On Monday, February 10, 2025 at 6:54:22 AM UTC-8 Bill Lindsay wrote:

It's a pretty hot take, but I also think the versatility resides mostly in 
the rider.  It's a common exchange at the bike shop, when the customer says 
"I just want a bike, how do I choose?"  The first question from the 
salesperson asks is "what kind of riding do you do?"  Some people are super 
narrow in what they do and how far they want to expand their envelope. 
 Other cyclists want to do and actively pursue doing everything or a huge 
swath of things.  The Leo Roadini in the hands of an intrepid rider can do 
most things a bicycle can do.  The rider makes the versatility, and the 
bike just doesn't get in the way of it.  

 
Think about what the typical bike shop employee has to deal with. Famous 
frame builder Dave Moulton wrote on his blog that most bikes are impulse 
purchased, ridden at most a few times (and sometimes not even that) before 
retired permanently in the garage. That's why there are so many Fusos in 
great condition for sale on eBay, years after he retired. The shop employee 
is NOT going to suggest that you "underbike" at all. In fact, they're 
motivated to sell you the bike that is "overbike" for your riding 
conditions, even if as a result you don't enjoy the cycling experience very 
much and stop cycling --- after all, they know that most people stop 
cycling after a few times. (I bought my son's Salsa Journeyman from a lady 
who bought a bike during the pandemic, rode it twice, and then gave up 
cycling --- the tires were heavy and way too wide someone her size or 
weight --- after I swapped them out for Pacenti 38mm tires my son loved the 
bike and did 2000' of climbing up over the local mountain, including the 
dirt section over the top where I once saw Tom Ritchey flash by at 20mph on 
his road bike, 23mm tires, no helmet)

Similarly, last year at Bormio, the bike shop "The Stelvio Experience" 
warned us against riding the Passo Di Valle Alpisella, warning us that the 
road bike couldn't handle it. I did it on my tandem with my 9 year old 
(https://blog.piaw.net/2024/08/june-25th-bormio-to-livigno-via-laghi.html), 
and it took some walking but it was totally worth it. I have no doubt the 
Roadini wouldn't even have blinked.

I run 700x40mm Continental Terra Speed on my Roadini. They measure 38mm on 
my Velocity A23 rims. I think I got them on sale for about $40 a tire, and 
I'm much too cheap to spend the $100/tire on the Rene Herse Extralight 
equivalents. The little kobbies don't do much and have almost worn off the 
back tire after about 1000 miles, but they do what I expect tires to do.

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