you know, i can understand the "mcrb" fad. i just go along with it.
all my bikes are steel ( except one ), some lugged, some have carbon
forks. my favorite bikes are the ones that i can fit a riv 700x33
tire.
don c.

On Mar 17, 10:04 pm, doug peterson <[email protected]> wrote:
> Remember the whole series on comfort, tires, etc, in recent BQ?  This
> sounds like a classic case of a level of dis-comfort that's manageable
> on a 50 mile ride becoming intolerable at century + distance.
>
> dougP
>
> On Mar 17, 5:38 pm, cyclotourist <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Looks like the guy has done a few centuries and doubles.  It would be cool
> > if Mr. Retro inspired him to try a more comfortable bike.  Course maybe
> > he'll go all comfort and end up with a 'bent.
>
> > On Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 12:17 PM, doug peterson <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Esteban:
>
> > > That's an interesting write-up.  Did you notice in the intro he
> > > mentions not finishing?  Got 150 miles though; darn sight more than
> > > I'm ever planning for a single day.
>
> > > Let's see, his problems were:  1) sore bottom; 2) struggling on the
> > > climbs; 3) pavement roughness.  Can't really tell much about the bike
> > > from the photo but it looks like low spoke count wheels (he mentions
> > > something about the spokes orienting "just so") & a carbonic looking
> > > fork, so we can guess at the rest of the package.  I wonder how he
> > > would have done on a more comfortable bike with wider range gearing?
> > > Gosh, a Brooks saddle, 25" or 30" low gear and big fat 28 mm tires may
> > > have made his day!
>
> > > dougP
>
> > > On Mar 17, 8:46 am, Esteban <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > I thought you folks would get a kick out of this.  A friend sent me
> > > > this ride report of the Death Valley Double, which I finished at a
> > > > rather leisurely 15:17.
> > > > I show up in the middle as Mr. Retro.
>
> > > >http://veloasana.com/2010/03/10/unfinished-business-in-death-valley/
> > > > "A rider catches me. He’s on an old steel-framed bike, complete with
> > > > fenders. He’s wearing a retro jersey. As he passes by, he exclaims,
> > > > “Some climb, huh?” .... Mr. Retro is descending faster than me. Within
> > > > a few minutes, he’s a mile ahead. But somehow, as the road levels off
> > > > near the bottom of the pass, I catch up. We round a corner and there
> > > > it is: the climb I forgot about. The other 12% grade – the backside of
> > > > Jubilee Pass. I brace for more climbing, but thankfully, this side of
> > > > the pass is fairly short.
>
> > > > I reach the summit just behind Mr. Retro.
>
> > > > “Well, that’s the last of the major climbing for the day,” he says."
>
> > > > Little does he know my Romulus is vintage 2003!
> > > > Here I am, Mr. Retro:
> > >http://m.flickr.com/#/photos/25671...@n02/4435969706/
> > > > Here I am, Mr. Retro:
>
> > > --
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> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
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>
> > --
> > Cheers,
> > David
> > Redlands, CA
>
> > "Bicycling is a big part of the future. It has to be. There is something
> > wrong with a society that drives a car to workout in a gym."  ~Bill Nye,
> > scientist guy- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

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