Last package I got from Riv they stuck one in free. I haven't even used it yet.
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I have no problem mixing gray and black. My daughter's bike has the
Yokozuna shifter cables in gray and Shimano brake cables in black (again,
because the Yokozuna were too stiff for the short bends on the
interrupters.)
On Monday, November 4, 2013 9:34:52 AM UTC-6, Tony McG wrote:
My
that seller is a famous gouger. The one that cracked me up (when building
my Moser) is a guy in Hungary was selling an inventory of Moser-engraved
Modolo brake levers for $45/pair, free shipping to US. pb*bikes bought a
pair and has it listed for $325 (it was on sale last week for $292).
On
Funny, I just recycled my old riv bottles because I wanted all my bike
bottles to be updated with the bpa/non plastic tasting kind.
Who knew I was sitting on a goldmine.
Addison Wilhite
Educator - The Academy of Arts, Careers Technology, Reno, Nevada (
http://www.washoecountyschools.org/aact/)
This guy is a piece of work.
Especially frustrating (to me anyway) he has a few NOS Suntour Winner Pro
Freewheel with good touring range - 14-32, 13-30, which he will part with
them for a paltry *THREE HUNDRED DOLLARS!* Sheesh.
Almost 9k transactions though. Even figuring a good amount
These bottom-dwellers on eBay make my blood boil
Most infamous is BBC (Budget Bike Center)... boy if that ain't an
oxymoron...
But PB-Bikes is doing a pretty good job of becoming the new eBay-hole of
the month... I realize it's fair game for non-regulated merchandise; you
can legally price
Why give them power over you? Why spend your time attempting to school them
and allow them to ruin your morning? You're paying a higher price than if
you bought an item from them.
With abandon,
Patrick
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 7:11:06 AM UTC-7, Montclair BobbyB wrote:
These
Looks like an unbranded Dimension. (not that there's anything wrong with
that!) I'm not particularly a fan of the company, but the Velo Orange
threadless stem is pretty decent looking. Soma and IRD make decent ones,
too. And heck, the Dimension (and other versions thereof) aren't bad
really.
I bought an NOS Shimano 8-speed-era Compact-C crank from BBC..$300. Most
of their stuff is overpriced, but I thought 300 was reasonable for a NIB
crank I was having a hard time finding.
Joe Bernard
Vallejo, CA.
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 6:11:06 AM UTC-8, Montclair BobbyB wrote:
These
I shop ebay with patience. Built two bikes in spring and summer. Examples
of good ebay deals - NOS Chorus brakes removed from a floor bike for $70.
NOS Centaur crankset, $120. Right-side NOS Chorus shifter (which I needed
the faster large drum size to work with a Chorus RD) $20. Very
Got my nice shiny new frame pump from Rivbike today. The super short mini
is good for the occasional pump up on the road but I have been doing some
mixed terrain where I had to take some air out and put it back in on the
same ride so it made more sense to go full size. My question is does the
I seem to recall that the rim profile was revised about the same time as
Longleaf had this run of 650b A23's made. That may be when the parallel
brake surfaces happened. I believe that's also when the updated the bead
hook to a more tubeless friendly design...
Steve
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at
Joe
That was the internal talk. The real product name for the Force Field
Fatty Rumpkin is going to be the Farmer Grumpkin. I talked with Grant
about it on one of the Shell Ridge S24Os. They used the standard Fatty
Rumpkin labelling on this first batch, but we're told that eventually it
My pump is 25 years old, I've never used a strap, and it's never fallen off.
With abandon,
Patrick
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I've never had the Zefal fall off the peg when riding.
However, it gets bumped off all the time when I'm walking the bike,
carrying it up stairs, loading it in my truck, etc.
So, I strap it. I salvaged a velcro strap from a cheap underseat bag with
a broken zipper.
Tim Gavin,
Cedar Rapids, IA
throwing out an example - when I used my Zefal this way, on the seat tube,
it fell off all the time and I ended up strapping it
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v728/bulldog1935/Raleigh/aP4130005.jpg
when I moved it to the top tube with an umbrella clip (rubber pad under the
umbrella clip) -
I finally mounted fenders to my Riv last night. Looking pretty classy, but
I need to tweak the fender line. The front is especially tricky; I think I
need to bend down the top of the crown mount to clear the headset; like in
the Riv install video. The cream Longboards go well with the
I am going to see if the Trangia has the umph to pull this off this weekend.
http://www.lottieanddoof.com/2013/06/one-pan-pasta/
I think I will get the water boiling in the kettle and then pour over the
ingredients in the pan. From there, cook until pasta is al dente, garnish
with basil,
Many will tell you that a bike that looks that good with fenders should
never be run without fenders. That's a stunner. As you think about your
fenderline tweaks, consider running a pair of Sheldon nuts. For bikes of
that type, I think it might be the smartest route
That said, I still do it
Tom,
Was very curious what culinary feast your hatching but the link doesn't
seem to work?
