It's really not faked, I rode with the guy who took the picture on Saturday.
We didn't know each other but we both posted pictures of the Bicycle
Tour of Colorado to an Austin based email list. He recognized my Riv
from the Saturday ride and emailed me.
I think if I recall correctly there were
I've re-read them once, maybe twice. I'm inspired to read them now... :-)
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:29 PM, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:13 PM, David Estes wrote:
>
>> I guess I came into this the opposite way. I was a BOB, Bridgestone
>> Owner's Bunch member that ended up
And you made fun...
Bag News
February 2, 2009
Just a quick note--
We're introducing a new line of bags: Sackville (after the famous town
in Canada). They should be called Blackville, because they're black.
We'll have pixup on the site in a week or less, and if you've room for
another bag in you
Obviously a faked photo. I know this because Stingray guy isn't using
clipless pedals.
I did something similar a few years ago. I dropped some roadie on his
sleek CF machine whilst riding my rusty Raleigh Sports 3-speed.
Cranking along in high gear, I passed him easily...until 50 feet in
front of
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:13 PM, David Estes wrote:
> I guess I came into this the opposite way. I was a BOB, Bridgestone
> Owner's Bunch member that ended up on the Rivendell mailing list when GP
> started the company. Although I read the Hobbit and LOTR in middle school,
> I didn't really make
http://belligerante.com/default.aspx
--Eric Norris
Sent from my iPhone 3G
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To post to this group, send email to rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups
That's great! Thanks for posting.
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LOVE IT! The guy leading out looks kinda' pissed at the whole situation,
but the two behind appreciate the situation. The Stingray guy himself looks
like he's loving every minute of it!
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 8:20 PM, Jim Bronson wrote:
>
> Here's one for you
>
>
> http://s343.photobucket.com/
Here's one for you
http://s343.photobucket.com/albums/o478/Toddb12345/?action=view¤t=StingrayClimb-1.jpg
--
having a blood clot is a sticky situation
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You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW
Owners Bun
I guess I came into this the opposite way. I was a BOB, Bridgestone Owner's
Bunch member that ended up on the Rivendell mailing list when GP started the
company. Although I read the Hobbit and LOTR in middle school, I didn't
really make the connection right away. It had been fourteen years or so
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 11:07 PM, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> Nah, the pennant is too classy looking. But perhaps a pair of those nekkid
> woman silhouette mudflaps
You know you can get those for bikes, too. Something called 'buddy
flaps' I think.
-sv
--~--~-~--~~~---
Nah, the pennant is too classy looking. But perhaps a pair of those nekkid
woman silhouette mudflaps
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:02 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
> Maybe Chrysler has a kit for the PT Cruiser that you could adapt?
>
> I think you need one of those Riv pennants in the back window of
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 10:44 AM, fiddlr40 wrote:
>
> > I am serious about wanting to see photos of broken carbon, btw. And this
> > raises a question about carbon fiber: I suppose that part of the problem
> is
> > stupid light cf, not cf per se, right? So, if you made a bike of cf that
> > isn't
Maybe Chrysler has a kit for the PT Cruiser that you could adapt?
I think you need one of those Riv pennants in the back window of your van.
_
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of PATRICK MOORE
Sent: Monday, February 02, 200
I haven't the foggiest what you were trying to do but I guarantee you that
had I been doing, rather attempting, it, quite a bit of hardware would have
been harmed, if not completely destroyed.
Thankfully, I rode my bike to the P.O., hardware store, & market, and had a
marvelous afternoon changing
And only a dollar! Thanks.
Now I need some flame decals for the sides and hood.
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 11:02 AM, Doug Peterson wrote:
> Patrick:
>
> Here's what you're looking for:
>
>
>
> Bumper sticker:
>
> http://www.rivbike.com/products/list/promotional#product=24-122
>
> OR ("all time wor
That 2nd link, it looks like they sawed off that there carbon fiber on
purpose ;-)
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 11:44 AM, fiddlr40 wrote:
>
>> I am serious about wanting to see photos of broken carbon, btw. And this
>> raises a question about carbon fiber: I suppose that part of the problem is
>> stup
Indeed, I was trying to put a default route in a switch with IP
routing and multiple routed VLANs connected and it wasn't working and
I was about to pull my hair out.
Then I realized that I had to put a COST to the route. Of course!
One silly digit.
so rather than #ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 168.
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 10:12 PM, Kelt wrote:
>
Two minor suggestions:
> A Kennel of Saluki
A pack of Saluki
> A Constellation of Romulus (Romuli)
A Hill of Romulus
or
A Legion of Romulus
or
A Senate of Romulus
otherwise I love your suggestions.
