Ok, so short story long:

Bought a cool looking steel frame from a local shop that was built as part 
of a small-batch of prototypes for a project that never got off the ground. 
This was bought when I made the move from the hilly Bay Area to the 
flatlands of Sacramento, so I initially started building it as a single 
speed levee gravel bike, but clearance and braking (with long reach 
calipers) was a bit meh, especially when it got muddy (sticky clays out 
here vs. decomposed granular rock in the bay). So rather than be satisfied, 
I began the modifications planned, which included:

   - (achieved) A different fork with more clearance, fender mounts (cause 
   why not?) and canti posts
   - (achieved) Crimped stays for more clearance
   - (TBD) Adding canti posts to frame, along with more crimping in the 
   rear for even more clearance
   - (TBD) building single speed dedicated wheel, and the original wheels 
   are now sold
   - (TBD) brakes, started with R559s, but then switched to mini-motos 
   which I have since traded for some paul cantis to be used on the Appaloosa
   - (TBD) Cockpit, have stem, bars and seatpost, but no brake levers (see 
   above, currently do not have brakes option finalized)
   - (Sorta figured out) Drivetrain, got the cranks/rings, pedals, but no 
   freewheel yet.

The use has since been changed now to also fit more of a commuter that I am 
more comfortable with locking up, along with a dedicated rack/basket combo 
and generally be a bike that I don't have to worry about as much when it 
comes to maintenance, storing inside, etc. but it is trending to be a more 
expensive bike than I'd like.

The sticking issue in my mind was/is that ultimately, its not that unique 
of a bike in terms of features (fenders, cantis, 650x42 clearance, etc.) 
and I'm spending a decent amount of time and effort achieving that aspect. 
The visuals are unique and it rides nicely, but i'd rather have a unique 
feature bike than a unique looking one if I'm spending all this effort on 
it.

Cheers,
Collin in Sactown

On Wednesday, December 23, 2020 at 9:46:31 AM UTC-8 Jason Fuller wrote:

> Agree that knowing the project base would go a long way in understanding 
> how good the potential end result would be!  I am generally pretty 
> impatient when I get a new project going but bear in mind there are still 
> new-in-box Rivs from the mid-2000's popping up every now and again - there 
> is no deadline for this build beyond your own expectations.  If it's an 
> exciting build or something that would be very useful to you once complete, 
> I'd just hang it up and wait until you've got the budget, supply, and 
> bandwidth to finish it. Might be three months, might be three years - and 
> that's OK.  If you're not feeling that attachment, or need the liquid cash, 
> then maybe different story.  

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