56cm double TT versions and a little tall for me, so 
 I think the 55cm will be perfect. They rode like a dream, and the quality 
 and craftsmanship were outstanding. I was surprised by how thin and light 
 the frame was. I never would have guessed from the ride - the bike feels 
 sturdy but yielding. You guys know that already though. The point is, I'm 
 convinced this is the bike for me. I will call them this week to discuss 
 sizing and dimensions. Any final words of advice?

 On Thursday, September 25, 2014 11:30:48 AM UTC-4, Conway Bennett wrote:

 You can always buy it, and if you like it, but absolutely want it new or 
 the 55 cm 1TT just resell it.  You should be able to move it quick and get 
 your money back.  But for the price of a repaint, which isn't necessary 
 but'll essentially make it new, you'll come out of this for less than a new 
 Sam+shipping with little liability.   

 I'd buy it and leave it alone though.  Then you won't agonize over that 
 first scratch.  I really like the green and the non creamed headtube.  I 
 find it understated and the lugwork speaks for itself.  You won't regret 
 the auxiliary TT either. 


 Fair winds, 

 Captain Conway Bennett 

  On Sep 25, 2014, at 9:04 AM, Ty Jeske tyj...@gmail.com wrote: 
  
  @conway, 
  Thanks! The Sam you saw on EBay is actually right here in Tampa. I sent 
 him a message to see if I can see it first. 
  
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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-30 Thread Ty Jeske
Thanks again for posting the Ebay Sam frame offer and for everyone's 
thoughtful help. Yesterday afternoon I went to the seller's house. He 
showed me his stable, complete with the frame for sale and his three built 
up Sams. They were all 56cm double TT versions and a little tall for me, so 
I think the 55cm will be perfect. They rode like a dream, and the quality 
and craftsmanship were outstanding. I was surprised by how thin and light 
the frame was. I never would have guessed from the ride - the bike feels 
sturdy but yielding. You guys know that already though. The point is, I'm 
convinced this is the bike for me. I will call them this week to discuss 
sizing and dimensions. Any final words of advice?

On Thursday, September 25, 2014 11:30:48 AM UTC-4, Conway Bennett wrote:

 You can always buy it, and if you like it, but absolutely want it new or 
 the 55 cm 1TT just resell it.  You should be able to move it quick and get 
 your money back.  But for the price of a repaint, which isn't necessary 
 but'll essentially make it new, you'll come out of this for less than a new 
 Sam+shipping with little liability.   

 I'd buy it and leave it alone though.  Then you won't agonize over that 
 first scratch.  I really like the green and the non creamed headtube.  I 
 find it understated and the lugwork speaks for itself.  You won't regret 
 the auxiliary TT either. 


 Fair winds, 

 Captain Conway Bennett 

  On Sep 25, 2014, at 9:04 AM, Ty Jeske tyj...@gmail.com javascript: 
 wrote: 
  
  @conway, 
  Thanks! The Sam you saw on EBay is actually right here in Tampa. I sent 
 him a message to see if I can see it first. 
  
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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread Conway Bennett
This thread was interesting at first but got way off topic BUT there is a green 
56 cm Sam on Ebay and it's in FL.  One thing to glean from this thread is that 
there is not one bike to rule them all.  Buy ittry itsell it.


FW,

CBB

Sam rider who just bought a Quickbeam that will replace his Cross Check that 
was supposed to be the last bike he'd ever buy FIVE bikes ago.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
Conway has a point. I know a guy who bought a Raleigh International new in 1972 
and 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
If you like quill stems, then by all means

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
I think a person who's relatively new to bikes should understand that

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread Ty Jeske
@conway,
Thanks! The Sam you saw on EBay is actually right here in Tampa. I sent him a 
message to see if I can see it first. 

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-25 Thread captainconwaybennett
You can always buy it, and if you like it, but absolutely want it new or the 55 
cm 1TT just resell it.  You should be able to move it quick and get your money 
back.  But for the price of a repaint, which isn't necessary but'll essentially 
make it new, you'll come out of this for less than a new Sam+shipping with 
little liability.  

I'd buy it and leave it alone though.  Then you won't agonize over that first 
scratch.  I really like the green and the non creamed headtube.  I find it 
understated and the lugwork speaks for itself.  You won't regret the auxiliary 
TT either.


Fair winds,

Captain Conway Bennett

 On Sep 25, 2014, at 9:04 AM, Ty Jeske tyje...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 @conway,
 Thanks! The Sam you saw on EBay is actually right here in Tampa. I sent him a 
 message to see if I can see it first. 
 
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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread 'hangtownmatt' via RBW Owners Bunch
Here's my story:

In March 2012, I bought myself a Sam Hillborne frameset.  I  wasn't even in 
the market! My son and daughter were competing in a swim meet at UC 
Berkley, and my wife and I took a little side trip to Walnut Creek during 
some downtime. She was interested in their mixte; the Betty Foy. We didn't 
have a lot of time but the staff took the appropriate measurements and put 
her on the Betty and myself, just for kicks, on the A. Homer Hilsen. Wild 
horses couldn't drag me to a double top tubed Hillborne at that time. 
Everything felt great. The service was terrific and there was absolutely 
zero pressure to buy. Unfortunately, we just didn't have enough time to 
fully test ride the bikes. 

A little background on myself. I'm a Classic  Vintage type. My three rides 
at the time were a 1983 Nishiki Sport, a 1986 Bianchi Squadra and a 1996 
Trek 950 rigid MTB. All three had been upgraded and modified in the 
Rivendell fashion. In other words comfortable. The handlebars on each at 
seat level. I had absolutely no need for another bike. But, for the last 
couple years I was seriously test riding bikes whenever the opportunity 
presented itself. And with my kids being competitive swimmers, we were on 
the road a lot, and I had plenty of opportunities. I test rode a lot of 
bikes in the all-rounder category (ex. Surly CC, Surly LHT in both 26 and 
700c, Bianchi Velope, Raliegh's and many others), but nothing fit better or 
rode better than what I already had.  I figured that if I ever purchased 
another bicycle it would have to be a custom to realized any perceivable 
gains.

Shortly after our first trip to Rivendell we had a weekend where both kids 
were out of town at the same time! We jumped on this opportunity and made 
an appointment with Rivendell for an extended test ride. I left it up to 
Rivendell whether they set me up with a Hilsen or a Hillborne, and told 
them right up front I wasn't in the market. We were there for the Betty 
Foy, and I was just along for another test ride opportunity. When we 
arrived everything was set up and ready to go. Grant remeasured both of us 
again to be sure, but the previous measurements were right on.

To make a long story short, we went on a 4-hour test ride! At the end of it 
all we came home with a Betty Foy, a double top tubed green Sam Hillborne, 
and a couple smiles ear-to-ear. I think what people seem to miss is that 
the value of product is sometimes greater than the sum of its parts. Yes, 
there are less expensive alternatives, but I had never felt more 
comfortable and confident on a bike. 

I've been riding the Hillborne for 2.5 years now and have just surpassed 
10,000 miles.  I've only ridden my Bianchi Squadra once since acquiring the 
Hillborne and all the others are just hanging on hooks in the garage.  
Yesterday I did a 55 mile RT commute and am enjoying the Hillborne as much 
today as I did on new bike day.  Maybe even more because I've really got it 
dialed in.

My philosophy on new bike purchases is that you must test ride before 
purchasing.  My only exception to this rule would be replacing a bicycle 
that has been destroyed in a crash with the same exact model.  My 
philosophy regarding a cost comparison between something like a Surly CC 
and a Rivendell Sam Hillborne goes like this:  Back in 2012 the Surly Cross 
Check frame\fork cost $450. The Sam Hillborne frame\fork cost $1,050. 
Building up both bikes with the same parts the Hillbornewould onlybe $600 
more; the difference being the cost of the frame sets. Life is pretty 
short.  Be sure to get the bicycle that fits and has the features you 
need.  After that everything else falls into place.  Nothing is more 
expensive than trying to save a few bucks on the initial purchase and than 
trying to rectify fit and features.

Just my thoughts.