~Hugh
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 8:24:22 AM UTC-8, Tom Virgil wrote:
I am going to see if the Trangia has the umph to pull this off this
weekend.
I'm beginning to think that the best option, for me, is the $1/month plan
from that club and a decent brush with Costco Dove clone soap slivers. I
must first use up my bags of cheap razors and my tube of gel, so I have
time to ponder this life-changing decision.
OTOH, I did try to trim the pony
Almost as fun as bikes!
On Mon, Nov 4, 2013 at 1:06 AM, Joe Bernard joerem...@gmail.com wrote:
We've gone from bikes to hatchets to shaving. It's madness, I tell ya!
Joe Madness Bernard
Vallejo, CA.
On Sunday, November 3, 2013 10:29:44 PM UTC-8, sameness wrote:
My defolliculaton arsenal
red and cream-- that's a beautiful bike.
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 11:20:37 AM UTC-5, Tim Gavin wrote:
I finally mounted fenders to my Riv last night. Looking pretty classy,
but I need to tweak the fender line. The front is especially tricky; I
think I need to bend down the top of the
Beautiful bike!
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 11:20:37 AM UTC-5, Tim Gavin wrote:
I finally mounted fenders to my Riv last night. Looking pretty classy,
but I need to tweak the fender line. The front is especially tricky; I
think I need to bend down the top of the crown mount to clear the
Patrick,
Dog. Clippers. Dog clippers. They solve all mens' hair grooming challenges.
No razor required. Grin.
With abandon,
Patrick
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 9:35:14 AM UTC-7, Patrick Moore wrote:
I'm beginning to think that the best option, for me, is the $1/month plan
from that club
This circumnavigates my stomping ground, so I am in for some or all of it.
Would not want to miss you guys
Are you thinking 15th and Camino Del Mar, South to Carmel Valley Road, East
to Sorrento Valley Road, South to Sorrento Valley Blvd, East to
Penasquitos? The initial stretch on Sorrento
You should take a look at the rest of this guy's outrageous
pricesSheesh!
On Wednesday, November 6, 2013 11:59:37 PM UTC-6, joe b. wrote:
Not sure I can justify drinking from my Riv bottles in this market...
Where you have a potentially colliding handlebar/top tube combo, a
strategically placed pump strap can save some grief.
From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Peter Morgano
Sent: Thursday, November 07, 2013 10:53 AM
To: rbw-owners-bunch
Most bids I have seen on an auction. At 62 at the moment.
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That's funny, everybody is bidding it up a dollar at a time!
Cheers,
David
it isn't a contest. Just enjoy the ride. - Seth Vidal
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 8:52 AM, Mattt mattto...@gmail.com wrote:
Most bids I have seen on an auction. At 62 at the moment.
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That's correct; I put my strap at that same place where the Silver shifters
will hit the top tube. I have a piece of vinyl electrical tape there even
if I'm not carrying my pump.
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 10:49 AM, Allingham II, Thomas J
thomas.alling...@skadden.com wrote:
Where you have a
My Brother showed these to me a couple a days ago...my reaction at that
time was non interest. It's absurd that anyone would buy one of these and
I'm sure Grant would laugh about this too. Definitely didn't ruin my
morning day. I could say something about free market but on second
thought...
I won't pay $800 for them, but I really like those Dia Compe 450 centerpull
brakes. Ball bearing pivots! SICK!
super sweet center
pullshttp://www.ebay.com/itm/NOS-DIA-COMPE-GRAN-COMPE-450-Center-Pull-Brake-Set-BALL-BEARING-PIVOTS-COMPLETE-/310784012165?pt=US_Brakeshash=item485c2baf85
On
Short of Buy it now, bidding on anything before the last five minutes is
rather foolish. People are amusing creatures.
With abandon,
Patrick
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 10:01:39 AM UTC-7, cyclot...@gmail.com wrote:
That's funny, everybody is bidding it up a dollar at a time!
Cheers,
Och! Man! This eventually happens in every group. I slip up and then no one
treats me the same. Sigh. I might as well get this over with. Steve, here's
your slippers (yumm, real lambswool!). Rod, here's your paper (sorry about
the drool on the meat flyer). Bob here's your ...
With abandon,
Hey Tom,
I'm into it!
I haven't read the reader article but it looks good to me. It will reduce
the mileage some but making this a 70% dirt ride appeals to me. I think
I've ridden the western part of this canyon at some point. Thanks for the
awesome suggestion and glad your going to make it!