-sv
--~--~-~--~~~-
just a few ideas.
A Flight of Bleriot
A Quiver of Legolas
A Moot of Quickbeams (agreeing, not stealing)
A Swell of Atlantises
A Giggle of Betty Foys
A Field of Bombadils
A Stand of Redwoods
A D'oh of Homer Hilsons (this is not right, but I can't find anything
more appropriate)
An Expletive of Sa
How about these names taken from various critter (The reader can research them
if interested) gatherings:
A zeal of approval?
A clat de rear?
A descent of Diablo?
A knob of shifters?
A bale of wicking wool?
Oh, the bikes,
A route of Rivendells?
From: Ri
I was a hardcore Tolkein fan from an early age, read everything I
could get my hands on, (Farmer Giles of Ham?) and I have to confess
that when I first encountered RBW, I didn't make the connection. I
was looking on the Waterford website (because a friend had a Gunnar in
a nice color-of-the-mont
well, i'm of the mind that slightly more than 1 mm is all a person really
needs--your chain doesn't come close there. Sheldon, iirc, informed that
opinion of mine. I think i'd have more like 3-4mm with the granny, for what
it's worth.
Best,
erik
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 5:33 PM, Doug Peterson wrot
Yea, you'd think Phil's & Tange would be interchangeable. But I'm like you
- I dunno. Only got one data point.
If you added a granny, you've got enough clearance for the ring with the
108? With a 24 granny, I'd have 0-1 mm clearance with a 107. Kinda hard to
measure this stuff with just a tape
By setting both derailers on the big-big combo before you start, there's
just enough cable slack to slide the levers out of the housings, although it
does take some gentle persuasion. This is with the old Suntour non-index
ratcheting ones with the stubby black plastic covered levers. Of course,
TJ:
IIRC this question came up a few days ago, either here or on the iBOB site.
Take a look in the archives for say the last week. Wish I could recall the
subject line but it wasn't far off yours. It seems there was some critical
part that the silvers kit didn't have but memory is fuzzy on th
The poor bike doesn't know what it's going to do next! TJ, I'll see if
there's a 12 step program for you. :-).
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of TJ Ramb
Sent: Monday, February 02, 2009 2:46 PM
To: RBW Own
The Atlantis can handle both! At the same time!
_
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Bruce
Sent: Monday, February 02, 2009 2:30 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: [RBW] Re: first time building up an atlantis
I don't know why a tange BB wouldn't be the same width as a phil, but I
don't have vast mechanic knowledge or anything of the sort.
also, dockers are 34x34. quickbeam is 49x19. atlantis chainrings are 46 & 34
too much fixed gear on the brain lately.
erik
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 5:05 PM, Doug Pete
I dunno about the kickstand plate, mine's older. Do Phil's match up with
Shimano / Tange?
_
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of erik jensen
Sent: Monday, February 02, 2009 1:32 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Su
Assuming that you like bar-end shifters, it's not that hard to change bars when
bar-end shifters are installed. Just make sure that you don't put the housing
under the bar tape. Then the only thing more time-consuming about bar change
with bar-ends is that you have to unhook the derailleurs. Bu
I have seen a couple of clever people braze on bosses onto a suitably
sized hose clamp. Some had slipping issues though
On Feb 3, 9:51 am, rcnute wrote:
> And I would like to know if there's a clamp for oversize tubes.
>
> On Feb 2, 2:39 pm, TJ Sutton wrote:
>
>
>
> > I have an old road frame w
oh and 113mm used with sugino triple.
170mm cranks
brooks saddle
nitto techtonic stem 112
ritchey ocr wheelset respaced to 135mm( it was there)
pasaela tourguard tires 32c ( except when in mtb mode when I fitted
some maxxis crossmarks)
The above has worked as a good canvas for all the incarnation
And I would like to know if there's a clamp for oversize tubes.
On Feb 2, 2:39 pm, TJ Sutton wrote:
> I have an old road frame without downtube shifter braze ons but a strap on
> down shifters. I will try but would like to know if anyone has retro fitted
> silver shifters to strap on bosses. Hop
I'd recommend DOWN TUBE shifters Especially on a first build. - Allows
easy transofrmation of the bike from drops to moutached to flat, etc
and is encourages you to ride through an unnecessary gear change.
in 12 months I have fitted my Atlantis as a virtual 29er mtb, a road
bike with 25c tyres and
I have an old road frame without downtube shifter braze ons but a strap on
down shifters. I will try but would like to know if anyone has retro fitted
silver shifters to strap on bosses. Hope that makes sense.