Matt 

On Monday, September 22, 2014 3:02:14 AM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm 

[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread cyclotour...@gmail.com
Great story, Matt! I imagine there are more than a few Just going for a 
test-ride folks that have left Walnut Creek with a new bike!

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 9:23:38 AM UTC-7, hangtownmatt wrote:

 Here's my story:

 In March 2012, I bought myself a Sam Hillborne frameset.  I  wasn't even 
 in the market! My son and daughter were competing in a swim meet at UC 
 Berkley, and my wife and I took a little side trip to Walnut Creek during 
 some downtime. She was interested in their mixte; the Betty Foy. We didn't 
 have a lot of time but the staff took the appropriate measurements and put 
 her on the Betty and myself, just for kicks, on the A. Homer Hilsen. Wild 
 horses couldn't drag me to a double top tubed Hillborne at that time. 
 Everything felt great. The service was terrific and there was absolutely 
 zero pressure to buy. Unfortunately, we just didn't have enough time to 
 fully test ride the bikes. 

 A little background on myself. I'm a Classic  Vintage type. My three 
 rides at the time were a 1983 Nishiki Sport, a 1986 Bianchi Squadra and a 
 1996 Trek 950 rigid MTB. All three had been upgraded and modified in the 
 Rivendell fashion. In other words comfortable. The handlebars on each at 
 seat level. I had absolutely no need for another bike. But, for the last 
 couple years I was seriously test riding bikes whenever the opportunity 
 presented itself. And with my kids being competitive swimmers, we were on 
 the road a lot, and I had plenty of opportunities. I test rode a lot of 
 bikes in the all-rounder category (ex. Surly CC, Surly LHT in both 26 and 
 700c, Bianchi Velope, Raliegh's and many others), but nothing fit better or 
 rode better than what I already had.  I figured that if I ever purchased 
 another bicycle it would have to be a custom to realized any perceivable 
 gains.

 Shortly after our first trip to Rivendell we had a weekend where both kids 
 were out of town at the same time! We jumped on this opportunity and made 
 an appointment with Rivendell for an extended test ride. I left it up to 
 Rivendell whether they set me up with a Hilsen or a Hillborne, and told 
 them right up front I wasn't in the market. We were there for the Betty 
 Foy, and I was just along for another test ride opportunity. When we 
 arrived everything was set up and ready to go. Grant remeasured both of us 
 again to be sure, but the previous measurements were right on.

 To make a long story short, we went on a 4-hour test ride! At the end of 
 it all we came home with a Betty Foy, a double top tubed green Sam 
 Hillborne, and a couple smiles ear-to-ear. I think what people seem to 
 miss is that the value of product is sometimes greater than the sum of its 
 parts. Yes, there are less expensive alternatives, but I had never felt 
 more comfortable and confident on a bike. 

 I've been riding the Hillborne for 2.5 years now and have just surpassed 
 10,000 miles.  I've only ridden my Bianchi Squadra once since acquiring the 
 Hillborne and all the others are just hanging on hooks in the garage.  
 Yesterday I did a 55 mile RT commute and am enjoying the Hillborne as much 
 today as I did on new bike day.  Maybe even more because I've really got it 
 dialed in.

 My philosophy on new bike purchases is that you must test ride before 
 purchasing.  My only exception to this rule would be replacing a bicycle 
 that has been destroyed in a crash with the same exact model.  My 
 philosophy regarding a cost comparison between something like a Surly CC 
 and a Rivendell Sam Hillborne goes like this:  Back in 2012 the Surly Cross 
 Check frame\fork cost $450. The Sam Hillborne frame\fork cost $1,050. 
 Building up both bikes with the same parts the Hillbornewould onlybe $600 
 more; the difference being the cost of the frame sets. Life is pretty 
 short.  Be sure to get the bicycle that fits and has the features you 
 need.  After that everything else falls into place.  Nothing is more 
 expensive than trying to save a few bucks on the initial purchase and than 
 trying to rectify fit and features.

 Just my thoughts.

 Matt 

 On Monday, September 22, 2014 3:02:14 AM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 

[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
I always thought the Cross-check was probably more comparable to the Sam, 
but the LHT isn't far off. All three are smartly designed and versatile. 
All three can be lifetime bikes, if you want them to be. I've extensively 
ridden a Disc Trucker, Cross-check, Atlantis, Romulus, and a few test miles 
on a Sam. There isn't anything magical about the intrinsic ride quality of 
the Sam compared to the two Surly models I mentioned, but it does have an 
extra measure of cosmetic flair, which may or may not be worth the extra 
cost and wait, depending on your point of view. Despite the lower price of 
the Surly, I don't believe there's any sacrifice of quality, which is 
sometimes implied in any Surly vs Riv discussion. Surly's quality control 
is the best of any company I've dealt with - they almost never make 
mistakes.

Here are a few technical details to consider. The Riv uses a 1 quill stem, 
which has some advantage for quickly raising and lowering the bar, but the 
quill stems currently available don't have a 31.8 clamp option. Since 
25.4/26.0 handlebars are getting fewer everyday, and 31.8 is effectively 
standard now, you'll be opting out of some great handlebar options with a 
standard quill stem (there are workarounds to solve this problem, but it's 
better to not have the problem in the first place, IMO). The Surly frames 
come with a threadless steerer, which makes switching to different bars 
much easier/cheaper. In general, threaded steerers and quill stems are 
regarded as outdated in the bicycle industry, and few manufacturers are 
supporting that design anymore. That makes the Surly somewhat more 
future-proof in regard to headsets, stems, and handlebars. I see the 
quill stems as a fairly major inconvenience, but, of course, the quill 
stems have an aesthetic effect that some people prefer, and I can't argue 
that. A second consideration is how you plan to accessorize the bike. Rivs 
tend to have rack braze-ons designed around the Nitto racks that they sell, 
while Surly frames have braze-ons designed around more universal rack 
designs. The rack thing shouldn't be a deal-breaker, because many racks 
will fit on the back of a Riv, but it does get difficult if you want, say, 
a Tubus low-rider rack on the fork of a Riv.



On Monday, September 22, 2014 5:02:14 AM UTC-5, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Will
+1.

To which I add:

Riding seasons vary. In WI, for example, unless you wish to install studded 
tires, the season ends in early December, returns late March. Your body 
looses elasticity during the off-season. So the first 2-3 weeks in March 
you need to raise the bars and lower the seat. Not much, but a little. Then 
as your riding fitness returns, the seat returns to last year's level, and 
the bars drop, just a bit. This fine tuning matches your body's increasing 
limberness. 

I also notice that I change my cockpit slightly depending on the 
temperature. In summer, shorts and sandals (and lots of mileage) make it 
easy and desireable to stretch out. In late fall when it's cold, wearing 
bulky clothes and winter shoes, reduce mobility, and a somewhat shorter, 
more upright, cockpit is fits better. 

For me, these are always modest adjustments: ~1 cm here or there. But 
feeling dialed in is nice, particularly when you can do it in less than a 
minute. Quills make this possible. 
 



On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 1:22:03 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

  On 09/24/2014 01:10 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
  
 I always thought the Cross-check was probably more comparable to the Sam, 
 but the LHT isn't far off. All three are smartly designed and versatile. 
 All three can be lifetime bikes, if you want them to be. I've extensively 
 ridden a Disc Trucker, Cross-check, Atlantis, Romulus, and a few test miles 
 on a Sam. There isn't anything magical about the intrinsic ride quality of 
 the Sam compared to the two Surly models I mentioned, but it does have an 
 extra measure of cosmetic flair, which may or may not be worth the extra 
 cost and wait, depending on your point of view. Despite the lower price of 
 the Surly, I don't believe there's any sacrifice of quality, which is 
 sometimes implied in any Surly vs Riv discussion. Surly's quality control 
 is the best of any company I've dealt with - they almost never make 
 mistakes.