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-TNs_RRuFXQk/UnvOxGRQAxI/ABQ/r-tplqwTuHg/s1600/IMG_9652.jpg
*One-Pan Pasta* (adapted slightly from *Martha Stewart
Living*http://www.marthastewart.com/978784/one-pan-pasta
)
- 12 ounces linguine
- 12 ounces cherry or grape tomatoes, halved or
I think with a stove full of fuel, and judicious use of the simmer lid when
you get things up to temperature, there's no reason why you can't make this
meal.
I was cooking quinoa and stuff like that on my tour and never ran into
problems.
cc
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 8:24 AM, Tom Virgil
I have a set of the Force-Field versions on my Bomba; I think my only
'complaint' is that I'd be happier if they were even wider; instead of a
42, if they were a 46 or so I've thought about switching the 650b Big
Ben instead
Interesting, tho'just the little details you
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 12:20:08 PM UTC-5, Deacon Patrick wrote:
Short of Buy it now, bidding on anything before the last five minutes is
rather foolish. People are amusing creatures.
Back before the watch-list developed to where it now is, I used to make an
initial low bid, just so
Wait, is there a 650B big ben? I was also looking for a rough stuff 650b
tire in the 50mm range without crazy knobs on it though.
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:41 PM, Leslie leslie.bri...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a set of the Force-Field versions on my Bomba; I think my only
'complaint' is that
Is there a 650B big ben? Not exactly:
650x48 big benhttp://www.rivbike.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=TBEN-10138
Hopefully it will be around soon. It's November after all
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 9:49:18 AM UTC-8, Peter M wrote:
Wait, is there a 650B big ben? I was also looking for
But wait! They're on sale now; can be yours for just $72 now!
I'm on the verge of posting a link to
http://www.rivbike.com/product-p/wb2.htm as a question to the seller, but I
don't want to get eBay's hammer to come down on me for it
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 12:59:37 AM UTC-5,
That is a nice price for rough stuff tires. I would definitely pick up a
pair for the Bombadil. If i know ETAs i would say maybe an after xmas gift
to myself?
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:53 PM, Bill Lindsay tapebu...@gmail.com wrote:
Is there a 650B big ben? Not exactly:
650x48 big
I was actually being melodramatic...takes a lot more to ruin my day... But
I do buy and sell on eBay, and I firmly believe in the overall fairness of
the system... it really works.
And I have a low tolerance for greedy sellers and cheap tactics, and have
ZERO issue pointing out to sellers when
I've got 2 or 3 of those in the translucent material. Wonder how beasuage
affects the value?
This question of worth or value comes up regularly. The market will
provide the answer. Don't forget we're the group laying out +/-$2k for
frames that are considered by many to be dated design,
Peter:
Off road it's pretty easy to dislodge the pump. If you don't want to add
more clutter, how about strapping it when venturing off-road? At least
then if you do knock it loose it won't immediately create a problem.
dougP
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 7:53:28 AM UTC-8, Peter M wrote:
I agree that worth is an artifact (it's what we make of it) but, I'm happy
to pay a few thousand for a bike because of the labor that went into it,
from the lugs that are investment-cast, to the hand brazing, to those
people who actually wear Nitto Factory hats at an actual Nitto Factory.
And
It could just be that your body was ahead of medical science, and it's your
newly discovered ALL tendon in your knee. Yes, you read that right, doctors
are THAT good at anatomy they don't know all the parts yet. Sardonic
grin.
I don’t use straps. If the pump has a reasonable amount of compression in the
spring when it’s mounted you shouldn’t have need to strap it on. I have never,
ever had a pump fall off while riding.
Note that I don’t ride off-road, so I don’t have to deal with the additional
potentially
More detail: I ride some pretty technical stuff off road and single track,
and the built in mounting post on my Hunqa has always held it on solid.
With abandon,
Patrick
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Growing up Pigeon toed has given me awesomely narrow q factor so most bikes
fit me nicely. I feel for those who have wide q as all the trends are with
narrow. I don't personally feel that 45 bucks for some machined inserts is
so much, especially not if it helps you ride more. But that is only my
Sounds delicious. I think you have to halve it though. Those are one quart
pots, I'm pretty sure. The recipe as written won't fit.
On Thursday, November 7, 2013, Christopher Chen wrote:
I think with a stove full of fuel, and judicious use of the simmer lid
when you get things up to
$45 is a bargain ... lol. compared to the used Riv water bottle posted
here from EeeBay ;)
AND you get Two Win Win
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I am thinking along the same lines, Anne. I have the Trangia 25-8 with 1.5
and 1.75 liter pots. 2 portions seems more in range.
I think picking up a baguette on the way to camp would cap things off
nicely.
Tom
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 11:49:05 AM UTC-8, Anne Paulson wrote:
Sounds
The strap isn't to keep the pump from falling off, it keeps it from
rattling.