TJ
BreViVelo
(because life is a short ride)
--~--~-~--~~~--
We talking a pair of Dockers or chainrings here?
From: erik jensen
hmm... i'm a 46x34
erik
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Owners Bunch" group.
To
hmm... i'm a 46x34
erik
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Shaun Meehan wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 3:17 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
>>
>> Jim:
>>
>> Something's still not quite right. Just copied from Riv's website a
>> minute
>> ago:
>>
>> Rivendell models except the Atlantis: 113mm. The Atl
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 3:17 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> Jim:
>
> Something's still not quite right. Just copied from Riv's website a minute
> ago:
>
> Rivendell models except the Atlantis: 113mm. The Atlantis: 107mm.
>
> dougP
I started with a 107mm on my Atlantis and had to have it swapped
No, I have the phil BB centered.
I am running the xd2 as a double, but I have plenty of room to add a granny
if I desired.
I don't know, but I'm staking my money on a difference between the new
models and the old. I can't say anything more, as I haven't compared them
closely.
erik
On Mon, Feb 2,
Erik:
I assume your Phil BB is offset to the right a few mm. That would make
the right side equivalent to a symmetrical 113-ish BB. Unfortunately,
most BBs can't be offset like Phil BBs can be.
Jim
On Feb 2, 3:32 pm, erik jensen wrote:
> Again, I run a 108mm phil on my atlantis.
> no problems wi
Again, I run a 108mm phil on my atlantis.
no problems with a crown logo xd2.
maybe a change occured with the introduction of the kickstand plate?
not enough clearance any longer?
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 3:17 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> Jim:
>
> Something's still not quite right. Just copied f
Jim:
Something's still not quite right. Just copied from Riv's website a minute
ago:
Rivendell models except the Atlantis: 113mm. The Atlantis: 107mm.
dougP
I wasn't sure if I actually posted this link, but the RBW-rec for the
Atlantis was changed to 110-113 in 11/07
http://groups.google.co
I measured from the smallest chainring to the chainstays. If you take
the 8mm b/t the 107 and the 115 and divide it roughly in half then you
end up with 4mm on either side. If you take 4mm away from the
clearance here you'd end up with AT MOST 1mm b/t the small chainring
and the chainstay.
that
Seth,
I use mine as you plan to use yours, and I love the following set-up, and since
2002, whenever I've deviated from it, I always go back to it:
No racks, but carradice Nelson longflap.
A small handlebar bag like the Rivendell Bar Tube.
Moustache bars very high above the saddle level, like se
on 2/2/09 11:36 AM, Seth Vidal at skvi...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 2:31 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>>
>> Ah ha! So you're the OP of that BB thread! Was there ever a clear answer
>> to whether a 107 mm would work? My chainline is around 5-6 mm off & going
>> from 115 to 107
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 2:31 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> Ah ha! So you're the OP of that BB thread! Was there ever a clear answer
> to whether a 107 mm would work? My chainline is around 5-6 mm off & going
> from 115 to 107 would take care of it. OTH, it ain't broke.
> If you're working with
Ah ha! So you're the OP of that BB thread! Was there ever a clear answer
to whether a 107 mm would work? My chainline is around 5-6 mm off & going
from 115 to 107 would take care of it. OTH, it ain't broke.
If you're working with Jim Thill, it'll come right. My experience is
limited to my o
I switched to Jagwire shoes on my Oryx brakes and the squealing stopped.
I had Koolstop before.
EricP wrote:
> Could just be the Oryx brakes. I have one set that's gone on three
> different bikes. The front brake has squealed on each bike. Tried
> different pads/toe in, etc. Just figure it's
Oh yeah! Sorry; it must be "middle age"...
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:36 AM, Seth Vidal wrote:
>
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 11:33 AM, Bill Gibson wrote:
>>
> But I followed him online
>> for awhile; no examples of the Rivendell bikes were available to me
>> until I saw one at a Seattle Bike Show i
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 1:40 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> A normal build per Riv will get you great versatility. Pick whatever bars
> you're comfortable with (drops, M'stashe, flat), your favorite saddle &
> pedals & go from there. The Sugino triple is a great value & with a wide
> range 8 speed
A normal build per Riv will get you great versatility. Pick whatever bars
you're comfortable with (drops, M'stashe, flat), your favorite saddle &
pedals & go from there. The Sugino triple is a great value & with a wide
range 8 speed cassette you'll have as wide a range of gearing as you'll
need.
on 2/2/09 10:15 AM, Seth Vidal at skvi...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'll be using it as a daily-use bike for transportation/errands and on
> the weekends for longer journeys. I tend to carry stuff with me as I
> go - even if it is just little stuff. Not likely much off-road,
> though.