 Here are a few technical details to consider. The Riv uses a 1 quill 
 stem, which has some advantage for quickly raising and lowering the bar, 
 but the quill stems currently available don't have a 31.8 clamp option. 
 Since 25.4/26.0 handlebars are getting fewer everyday, and 31.8 is 
 effectively standard now, you'll be opting out of some great handlebar 
 options with a standard quill stem (there are workarounds to solve this 
 problem, but it's better to not have the problem in the first place, IMO). 
 The Surly frames come with a threadless steerer, which makes switching to 
 different bars much easier/cheaper. In general, threaded steerers and quill 
 stems are regarded as outdated in the bicycle industry, and few 
 manufacturers are supporting that design anymore. That makes the Surly 
 somewhat more future-proof in regard to headsets, stems, and handlebars. 
 I see the quill stems as a fairly major inconvenience, but, of course, the 
 quill stems have an aesthetic effect that some people prefer, and I can't 
 argue that. A second consideration is how you plan to accessorize the bike. 
 Rivs tend to have rack braze-ons designed around the Nitto racks that they 
 sell, while Surly frames have braze-ons designed around more universal rack 
 designs. The rack thing shouldn't be a deal-breaker, because many racks 
 will fit on the back of a Riv, but it does get difficult if you want, say, 
 a Tubus low-rider rack on the fork of a Riv.

  
 In my personal experience, the biggest issue regarding a lifetime 
 bicycle is the ability to adjust your position to physiological changes 
 that occur with time.  Most significant of these, certainly for me and 
 probably for most, has been the need to raise the handlebar position.  In 
 my 30s, I had a 5 drop.  In my 50s, 5cm below the saddle was fine.  By the 
 time I turned 60, as mile 80 rolled around I'd feel as though a railroad 
 spike had been hammered down into the back of my neck, a problem that was 
 solved by raising the bars to seat height.

 Step 1 with threadless is to cut the steerer.  And once you have done 
 that, there is no way to make it longer again.   Yes, you could go for more 
 of an up-angle, but unless you started out with a -17 (and odds are you 
 actually started out with an up-angled stem already) you're very limited in 
 how much higher you can go.  

 With a quill stem you can not only raise the bars, if necessary you can 
 substitute a stem with a longer quill.  

 Let's take this bike as a case in point.



 It was originally built for a well known New England randonneur in 1991, 
 for the 100th anniversary PBP.  Here's how he had it set up when I bought 
 it in 2002:



 Not quite slammed, but the stem is easily several inches lower than I 
 could use.  Switching from a standard quill length to a Technomic made 
 this frame usable for me.  If it had been threadless, there would have been 
 no way on earth I could have ridden this bike.   Which would have been a 
 terrible shame, 

Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Bill Lindsay
What you need to worry about is future-proofing your ability to fit on the 
bike long term.  And there, threadless falls on its face.

I disagree.  In the special case of 1 threadless with a steel steerer, no 
matter how short you happened to cut the steerer, you can always get 
equivalent adjustability to a quill stem..by having the steerer 
threaded and converting to a quill stem.  ;-)

Bill watching-the-bars-rise-as-the-years-roll-by Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes often 
change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that a new 
Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a Nitto quill 
stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, which a lot of people 
do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an issue for many years.

I would strongly suggest NOT threading a threadless fork. It seems very 
unsafe to me

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 1:22:03 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

  On 09/24/2014 01:10 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
  
 I always thought the Cross-check was probably more comparable to the Sam, 
 but the LHT isn't far off. All three are smartly designed and versatile. 
 All three can be lifetime bikes, if you want them to be. I've extensively 
 ridden a Disc Trucker, Cross-check, Atlantis, Romulus, and a few test miles 
 on a Sam. There isn't anything magical about the intrinsic ride quality of 
 the Sam compared to the two Surly models I mentioned, but it does have an 
 extra measure of cosmetic flair, which may or may not be worth the extra 
 cost and wait, depending on your point of view. Despite the lower price of 
 the Surly, I don't believe there's any sacrifice of quality, which is 
 sometimes implied in any Surly vs Riv discussion. Surly's quality control 
 is the best of any company I've dealt with - they almost never make 
 mistakes.

 Here are a few technical details to consider. The Riv uses a 1 quill 
 stem, which has some advantage for quickly raising and lowering the bar, 
 but the quill stems currently available don't have a 31.8 clamp option. 
 Since 25.4/26.0 handlebars are getting fewer everyday, and 31.8 is 
 effectively standard now, you'll be opting out of some great handlebar 
 options with a standard quill stem (there are workarounds to solve this 
 problem, but it's better to not have the problem in the first place, IMO). 
 The Surly frames come with a threadless steerer, which makes switching to 
 different bars much easier/cheaper. In general, threaded steerers and quill 
 stems are regarded as outdated in the bicycle industry, and few 
 manufacturers are supporting that design anymore. That makes the Surly 
 somewhat more future-proof in regard to headsets, stems, and handlebars. 
 I see the quill stems as a fairly major inconvenience, but, of course, the 
 quill stems have an aesthetic effect that some people prefer, and I can't 
 argue that. A second consideration is how you plan to accessorize the bike. 
 Rivs tend to have rack braze-ons designed around the Nitto racks that they 
 sell, while Surly frames have braze-ons designed around more universal rack 
 designs. The rack thing shouldn't be a deal-breaker, because many racks 
 will fit on the back of a Riv, but it does get difficult if you want, say, 
 a Tubus low-rider rack on the fork of a Riv.

  
 In my personal experience, the biggest issue regarding a lifetime 
 bicycle is the ability to adjust your position to physiological changes 
 that occur with time.  Most significant of these, certainly for me and 
 probably for most, has been the need to raise the handlebar position.  In 
 my 30s, I had a 5 drop.  In my 50s, 5cm below the saddle was fine.  By the 
 time I turned 60, as mile 80 rolled around I'd feel as though a railroad 
 spike had been hammered down into the back of my neck, a problem that was 
 solved by raising the bars to seat height.

 Step 1 with threadless is to cut the steerer.  And once you have done 
 that, there is no way to make it longer again.   Yes, you could go for more 
 of an up-angle, but unless you started out with a -17 (and odds are you 
 actually started out with an up-angled stem already) you're very limited in 
 how much higher you can go.  

 With a quill stem you can not only raise the bars, if necessary you can 
 substitute a stem with a longer quill.  

 Let's take this bike as a case in point.



 It was originally built for a well known New England randonneur in 1991, 
 for the 100th anniversary PBP.  Here's how he had it set up when I bought 
 it in 2002:



 Not quite slammed, but the stem is easily several inches lower than I 
 could use.  Switching from a standard quill length to a Technomic made 
 this frame usable for me.  If it had been threadless, there would have been 
 no way on earth I could have ridden this bike.   Which would have been a 
 terrible shame, because I love this bike.

 I think worrying about the future availability of 25.4 or 26.0 handlebars, 
 quill stems and threaded headsets is worrying about the wrong thing.  There 
 are plenty of bars, stems and headsets and I'm confident there will 
 continue to be.  What you need to worry about is future-proofing your 
 ability to fit on the bike long term.  And there, threadless falls on its 
 face.





  

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/24/2014 04:23 PM, Joe Broach wrote:


It's worth noting that you can quick adjust the newfangled stems' 
height, too, if you use Sheldon's method and clamp a cable hanger or 
seatpost collar around the steerer below the stem. That holds the 
headset adjustment when you remove the stem and shuffle spacers 
around. I go even further afield when I'm monkeying with fit and 
remove the spacers entirely, then it's truly as simple as a quill 
stem, if not as tidy looking.




Yes, but those are tiny adjustments.  They address Will's seasonal 
tweaks, yes, but don't address the long-term changes I was alluding to.



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/24/2014 04:19 PM, Bill Lindsay wrote:


I disagree.  In the special case of 1 threadless with a steel 
steerer, no matter how short you happened to cut the steerer, you can 
always get equivalent adjustability to a quill stem..by having the 
steerer threaded and converting to a quill stem.  ;-)




A very special case indeed...



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
Of course, if someone is devoted to quill stems, then I would expect that 
person to be devoted to traditional handlebar designs, to the exclusion 
of newer designs. I personally think the Jones Loop bar is the best 
all-around bar for my riding. I can't do that with a quill stem. There are 
a lot more 31.8 bars than there are 26.0 bars nowadays. I prefer to have 
the option rather than be locked in to a standard that appears to be dying, 
or at least dwindling.

