Thought of your email right away, Peter! 

On Saturday, July 15, 2023 at 7:32:43 PM UTC-4 divis...@gmail.com wrote:

> A 120mm track-ended (or horizontal dropoutted) frameset with a derailleur 
> hangar is just a modern update of the traditional 40s-50s British path 
> racer, a road bike easily converted for track use.
>
> BITD, for a long time after WWII, massed race cycling on public roads was 
> forbidden in the UK. If caught, race participants could be severely 
> punished. Aside from making club racers/not-racers sneaky around Tommy Law, 
> it meant that the dominant forms of competitive cycling became time 
> trialing (riding alone on a measured course; fastest posted time wins, and 
> if the police stop you, you can claim you were just out for a recreational 
> ride of a Sunday) and track racing. Since tracks were expensive to build 
> and mostly were only in cities, "path racing" on grass courses (some local 
> meadow) became a thing.
>
> Like soccer, competitive cycling has historically been a sport of the 
> poor. Poor people got good at cycling because they rode bikes all the time. 
> They were the cheapest form of personal transportation one could get, so 
> you rode everywhere. A club cyclist typically only owned one bicycle, which 
> had to do everything. So the club racers would often have one bike, with 
> two sets of wheels: A geared wheelset (often with steel rims) for just 
> riding around, and a lighter track wheelset with tubular tires for 
> competition.
>
> Since the bike was their transportation and they had no other way to get 
> their bike to races, they'd hang the track wheelset from clips mounted to 
> either side of the front axle, ride to wherever that weekend's race was 
> held and swap the wheelset around. They'd ride laps around the meadow, 
> remove the trackie wheelset, replace the geared wheelset (with either an 
> IGH or a hanging derailleur) and head back home - with or without a stop at 
> the pub for a pint for the road.
>
> If someone uses a flip-flop wheel, with mounting for a track cog on one 
> side and a freewheel on the other, why shouldn't the freewheel be a 
> multigear freewheel, if the wheel's dished to allow it? Then you'd need a 
> frame-mounted hanger (or a derailleur-mounted add-on hanger) to mount the 
> "multi-cog negotiation mechanism".
>
> Peter Adler
> Berkeley, CA/USA
>
> On Friday, July 14, 2023 at 4:01:03 PM UTC-7 Jason Fuller wrote:
>
> I keep forgetting about the dangling hanger. Such a silly thing to have 
> added IMO, particularly if 120 spaced. Admittedly I don't understand the 
> attraction to the 3-by-1 drivetrain, but regardless, a regular 
> vertical-dropout bike is well suited to that already.  It's not a huge 
> visual impact, but it shouldn't be there in my opinion. 
>
>

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