>
Some good setup
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 12:37 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> What's your intended use? i.e., touring, day trips, off-road?
>
I'll be using it as a daily-use bike for transportation/errands and on
the weekends for longer journeys. I tend to carry stuff with me as I
go - even if it is just little st
Patrick:
Here's what you're looking for:
Bumper sticker:
http://www.rivbike.com/products/list/promotional#product=24-122
OR ("all time worlds worst seller"):
http://www.rivbike.com/products/list/promotional#product=24-214
dougP
_
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[
> I am serious about wanting to see photos of broken carbon, btw. And this
> raises a question about carbon fiber: I suppose that part of the problem is
> stupid light cf, not cf per se, right? So, if you made a bike of cf that
> isn't stupidly light, would it have any advantage over steel?
Here
What's your intended use? i.e., touring, day trips, off-road?
-Original Message-
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Seth Vidal
Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2009 8:47 PM
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Subject: [RBW] first t
> Of course, if a Riv were in a crash hard enough to splinter a Madone, it
> would get pretty beat up itself, no?
Possibly get bent, dented or scratched. I do not think a human riding
a steel bike could accelerate it to a point where a crash would
splinter the steel. Cars can hit another car or
Quoting PATRICK MOORE :
>
> I am serious about wanting to see photos of broken carbon, btw. And this
> raises a question about carbon fiber: I suppose that part of the problem is
> stupid light cf, not cf per se, right? So, if you made a bike of cf that
> isn't stupidly light, would it have any ad
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 11:33 AM, Bill Gibson wrote:
>
But I followed him online
> for awhile; no examples of the Rivendell bikes were available to me
> until I saw one at a Seattle Bike Show in 1987? 1988? 1989?
I think you must mean 1997, or 1998.
-sv
--~--~-~--~~~---
I don't know if I was searching for LOTR related information way back
in internet prehistory, on some message boards, or GE net or something
like that, all text, I found Grant's early bellyaching and what
amounted to blogging early Rivendell Bicycle struggles on line: waxing
chains, getting real c
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 7:21 AM, JoelMatthews wrote:
> Watching carbon bikes explode has me sworn off
> ever riding one.
Can anyone post links to footage or photos? I'd love to see such a crash in
slow motion, splinters lazily turning through the air.
Of course, if a Riv were in a crash hard
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:07 AM, PATRICK MOORE wrote:
> Now y'all have got me thinking I ought to glue a Riv headbadge onto it,
> using Goop, of course. (In front; the rear is covered with stickers as well
> as with 3 of my daughter's magnetic Little Women paperdolls.) *Are* there
> Riv stickers,
On Sun, Feb 1, 2009 at 5:32 PM, Doug Peterson wrote:
>
> My Atlantis headbadge is glued on. Had the bike 6 years & never noticed.
> Uh, oh, shows how thoroughly I clean! In the past, I've had other bikes
> with glued headbadges, back when bikes had headbadges. Don't forget, lots
> of parts of
George:
Are you getting rain down under or just humidity? Hear that drought
has been very hard there.
I can't imagine the force necessary to make an Atlantis shatter the
way those carbon bikes will. I guess if you are in the bike biz to
win, you take risks. Watching carbon bikes explode has m
I'd love some ice, it's a heatwave here in Sydney, Australia. At
11:00pm it's still 75 degrees and 73% humidity, tomorrow it's going to
make 90. The week after they finished the Tour Down Under in Adelaide
they had six days over 104 and a peak of 115.
Riv content: There was a mass crash on one
Thanks, I think it was the Wild629 that I needed. I was looking for
Marty.
Michael
On Feb 1, 6:25 pm, Marty wrote:
> You should be able to visit the Rivendell bikes pages on Flickr and
> search on Bombadil. The photos for mine are under the name wild629.
> I've received comments on one or two,
Could just be the Oryx brakes. I have one set that's gone on three
different bikes. The front brake has squealed on each bike. Tried
different pads/toe in, etc. Just figure it's one of those things.
Not a fan of it, but learning to live with it.
Will probably try some different pads this sprin
Seth,
Mine was very "normal." It was clear powerder coated and I had to
chase excess powdercoating from the threads and inside the seat tube.
Angus
On Feb 1, 10:47 pm, Seth Vidal wrote:
> Hi,
> This will be my first time building up an atlantis and I was
> wondering if anyone had any special
Howdy folks
Long shot, I'm sure, but I would like to find a nice set of Campy 9S
downtube shifters. Anybody have some to spare?
Thanks, Doug
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