Steven,

Lately, I've been running mostly Schwalbe Racing Ralph 50mm tires but i've 
run 28's and 32/33/34 tires as well.  Unfortunately, i think Schwalbe has 
abandoned tubulars altogether.  I have accumulated several of the Racing 
Ralphs but after that, I'm not sure that anything comparable is available.  
I know, at one time, one could special order from Dugast or maybe FMB but I 
don't know about now.

On Friday, March 8, 2024 at 6:21:26 PM UTC-8 Jason Fuller wrote:

> I know this has been pretty well covered by now, but I'm finally going to 
> add my two cents as well. I have ridden a few, but I think that anecdotes 
> are only going to take you so far because of the wide range of preferences 
> on the speed-comfort continuum. Based on your replies, I feel quite 
> confident that both the Homer and the Hillborne would be perfectly suited: 
> comfortable as heck, don't feel overbuilt, not super fast but not sluggish 
> either. If you're fine with caliper brakes I can't find a good reason to 
> push one over the other. My Hillborne has been with me for close to 4.5 
> years now, I've ridden it 10,400km and counting, and it has been my 
> favourite bike every day that I've owned it. I flip-flop between Albatross 
> and Noodles and it's great with either. 
>
> If you aren't buying right away, the upcoming Charlie H Gallop would be a 
> worthy contestant too, I'm betting. I had the prototype and it was a 
> compelling combination of the long wheelbase Rivs with the lighter tubing 
> Rivs.  
>
> On Saturday 2 March 2024 at 10:56:38 UTC-8 cfic...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>> I really like the Rivendell approach to bikes and bike technology with 
>> the idea of a more upright posture and a long wheelbase for long rides at a 
>> comfortable pace, but it seems like the models all lean heavily to what 
>> they call "country bikes."  I like to ride from my house, and that means 
>> riding almost exclusively on smooth (mostly) pavement. Can anyone suggest 
>> which models are better suited for road riding? Reading and comparing the 
>> descriptions, it seems that the Homer might be a good choice, or possibly 
>> the Appaloosa or Atlantis? Or the new Charlie Gallop, though I haven't 
>> heard much about how it is supposed to ride? I tried a Roadini (which I 
>> recently listed here and sold), but I think it was too big for me. I never 
>> felt comfortable on it. Maybe I just needed it in the right size. 
>>
>> I would like the bike to work well with drop bars because of the multiple 
>> hand positions and they're just what I'm used to. I tried a bike with swept 
>> bars recently, but found I wasn't comfortable on longer rides. And when 
>> riding on streets with minimal shoulder width, I felt like I was going to 
>> catch the end of them on mailboxes or other obstacles. Maybe there's a 
>> handlebar in Rivendell's catalog that works well for road riding?
>>
>> I'd appreciate any comments, especially if someone does this type of 
>> riding and has tried several of these models. Thanks.
>>
>> Chuck
>>
>

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