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:36:36 PM UTC-5, Jim Thill - Hiawatha 
Cyclery wrote:

 For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes 
 often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that a 
 new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a Nitto quill 
 stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, which a lot of people 
 do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an issue for many years.

 I would strongly suggest NOT threading a threadless fork. It seems very 
 unsafe to me

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 1:22:03 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

  On 09/24/2014 01:10 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
  
 I always thought the Cross-check was probably more comparable to the Sam, 
 but the LHT isn't far off. All three are smartly designed and versatile. 
 All three can be lifetime bikes, if you want them to be. I've extensively 
 ridden a Disc Trucker, Cross-check, Atlantis, Romulus, and a few test miles 
 on a Sam. There isn't anything magical about the intrinsic ride quality of 
 the Sam compared to the two Surly models I mentioned, but it does have an 
 extra measure of cosmetic flair, which may or may not be worth the extra 
 cost and wait, depending on your point of view. Despite the lower price of 
 the Surly, I don't believe there's any sacrifice of quality, which is 
 sometimes implied in any Surly vs Riv discussion. Surly's quality control 
 is the best of any company I've dealt with - they almost never make 
 mistakes.

 Here are a few technical details to consider. The Riv uses a 1 quill 
 stem, which has some advantage for quickly raising and lowering the bar, 
 but the quill stems currently available don't have a 31.8 clamp option. 
 Since 25.4/26.0 handlebars are getting fewer everyday, and 31.8 is 
 effectively standard now, you'll be opting out of some great handlebar 
 options with a standard quill stem (there are workarounds to solve this 
 problem, but it's better to not have the problem in the first place, IMO). 
 The Surly frames come with a threadless steerer, which makes switching to 
 different bars much easier/cheaper. In general, threaded steerers and quill 
 stems are regarded as outdated in the bicycle industry, and few 
 manufacturers are supporting that design anymore. That makes the Surly 
 somewhat more future-proof in regard to headsets, stems, and handlebars. 
 I see the quill stems as a fairly major inconvenience, but, of course, the 
 quill stems have an aesthetic effect that some people prefer, and I can't 
 argue that. A second consideration is how you plan to accessorize the bike. 
 Rivs tend to have rack braze-ons designed around the Nitto racks that they 
 sell, while Surly frames have braze-ons designed around more universal rack 
 designs. The rack thing shouldn't be a deal-breaker, because many racks 
 will fit on the back of a Riv, but it does get difficult if you want, say, 
 a Tubus low-rider rack on the fork of a Riv.

  
 In my personal experience, the biggest issue regarding a lifetime 
 bicycle is the ability to adjust your position to physiological changes 
 that occur with time.  Most significant of these, certainly for me and 
 probably for most, has been the need to raise the handlebar position.  In 
 my 30s, I had a 5 drop.  In my 50s, 5cm below the saddle was fine.  By the 
 time I turned 60, as mile 80 rolled around I'd feel as though a railroad 
 spike had been hammered down into the back of my neck, a problem that was 
 solved by raising the bars to seat height.

 Step 1 with threadless is to cut the steerer.  And once you have done 
 that, there is no way to make it longer again.   Yes, you could go for more 
 of an up-angle, but unless you started out with a -17 (and odds are you 
 actually started out with an up-angled stem already) you're very limited in 
 how much higher you can go.  

 With a quill stem you can not only raise the bars, if necessary you can 
 substitute a stem with a longer quill.  

 Let's take this bike as a case in point.



 It was originally built for a well known New England randonneur in 1991, 
 for the 100th anniversary PBP.  Here's how he had it set up when I bought 
 it in 2002:



 Not quite slammed, but the stem is easily several inches lower than I 
 could use.  Switching from a standard quill length to a Technomic made 
 this frame usable for me.  If it had been threadless, there would have been 
 no way on earth I could have ridden this bike.   Which would have been a 
 

Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/24/2014 04:36 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes 
often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that 
a new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a 
Nitto quill stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, 
which a lot of people do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an 
issue for many years.




And a new fork of comparable quality to a Nitto stem will cost over six 
times as much, about as much as a new frame of comparable (or even 
superior) quality to the Surly frame, based on what we learned in the 
discussion of the Lyon forks.  Basically, I interpret all this as saying 
frames made for threadless forks should be considered disposable.  And 
I'm sure there are plenty of production frames out there that 
legitimately could be considered disposable tools. Certainly the LHT 
qualifies.  But I don't consider a frame like my Longstaff a disposable 
tool.



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
I'm talking about replacing the stock for on a LHT with the same exact fork 
with a longer steerer, if aging or injury (or whatever) makes it desirable 
to have higher bars. Upgrading to a more magical fork is another matter. 
Robert Pirsig had a famous book about a guy who drove himself insane trying 
to define quality, so I won't try to argue whether or not a Surly fork is 
of the same quality as a Nitto stem. 

Interesting point about disposability. To an extent, you are right. This 
doesn't mean you're likely to wear out your LHT anytime soon, but let's say 
you wreck it somehow. No problem, for $400ish, you can get another one just 
like it tomorrow. For more precious frames, like your Longstaff or most 
Rivs, replacement will be more costly in terms of time and money.

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:51:33 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On 09/24/2014 04:36 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote: 
  For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes 
  often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that 
  a new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a 
  Nitto quill stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, 
  which a lot of people do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an 
  issue for many years. 
  

 And a new fork of comparable quality to a Nitto stem will cost over six 
 times as much, about as much as a new frame of comparable (or even 
 superior) quality to the Surly frame, based on what we learned in the 
 discussion of the Lyon forks.  Basically, I interpret all this as saying 
 frames made for threadless forks should be considered disposable.  And 
 I'm sure there are plenty of production frames out there that 
 legitimately could be considered disposable tools. Certainly the LHT 
 qualifies.  But I don't consider a frame like my Longstaff a disposable 
 tool. 




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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread cyclotour...@gmail.com
One of the things I LOVE about threadless forks/headsets is their 
adjustability. Swapping stems and adding spacers is a quick job, and so 
much more pleasant than unwrapping bars (and inevitably scratching them up 
pulling them through a quill stem). Threadless stems come in a plethora of 
sizes and are easy and cheap to swap out when I need one. Much more so than 
Nitto quill stems. The trick is leaving the stem long enough to have the 
option of putting on spacers and moving the stem up.

My $.02

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 2:01:44 PM UTC-7, Jim Thill - Hiawatha 
Cyclery wrote:

 I'm talking about replacing the stock for on a LHT with the same exact 
 fork with a longer steerer, if aging or injury (or whatever) makes it 
 desirable to have higher bars. Upgrading to a more magical fork is another 
 matter. Robert Pirsig had a famous book about a guy who drove himself 
 insane trying to define quality, so I won't try to argue whether or not a 
 Surly fork is of the same quality as a Nitto stem. 

 Interesting point about disposability. To an extent, you are right. This 
 doesn't mean you're likely to wear out your LHT anytime soon, but let's say 
 you wreck it somehow. No problem, for $400ish, you can get another one just 
 like it tomorrow. For more precious frames, like your Longstaff or most 
 Rivs, replacement will be more costly in terms of time and money.

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:51:33 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On 09/24/2014 04:36 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote: 
  For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes 
  often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that 
  a new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a 
  Nitto quill stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, 
  which a lot of people do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an 
  issue for many years. 
  

 And a new fork of comparable quality to a Nitto stem will cost over six 
 times as much, about as much as a new frame of comparable (or even 
 superior) quality to the Surly frame, based on what we learned in the 
 discussion of the Lyon forks.  Basically, I interpret all this as saying 
 frames made for threadless forks should be considered disposable.  And 
 I'm sure there are plenty of production frames out there that 
 legitimately could be considered disposable tools. Certainly the LHT 
 qualifies.  But I don't consider a frame like my Longstaff a disposable 
 tool. 




