Leah:

First of all, thanks for the photos.  They look great & I can see you two 
cruising the neighborhood.  

1.  With the bars being different, each bike will feel unique.  You're used 
to yours so naturally any other bike will feel strange.  As to "what's 
different", it would take some time with a tape measure to develop an 
answer.  As long as each of is comfortable on your own bike, life is good.

Side note on his "command performance" position.  I recently had someone 
liken their upright, swept bar position as "master of my realm."  

2.  That's a shame about the box.  It seemed a really cool idea when you 
first brought it up.  As to envisioning riding at the beach, hey, beach has 
sand; desert has sand.  A loop of breaking waves on his music player & all 
is well.  Hope someone here has a rack'n'crate combo they can recommend.  

3.  Others have good suggestions.  Check it all out.  If REI put it 
together, I'd have them give it a once over.  Some REI stores are better 
than others when it comes to bikes though.  

Keep us posted on future developments.  In any case, it sounds like you 
both are having a lot of fun with the bikes.

dougP

On Sunday, June 5, 2016 at 2:20:18 PM UTC-7, LeahFoy wrote:
>
> This post is a collection of questions and thoughts. I'm trying to 
> consolidate into just the one post, so sorry if it seems disjointed - I 
> thought maybe one post would be preferable to three.
>
> 1. First question: Why does my  6 ft husband's 52 cm Clem seem too small 
> and confined to me, who is 5'6"?
>
> You may remember my zany husband who got a Clem around Christmastime. It 
> was a memorable experience, let me tell you. He isn't Rivy at all, so this 
> was quite the leap for him, and he settled on "matching" his bike to mine 
> more than any other inspiration. We've been having a wonderful time with 
> our bikes, not many lengthy rides, but rather, we do this great thing he 
> calls "Our Evening Constitutional." Every night after dinner, we put on our 
> matching Keens, our matching RayBans, and we take our Rivendell bikes and 
> cruise around the neighborhood and through the park at our leisure. Our 
> kids are big enough to stay home, and we feel like we are really getting 
> away with something. We chat, we laugh, we congratulate ourselves on our 
> fantastic bikes and reflect on 12 years of marriage. This is the kind of 
> date I recommend. 
>
> But I digress.
>
> One night we decided to switch bikes. I'd made some minor adjustments to 
> his saddle and bars for him and wanted to test them. Secondly, I wanted to 
> gaze upon my lovely Betty Foy while he rode it. (You never get to 
> appreciate how great your own bike looks when you're on it!) I was really 
> expecting his bike to be large and unwieldy but I was shocked to discover 
> it felt cramped! I felt like the bars were squirrely, and that my butt 
> should be way farther back. I wanted to be more stretched out. Now, I have 
> albatross bars and he has whatever the Clems came with, but how can it make 
> that much difference? 
>
> I told him I didn't like his "sit up and beg" positioning. He retorted, 
> "It is not. It's the 'seated command' position." Then I rolled my eyes. 
>
> I tried grabbing his bars so I was more stretched out. No improvement. His 
> sprung Brooks is pushed all the way back on its rails. Is this how the Clem 
> is supposed to feel? Am I just too used to the Betty Foy? I really thought 
> loooonnnnggg chainstays would make a huge difference, but there I was - 
> cramped. I knew if I came to you, you all would tell me why. 
>
> I felt so disappointed because I was hoping his bike would be as good/even 
> better than mine. The way I see it, my bike is perfect. I feel like the 
> bike is part of ME. I get on it and there's nothing I could do to make it 
> more comfortable. I don't even think about comfort. I fret a little about 
> the dings in the paint and wish I had the Big Back Rack to match my Big 
> Front Rack, and I wish that I had the gray medium Saddleback instead of the 
> tan - all stupid cosmetic stuff. But I couldn't be happy on his bike, and 
> that seems odd to me. Rivendells are comfortable and useful. It's their 
> trademark; what am I missing? My husband is not a bike person, so he's just 
> happy cruising around and looking alike. He thinks his bike feels fine, but 
> he calls mine "more plush." He'll happily roll along in his "seated 
> command" position regardless of what we say here, but I'm hoping you'll 
> have some rationale. 
>
> 2. It's his birthday next week. Do you remember his obsession with getting 
> a bamboo crate for the front of his Clem? Well, he ordered one from the 
> company Bamboobee on Amazon. They said it would be here anywhere in a 4 
> week timeframe. That timeframe came and went and after a lot of 
> back-and-forth, I was just refunded my money. I want to get him a rack and 
> different crate for his birthday. I have no idea what front rack the Clem 
> takes. Who can say, and does anyone have one for sale on the list? He has 
> the mousetrap rack on the back.
>
> Also, does anyone have a recommendation for a crate? He loved that the 
> Bamboobee looked modern and had a built in cup holder. He envisions himself 
> riding his Clem with this contraption and a handlebar speaker on the beach. 
> He lives in the desert.
>
> 3. His gears ghost shift. And there's lots of chatter in his gears. Is it 
> possible the REI mechanic didn't install the gearing correctly? Do they 
> need adjustment after a while? 
>
> Lastly, I've included a couple photos. Thanks so much for reading and 
> lending me your expertise. 
> Grateful!
> Leah
>
> https://flic.kr/p/GVbyb9
> https://flic.kr/p/DNo3w6
>
>

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