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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/24/2014 05:01 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
I'm talking about replacing the stock for on a LHT with the same exact 
fork with a longer steerer, if aging or injury (or whatever) makes it 
desirable to have higher bars. Upgrading to a more magical fork is 
another matter. Robert Pirsig had a famous book about a guy who drove 
himself insane trying to define quality, so I won't try to argue 
whether or not a Surly fork is of the same quality as a Nitto stem.


But you certainly wouldn't argue that a Surly fork is the same quality 
as a Jeff Lyon fork, would you?




Interesting point about disposability. To an extent, you are right. 
This doesn't mean you're likely to wear out your LHT anytime soon, but 
let's say you wreck it somehow. No problem, for $400ish, you can get 
another one just like it tomorrow. For more precious frames, like your 
Longstaff or most Rivs, replacement will be more costly in terms of 
time and money.


If even possible.  In the case of the Longstaff, impossible, since he 
passed away in 2003.


On the other hand, there's a lot to be said for using a disposable tool 
on a mission that is apt to be potentially hazardous or at a minimum is 
likely to lead to rough handling, and touring can certainly be that.   
I'd rather use my Kogswell P/R for touring than my MAP Randonneur, even 
though Mitch Pryor does make a lovely add-on low-rider rack that mounts 
to the front bag support for the current generation of Randonneur 
Project bikes.








On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:51:33 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

On 09/24/2014 04:36 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
 For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic.
Tastes
 often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point
out that
 a new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a
 Nitto quill stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning,
 which a lot of people do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an
 issue for many years.


And a new fork of comparable quality to a Nitto stem will cost
over six
times as much, about as much as a new frame of comparable (or even
superior) quality to the Surly frame, based on what we learned in the
discussion of the Lyon forks.  Basically, I interpret all this as
saying
frames made for threadless forks should be considered disposable.
 And
I'm sure there are plenty of production frames out there that
legitimately could be considered disposable tools. Certainly the LHT
qualifies.  But I don't consider a frame like my Longstaff a
disposable
tool.


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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Joe Bernard
I always purchase lifetime bikes. Problem is, I always sell them for 
different lifetime bikes ;)

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:53:04 PM UTC-7, Philip Williamson wrote:

 Leaving the steerer long isn't even a trick... Simply do nothing, and it 
 magically stays long!

 I have and love bikes with quill stems and with threadless stems. I've had 
 my Bontrager (threadless) for almost 14 years, so it's looking like a Buy 
 It For Life bike. And the fork may well be almost as irreplaceable as 
 Steve's Longstaff fork. 

 Stem adjustment is something I almost never do on most of my bikes. My 
 quill bikes, never, my newer threadless bike every few months as I dial 
 different elements. Bearing preload seems easy, once you learn to use your 
 body weight, and which thing (stem or star nut) to tighten first. Maybe I'm 
 missing some secret difficulty?

 Philip
 www.biketinker.com



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Bill Lindsay
'til death do us partor some other bike catches my eye

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 4:49:33 PM UTC-7, Joe Bernard wrote:

 I always purchase lifetime bikes. Problem is, I always sell them for 
 different lifetime bikes ;)

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:53:04 PM UTC-7, Philip Williamson wrote:

 Leaving the steerer long isn't even a trick... Simply do nothing, and it 
 magically stays long!

 I have and love bikes with quill stems and with threadless stems. I've 
 had my Bontrager (threadless) for almost 14 years, so it's looking like a 
 Buy It For Life bike. And the fork may well be almost as irreplaceable as 
 Steve's Longstaff fork. 

 Stem adjustment is something I almost never do on most of my bikes. My 
 quill bikes, never, my newer threadless bike every few months as I dial 
 different elements. Bearing preload seems easy, once you learn to use your 
 body weight, and which thing (stem or star nut) to tighten first. Maybe I'm 
 missing some secret difficulty?

 Philip
 www.biketinker.com



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Andrew Marchant-Shapiro
I used to buy bikes for my lifetime, until I realized that each and every 
bike I've had has ridden differently, and I've *liked* the difference.  Two 
years ago I lost a Trek 560 that I absolutely *loved.  *I was going to get 
a custom-built replacement, but that ultimately proved unworkable.  
Consequently, I bought a Velo Orange Randonneur.  I like it a lot.  I also 
liked my Kogswell D58--threadless stem and all.  I just didn't need it 
anymore.

This is all by way of saying that variety is a spice of life.

When my next bike gets shot out from under me--if--I will not worry about a 
perfect replacement.  Because whatever I find will be as good as, if not 
better, than the old bike.

Lifetime, schmifetime.  They're all tools, they're all bikes, and they're 
all meant to be ridden into the ground.  If you want one with fancy paint, 
that's your deal, and I can completely understand.

On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 7:54:32 PM UTC-4, Bill Lindsay wrote:

 'til death do us partor some other bike catches my eye

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 4:49:33 PM UTC-7, Joe Bernard wrote:

 I always purchase lifetime bikes. Problem is, I always sell them for 
 different lifetime bikes ;)

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:53:04 PM UTC-7, Philip Williamson 
 wrote:

 Leaving the steerer long isn't even a trick... Simply do nothing, and it 
 magically stays long!

 I have and love bikes with quill stems and with threadless stems. I've 
 had my Bontrager (threadless) for almost 14 years, so it's looking like a 
 Buy It For Life bike. And the fork may well be almost as irreplaceable as 
 Steve's Longstaff fork. 

 Stem adjustment is something I almost never do on most of my bikes. My 
 quill bikes, never, my newer threadless bike every few months as I dial 
 different elements. Bearing preload seems easy, once you learn to use your 
 body weight, and which thing (stem or star nut) to tighten first. Maybe I'm 
 missing some secret difficulty?

 Philip
 www.biketinker.com



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Eric Platt
Much like guitars, never found anything close to a lifetime bike.  In a
related matter, a friend of mine has been through more custom guitars and
custom bikes than I can count.  At least 4 custom bikes I know of.  His
present passion? Long Haul Trucker with 26 wheels.

I have no problem getting the bars high enough on my bikes with threadless
stems.  Now, the 6 or so above the saddle I occasionally put the bars on
my Hillborne?  Nope.  But two or three inches above, not a problem.

Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN

On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 6:54 PM, Bill Lindsay tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:

 'til death do us partor some other bike catches my eye


 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 4:49:33 PM UTC-7, Joe Bernard wrote:

 I always purchase lifetime bikes. Problem is, I always sell them for
 different lifetime bikes ;)

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:53:04 PM UTC-7, Philip Williamson
 wrote:

 Leaving the steerer long isn't even a trick... Simply do nothing, and it
 magically stays long!

 I have and love bikes with quill stems and with threadless stems. I've
 had my Bontrager (threadless) for almost 14 years, so it's looking like a
 Buy It For Life bike. And the fork may well be almost as irreplaceable as
 Steve's Longstaff fork.

 Stem adjustment is something I almost never do on most of my bikes. My
 quill bikes, never, my newer threadless bike every few months as I dial
 different elements. Bearing preload seems easy, once you learn to use your
 body weight, and which thing (stem or star nut) to tighten first. Maybe I'm
 missing some secret difficulty?

 Philip
 www.biketinker.com

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/24/2014 09:00 PM, Eric Platt wrote:

Much like guitars, never found anything close to a lifetime bike.


Lots of people figured the 54-year-old Gibson Les Paul electric guitar 
would fetch more than its $20,000 to $30,000 pre-auction estimate, but 
no one knew how much more.


The answer: a lot. Two Saturdays ago, *Gil Southworth Jr.* paid 
$140,000 for the guitar I wrote about 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/one-careful-owner-the-story-of-a-desirable-vintage-guitar-about-to-be-auctioned/2014/09/08/7a57b312-3778-11e4-9c9f-ebb47272e40e_story.html 
recently. Add in the premium paid toQuinn’s Auction Galleries 
http://www.quinnsauction.com/in Falls Church and the price tag came to 
$165,200. Why, with that money, Gil could have bought 1,652 brand-new 
$100 ukuleles (a sobering thought)


Sure as hell sounds like a lifetime guitar to me.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread 'Tony McG' via RBW Owners Bunch
Last Summer I put together a beautiful LHT that I haven't ridden since I 
bought my Atlantis.   The only experience I have with the Sam is a quick 
ride around the block in Walnut Creek a few years ago; I wish I had taken 
it for a longer ride.  The double top tube does not bother me, but I prefer 
cantilever or v-brakes over the caliper brakes offered on the new Sams.

Jim has a good point regarding the threadless vs threaded fork, because 
there are so many more handle bar options available.  I am still trying to 
figure out how to adjust the headset preload on my Atlantis.


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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread ted
So of course you should do as you like and go threadless ever and always. I 
see absolutely no reason why you shouldn't.
But some of the rest of us find that the bars we want work with quill 
stems, and find the range of quill stems available perfectly adequate. 
Though threadless has dominated the market for what 15 years I don't think 
the last 5 or 10 have seen dramatic reductions in the availability of quill 
stems etc. I believe your implied prediction of their imminent demise is 
premature, and see no need to shun them for fear of being locked into 
something unobtainable.
Folks explaining how you can adjust bar height on threadless setups, and 
how its really easy, remind me of when I told people that gluing tubulars 
was simple. Easy is in the eye of the doer, and (aside from the advantages 
of removable face plates) I can't believe dealing with threadless is as 
easy as the quill system is. I think spacers above the stem on a threadless 
setup looks bad. You say I can buy a new fork if I want to raise my bars an 
inch? Yea, well you go ahead with that plan but I don't think I will.


On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 1:40:43 PM UTC-7, Jim Thill - Hiawatha 
Cyclery wrote:

 Of course, if someone is devoted to quill stems, then I would expect that 
 person to be devoted to traditional handlebar designs, to the exclusion 
 of newer designs. I personally think the Jones Loop bar is the best 
 all-around bar for my riding. I can't do that with a quill stem. There are 
 a lot more 31.8 bars than there are 26.0 bars nowadays. I prefer to have 
 the option rather than be locked in to a standard that appears to be dying, 
 or at least dwindling.

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:36:36 PM UTC-5, Jim Thill - Hiawatha 
 Cyclery wrote:

 For a lot of us, the ideal of a lifetime bike isn't realistic. Tastes 
 often change faster than our bodies do. Anyway, I would point out that a 
 new Surly fork with uncut steerer isn't much more costly than a Nitto quill 
 stem. If you don't cut it too short at the beginning, which a lot of people 
 do (and regret), then there shouldn't be an issue for many years.

 I would strongly suggest NOT threading a threadless fork. It seems very 
 unsafe to me

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 1:22:03 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:

  On 09/24/2014 01:10 PM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery wrote:
  
 I always thought the Cross-check was probably more comparable to the 
 Sam, but the LHT isn't far off. All three are smartly designed and 
 versatile. All three can be lifetime bikes, if you want them to be. I've 
 extensively ridden a Disc Trucker, Cross-check, Atlantis, Romulus, and a 
 few test miles on a Sam. There isn't anything magical about the intrinsic 
 ride quality of the Sam compared to the two Surly models I mentioned, but 
 it does have an extra measure of cosmetic flair, which may or may not be 
 worth the extra cost and wait, depending on your point of view. Despite the 
 lower price of the Surly, I don't believe there's any sacrifice of 
 quality, which is sometimes implied in any Surly vs Riv discussion. 
 Surly's quality control is the best of any company I've dealt with - they 
 almost never make mistakes.

 Here are a few technical details to consider. The Riv uses a 1 quill 
 stem, which has some advantage for quickly raising and lowering the bar, 
 but the quill stems currently available don't have a 31.8 clamp option. 
 Since 25.4/26.0 handlebars are getting fewer everyday, and 31.8 is 
 effectively standard now, you'll be opting out of some great handlebar 
 options with a standard quill stem (there are workarounds to solve this 
 problem, but it's better to not have the problem in the first place, IMO). 
 The Surly frames come with a threadless steerer, which makes switching to 
 different bars much easier/cheaper. In general, threaded steerers and quill 
 stems are regarded as outdated in the bicycle industry, and few 
 manufacturers are supporting that design anymore. That makes the Surly 
 somewhat more future-proof in regard to headsets, stems, and handlebars. 
 I see the quill stems as a fairly major inconvenience, but, of course, the 
 quill stems have an aesthetic effect that some people prefer, and I can't 
 argue that. A second consideration is how you plan to accessorize the bike. 
 Rivs tend to have rack braze-ons designed around the Nitto racks that they 
 sell, while Surly frames have braze-ons designed around more universal rack 
 designs. The rack thing shouldn't be a deal-breaker, because many racks 
 will fit on the back of a Riv, but it does get difficult if you want, say, 
 a Tubus low-rider rack on the fork of a Riv.

  
 In my personal experience, the biggest issue regarding a lifetime 
 bicycle is the ability to adjust your position to physiological changes 
 that occur with time.  Most significant of these, certainly for me and 
 probably for most, has been the need to raise the handlebar position.  In 
 my 30s, I had a 5 drop.  In my 

Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Philip Williamson
Sounds more like an investment to me.

Philip
www.biketinker.com

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-24 Thread Jim Bronson
haha Andrew great comments

I thought my Paul Taylor custom was going to be a lifetime bike, it's
very fast but it's punishing and you can not get anyting over 23mm
under the front fork.  The other problem is that it TT is 66mm C-C and
it's threadless so even with the itty bittiest stem is more than I
want.  And it's hard to get any up angle when you're using a tiny
threadless stem.  A quill with 50mm extension would have been so much
better.  So I got the thing repainted, err powdercoated, and now I'm
selling it.

Then there's the Eisentraut, I thought it would be a piece of history
that I would keep for a lifetime.  Now, I'm kind of wondering why I
have it, ifn I'm not going to build it up and ride it.  The problem is
that it's a touring frame, with none of the modern accoutrements for
touring like eyelets for racks and so forth.

But anyway :)

On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 7:58 PM, Andrew Marchant-Shapiro
marchantshap...@gmail.com wrote:
 I used to buy bikes for my lifetime, until I realized that each and every
 bike I've had has ridden differently, and I've liked the difference.  Two
 years ago I lost a Trek 560 that I absolutely loved.  I was going to get a
 custom-built replacement, but that ultimately proved unworkable.
 Consequently, I bought a Velo Orange Randonneur.  I like it a lot.  I also
 liked my Kogswell D58--threadless stem and all.  I just didn't need it
 anymore.

 This is all by way of saying that variety is a spice of life.

 When my next bike gets shot out from under me--if--I will not worry about a
 perfect replacement.  Because whatever I find will be as good as, if not
 better, than the old bike.

 Lifetime, schmifetime.  They're all tools, they're all bikes, and they're
 all meant to be ridden into the ground.  If you want one with fancy paint,
 that's your deal, and I can completely understand.


 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 7:54:32 PM UTC-4, Bill Lindsay wrote:

 'til death do us partor some other bike catches my eye

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 4:49:33 PM UTC-7, Joe Bernard wrote:

 I always purchase lifetime bikes. Problem is, I always sell them for
 different lifetime bikes ;)

 On Wednesday, September 24, 2014 3:53:04 PM UTC-7, Philip Williamson
 wrote:

 Leaving the steerer long isn't even a trick... Simply do nothing, and it
 magically stays long!

 I have and love bikes with quill stems and with threadless stems. I've
 had my Bontrager (threadless) for almost 14 years, so it's looking like a
 Buy It For Life bike. And the fork may well be almost as irreplaceable as
 Steve's Longstaff fork.

 Stem adjustment is something I almost never do on most of my bikes. My
 quill bikes, never, my newer threadless bike every few months as I dial
 different elements. Bearing preload seems easy, once you learn to use your
 body weight, and which thing (stem or star nut) to tighten first. Maybe I'm
 missing some secret difficulty?

 Philip
 www.biketinker.com

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Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!

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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-23 Thread Daniel M
Chris:

It is a Thorn Raven Tour. Not custom, probably low-volume, designed 
specifically for the Rohloff hub. It's not a direct replacement for the 
Hillborne in any way, shape, or form - it's a nearly 40-pound touring / city / 
fleeing-the-zombie-apocalypse bike. I wouldn't even THINK of attempting a 
double century on it, but I can't imagine ever touring again without a Rohloff. 
That said, the 26 LHT is probably one-third of the price, considerably 
lighter, and still completely versatile and reliable. 

Daniel
Berkeley, CA

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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-23 Thread ascpgh
Ty,

Buy the Sam.

I don't have a Sam, but I do have a 2001 pearl orange Rivendell Rambouillet 
and a Suly Disc Trucker for my commuter and rough stuff bike. I bought my 
Rambouillet just in time for (and because of) a chance to join three others 
on a super light, credit card ride across the country with just a saddlebag 
(Caradice Nelson Longflap) load.  I also frequent the Great Allegheny 
Passage rail trail/CO toe path route between Pittsburgh and Washington DC 
as well as all sorts of solo and group riding in between.

To me the overbuilt nature of the Trucker as a full-on loaded tourer isn't 
of use but the handling (longer wheelbase, slower, steadier handling) is 
beneficial to the level of my mental acuity on my year-round daily route, 
particularly the return leg after 12-14 hours at work. By the end of August 
I am in the dark going both directions until roughly next April, and 
despite a hub generator and a really good light there are still things that 
will surprise me and render me again thankful to be on a slower handling 
frame that is not easily upset.

If I had any greener pastures thoughts about my Rambouillet, I'd be 
looking at the Sam, specifically for additional clearance for wider tires 
with fenders. Limited brake caliper reach options dictated my bike's 
clearances when designed, those choices were more abundant when specifying 
the Sam frames. The ride quality of the Sam is much more akin to my 
Rambouillet than the LHT you compare. Some may point out that the LHT was 
highly influenced by the Atlantis which was the original production (versus 
the all custom, to-order frames) from Rivendell and the Rambouillet was the 
second, offering a different intended purpose (light or no load) and ride 
quality (responsive, lively). 

I may justifying more clearance and buying a new model, instead I feel like 
I should send a quick note each spring to Rivendell thanking them for 
another year of enjoyment, good fit and service from my well-selected 
Rambouillet. They say their bikes: 

*We do, though, guarantee that we put every effort into making your 
 Rivendell the best bike you've ever seen, touched, heard about, or ridden. 
 We use the best materials, the best craftsmanship, the best design. Barring 
 accidents and assuming you're riding it for its intended purpose, we expect 
 it will be the last bicycle you ever have to buy.*


I'd love to buy another but their statement is pretty clear, and so far 
true for me. 

Andy Cheatham
Pittsburgh 


On Monday, September 22, 2014 6:02:14 AM UTC-4, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-23 Thread Ty Jeske
Thanks for all the great advice and thoughtful responses everyone. The LHT 
I'm riding is my friend's spare, so I think I could get a good deal on it 
should I decide to go that direction. I am wary of buying what I intend to 
be a lifetime bicycle just because it's convenient or a bargain though, so 
I would love to see and ride a Sam first hand. If you know anyone who has a 
Sam in my area (i could meet anywhere in Florida), or in Atlanta where I 
visit frequently, please see if they're willing to allow a test-ride. I 
think I would fit a 55cm best.

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-23 Thread Steve Palincsar

On 09/23/2014 05:39 AM, Ty Jeske wrote:
Thanks for all the great advice and thoughtful responses everyone. The 
LHT I'm riding is my friend's spare, so I think I could get a good 
deal on it should I decide to go that direction. I am wary of buying 
what I intend to be a lifetime bicycle just because it's convenient or 
a bargain though, so I would love to see and ride a Sam first hand. If 
you know anyone who has a Sam in my area (i could meet anywhere in 
Florida), or in Atlanta where I visit frequently, please see if 
they're willing to allow a test-ride. I think I would fit a 55cm best.




I think most would agree that a LHT is a useful tool, but as a lifetime 
bicycle, not so much.



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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-23 Thread WETH
I own and ride both a Surly LHT and an Atlantis.  If I could keep only one, 
it would be the Atlantis.
To quote Steve: I think most would agree that a LHT is a useful tool, but 
as a lifetime 
bicycle, not so much. 

On Tuesday, September 23, 2014 1:52:44 PM UTC-4, Steve Palincsar wrote:

 On 09/23/2014 05:39 AM, Ty Jeske wrote: 
  Thanks for all the great advice and thoughtful responses everyone. The 
  LHT I'm riding is my friend's spare, so I think I could get a good 
  deal on it should I decide to go that direction. I am wary of buying 
  what I intend to be a lifetime bicycle just because it's convenient or 
  a bargain though, so I would love to see and ride a Sam first hand. If 
  you know anyone who has a Sam in my area (i could meet anywhere in 
  Florida), or in Atlanta where I visit frequently, please see if 
  they're willing to allow a test-ride. I think I would fit a 55cm best. 
  

 I think most would agree that a LHT is a useful tool, but as a lifetime 
 bicycle, not so much. 




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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread dougP
As well executed as the LHT is (and they are quite serviceable bikes), I 
submit that you would notice a difference between that and a Sam.  One of 
my touring buds rode an LHT for a number of years and was pleased with it.  
His dear wife knew he really appreciated the Atlantis but would never 
indulge himself, so she bought one for him in the same size as his LHT.  
After quite a bit of time riding both bikes, he concluded that the Atlantis 
really was superior.  It was more responsive and rode better both loaded 
and unloaded.  The LHT seemed to need some load to soften up the ride.  He 
ended up selling the LHT.  

The Atlantis is built heavier / stouter / intended to carry more stuff than 
the Sam.  During a recent visit to RBWHQ, I rode several bikes to check out 
different handlebars.  One of them was a Sam  I noticed it felt lighter  
more responsive than my Atlantis.  Many list members have done light 
touring with a Sam.  For the service you describe, the Sam is ideal.  The 
intended use for the LHT is the heavy duty, 4 bags plus more stuff tour, 
and it's likely over-kill for what you describe.  

Just my observations  opinions.  I hope someone in your area can connect 
with you for a test ride of a Sam.  Then you'll be able to make a fully 
informed choice.  Good luck in your search.

dougP

On Monday, September 22, 2014 3:02:14 AM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread Daniel M
I will submit my opinion to add to the variety.

I owned a Sam Hillborne for two years. I bought it brand new, rode it in a 
double-century, later added front and rear racks and rode it from Berkeley 
to the Oregon-Washington border and back. It was/is a near-perfect all 
rounder.

So why did I sell it? I wanted something with smaller wheels and bigger 
tires. The Hillborne in my size (no longer made 56cm, single top tube, 
cantilever brakes) happened to come with 700c wheels and I was running the 
biggest tires that I could fit with fenders: Schwalbe Marathon Supreme 
700x40. What happened is that I finally built the touring bike of my dreams 
with a Rohloff hub and 26 wheels (and currently running 60mm tires with 
fenders) and I was kind of blown away by the stability of the touring 
geometry coupled with the agility of the smaller wheels. The Hillborne was 
incredibly stable on descents but REALLY reluctant to change direction 
quickly around town - kind of the complaint about 29ers (AKA 700c) that has 
sent people to 27.5 (AKA 650b) in the mountain bike world. If I hadn't 
built up the touring bike, I would probably still own the Hillborne, but I 
didn't need two touring bikes, so when I stumbled across a 
reasonably-priced used 650b randonneuring bike I bought it and sold the 
Hillborne for the same amount of money.

When it came time to choose an all-around bike for my wife, who is 5'10, 
we chose a Long Haul Trucker in the 58cm frame size with 26 wheels. We 
also swapped out the drop handlebars for upright, swept bars, and replaced 
the canti brakes with V-brakes. I really think it is the ideal all-round 
bike. So comfortable, capable of hauling whatever you can put on it, and 
2.0 (50mm) Big Apples are wonderfully smooth on pavement and stable and 
capable off of it. If my main uses were as you describe, rides under 40 
miles, getting groceries, and occasional touring, I would get it over the 
Hillborne in a heartbeat. If I intended to ride mostly lightly loaded and 
for longer distances (60+ miles), then I would seriously consider the 
Hillborne, which is less of a tank and more of a road bike, although the 
lack of canti posts on the current offerings I find really disappointing.

My two cents in a nutshell.

Daniel M
Berkeley, CA

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Re: [RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread Goshen Peter
Buy my Bombadil!
On Sep 22, 2014 1:57 PM, Daniel M dpmay...@hotmail.com wrote:

 I will submit my opinion to add to the variety.

 I owned a Sam Hillborne for two years. I bought it brand new, rode it in a
 double-century, later added front and rear racks and rode it from Berkeley
 to the Oregon-Washington border and back. It was/is a near-perfect all
 rounder.

 So why did I sell it? I wanted something with smaller wheels and bigger
 tires. The Hillborne in my size (no longer made 56cm, single top tube,
 cantilever brakes) happened to come with 700c wheels and I was running the
 biggest tires that I could fit with fenders: Schwalbe Marathon Supreme
 700x40. What happened is that I finally built the touring bike of my dreams
 with a Rohloff hub and 26 wheels (and currently running 60mm tires with
 fenders) and I was kind of blown away by the stability of the touring
 geometry coupled with the agility of the smaller wheels. The Hillborne was
 incredibly stable on descents but REALLY reluctant to change direction
 quickly around town - kind of the complaint about 29ers (AKA 700c) that has
 sent people to 27.5 (AKA 650b) in the mountain bike world. If I hadn't
 built up the touring bike, I would probably still own the Hillborne, but I
 didn't need two touring bikes, so when I stumbled across a
 reasonably-priced used 650b randonneuring bike I bought it and sold the
 Hillborne for the same amount of money.

 When it came time to choose an all-around bike for my wife, who is 5'10,
 we chose a Long Haul Trucker in the 58cm frame size with 26 wheels. We
 also swapped out the drop handlebars for upright, swept bars, and replaced
 the canti brakes with V-brakes. I really think it is the ideal all-round
 bike. So comfortable, capable of hauling whatever you can put on it, and
 2.0 (50mm) Big Apples are wonderfully smooth on pavement and stable and
 capable off of it. If my main uses were as you describe, rides under 40
 miles, getting groceries, and occasional touring, I would get it over the
 Hillborne in a heartbeat. If I intended to ride mostly lightly loaded and
 for longer distances (60+ miles), then I would seriously consider the
 Hillborne, which is less of a tank and more of a road bike, although the
 lack of canti posts on the current offerings I find really disappointing.

 My two cents in a nutshell.

 Daniel M
 Berkeley, CA

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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread cyclotour...@gmail.com
Considering that Sams are going away in the near future, that should seal 
the deal on one for you!

On Monday, September 22, 2014 3:02:14 AM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread Joe Bernard
Since you've already ridden the one, I think you would really need to ride 
the other to make your choice. Then pick the one you think will have you 
taking extra trips just 'cause it's so cool to be on.

Joe Bernard
Vallejo, CA.

On Monday, September 22, 2014 3:02:14 AM UTC-7, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread Jon in the foothills of Central Colorado
I'm a new member of this group and recently purchased a Sam from Rivendell 
and built it from the frame up.I looked at the LHT and it's a great bike 
and the price difference definitely stood out.
I never rode either bike before buying my Sam. 
The thing that put the Sam above the LHT was the people  at Rivendell. You 
can call them anytime and no matter who you talk to they know their product 
line and they will answer your questions with enthusiasm .The same goes for 
the people in this group. The Rivendell people know what works and what 
doesn't and won't sell you components that are not compatible with other 
components or the bike. They ride what they sell. I think the Rivendell 
buying experience is something special .Buying a bike should be fun and 
they will be there after the sale to help with questions or problems. One 
example is I was in the middle of building my Sam and I realized that I 
forgot to order brake levers.I called on a Friday afternoon and Vince 
understood that I would have to stop until I got levers and went out of his 
way to ship out the levers that afternoon and they were in my hands before 
I needed them. 
Everything that they suggested has worked out great.It's the first bike I 
have ever bought over the phone and it is the most comfortable bike I've 
bought in 30 years of riding.
Tell them what you want to use the bike for and they will fix you up with 
the best components and accessories and you can trust they won't sell you 
more than you need.
My two cents.
Jon
On Monday, September 22, 2014 4:02:14 AM UTC-6, Ty Jeske wrote:

 I've been riding a bargain lugged steel Schwinn Traveler (1982) for the 
 last several years. The frame is a little small for me and I've sunk 
 several times its purchase price into repairs, but it has been a reliable 
 and mostly comfortable steed. For the last week though, I've been borrowing 
 a friend's Long Haul Trucker and I've come to realize that the last 30 
 years have brought desirable advances to bicycle technology. The time has 
 finally come to make an upgrade. I love the ride of steel, and the look of 
 lugged steel in particular, so I'm looking between the LHT and the 
 Rivendell Sam Hillborne. The advantage of the LHT is that I'm riding one 
 now and know exactly what I'd be getting. It's also about half the cost of 
 the Sam. The Sam has the advantage of beautiful lugs, possibly superior 
 components, and a reputation for lasting a lifetime. It also fits my ideal 
 of a comfortable go-anywhere bike. Does anybody have any experience with 
 both that may help me decide? Even better, does anyone know how I may go 
 about test riding the Sam Hillborne? I'm in Tampa FL.

 I plan to use the bike much as I do my current one. Mostly recreational 
 rides (15-40 mi), fetching groceries, etc. The occasional overnight camping 
 trip and rare credit card or light touring. Whatever I get will need to 
 take me through the level wooded area and fields between my house and the 
 nearest paved bike trail.


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[RBW] Re: Considering my first Riv purchase and looking for helpful advice

2014-09-22 Thread 'Chris Lampe 2' via RBW Owners Bunch
Daniel,

What frame did you end up building into a 26 touring bike?  Was it a 
custom or off-the-shelf?  



On Monday, September 22, 2014 12:57:41 PM UTC-5, Daniel M wrote:

 I will submit my opinion to add to the variety.

 I owned a Sam Hillborne for two years. I bought it brand new, rode it in a 
 double-century, later added front and rear racks and rode it from Berkeley 
 to the Oregon-Washington border and back. It was/is a near-perfect all 
 rounder.

 So why did I sell it? I wanted something with smaller wheels and bigger 
 tires. The Hillborne in my size (no longer made 56cm, single top tube, 
 cantilever brakes) happened to come with 700c wheels and I was running the 
 biggest tires that I could fit with fenders: Schwalbe Marathon Supreme 
 700x40. What happened is that I finally built the touring bike of my dreams 
 with a Rohloff hub and 26 wheels (and currently running 60mm tires with 
 fenders) and I was kind of blown away by the stability of the touring 
 geometry coupled with the agility of the smaller wheels. The Hillborne was 
 incredibly stable on descents but REALLY reluctant to change direction 
 quickly around town - kind of the complaint about 29ers (AKA 700c) that has 
 sent people to 27.5 (AKA 650b) in the mountain bike world. If I hadn't 
 built up the touring bike, I would probably still own the Hillborne, but I 
 didn't need two touring bikes, so when I stumbled across a 
 reasonably-priced used 650b randonneuring bike I bought it and sold the 
 Hillborne for the same amount of money.

 When it came time to choose an all-around bike for my wife, who is 5'10, 
 we chose a Long Haul Trucker in the 58cm frame size with 26 wheels. We 
 also swapped out the drop handlebars for upright, swept bars, and replaced 
 the canti brakes with V-brakes. I really think it is the ideal all-round 
 bike. So comfortable, capable of hauling whatever you can put on it, and 
 2.0 (50mm) Big Apples are wonderfully smooth on pavement and stable and 
 capable off of it. If my main uses were as you describe, rides under 40 
 miles, getting groceries, and occasional touring, I would get it over the 
 Hillborne in a heartbeat. If I intended to ride mostly lightly loaded and 
 for longer distances (60+ miles), then I would seriously consider the 
 Hillborne, which is less of a tank and more of a road bike, although the 
 lack of canti posts on the current offerings I find really disappointing.

 My two cents in a nutshell.

 Daniel M
 Berkeley, CA


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