The rattling can be the sound of the raised edge of the pump handle
hitting the bottom to the TT, which then rusts, then the TT fails.
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Yes, but sometimes someone else, by bidding early, has effectively occupied
that sweet place in the bidding, thereby 'taking your spot' up to the point
that bids are too high and its no longer a deal. I also usually wait until
the last 10 seconds or so, but I'm always worried I 've been
You can also place it behind the seat tube; compressed between the upper
and lower chainstays.
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 10:53:28 AM UTC-5, Peter M wrote:
Got my nice shiny new frame pump from Rivbike today. The super short mini
is good for the occasional pump up on the road but I have
Bill-
I have some sheldon's fender nuts, but I didn't use them because I didn't
have any bolts that fit them (fenders had one size smaller in hardware). I
understand that they make de-fendering easier (no need to remove brake
caliper, etc), but I don't see how they'll improve fender line. They
It's rare that pre-made front racks fit universally every time since
cantilever-to-crown distances can vary from bike to bike, as can
canti-to-canti distance, and most of the time a little tweaking is
required. I usually start with the rack legs since they are longer and you
can distribute
My '88 Schwinn KOM-10 MTB has a vertical pump peg behind the seat cluster.
Unfortunately, I'm using the chainstay bridge to mount a fender, so I
can't use that location right now.
It's a nice feature, but kinda bewildering as the bike has the peg but no
fender or rack eyelets.
On Thu, Nov 7,
Tim
Sheldons nuts on bikes with caliper brakes can get the fender just a tiny
bit higher under the brake and fork crown. On the front, you can only get
the fender as high as the slot of that little L-bracket allows. Yes you
have to bend the tip to clear the headset bottom cup, but also you'd
Bill-
Thanks for the advice. I need to pick up a couple M6 bolts (and a better
method to attach the fender at the chainstay bridge) at the hardware store
and I'll give it a try.
I can see how they would help you get the fender as high as possible.
Unfortunately, that won't let me step up
Best of luck with it. Your bike looks terrific all the same
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 12:32:04 PM UTC-8, Tim Gavin wrote:
Bill-
Thanks for the advice. I need to pick up a couple M6 bolts (and a better
method to attach the fender at the chainstay bridge) at the hardware store
and
I've knocked it off a couple times, but the big reason is to reduce rattles.
Cheers,
David
it isn't a contest. Just enjoy the ride. - Seth Vidal
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:17 PM, Tim Gavin
tim.ga...@littlevillagemag.comwrote:
My '88 Schwinn KOM-10 MTB has a vertical pump peg behind the
On 11/07/2013 02:11 PM, Christopher Chen wrote:
I agree that worth is an artifact (it's what we make of it) but, I'm
happy to pay a few thousand for a bike because of the labor that went
into it, from the lugs that are investment-cast, to the hand brazing,
to those people who actually wear
I wouldn't care if Ernest Hemingway sucked martinis out of that water
bottle during the liberation of Paris, it's still absurd.
In that case it would be well worth $100 for proof of the Tardis'
existence. Grin.
With abandon,
Patrick
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 1:46:40 PM UTC-7, Steve
Steve
What if it was a famous artifact of bike racing history, like a water
bottle that Cipolinni threw at a race official?
Cipo! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4XxCZagAjk
...no, probably not even then...
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 12:46:40 PM UTC-8, Steve Palincsar wrote:
On
I think the key to pump security on bumpy terrain is to have a mounting peg
and sufficient compression.
Or use a Lezyne mini. The larger one pumps a 61 actual mm Big Apple to 20+
rather quickly and easily, and a 55 (actual) F Fred to 30 with not much
more effort. I daresay even a Zefal might take
But he threw so many at officials during his career that their is a glut of
them on the market. :)
Addison Wilhite
Educator - The Academy of Arts, Careers Technology, Reno, Nevada (
http://www.washoecountyschools.org/aact/)
Blogger - Reno Rambler (http://reno-rambler.blogspot.com)
Bicycle
A perfect complement to a S24O is a food dehydrator. You can prepare soups,
pasta, even meat dishes... at home, perfectly seasoned, then dry them
overnight and seal in a ziplock baggie. At camp all you do is rehydrate and
heat, and you have fool-proof good-tasting food. I am doing this more and
I booked spots at West Point Inn, Glen, and Hawk camp on the 12th, 13th,
and 14th respectively. I'm going to resist the urge to overplan beyond
that, and enjoy the adventure of finding my way. There wasn't much to
booking those places and there's nothing so spendy that I couldn't change
the
That's a great idea, Andrew. I went on a backpacking trip in the Smokies
with my son's scout troop and we spent too much on dehydrated food. We
even avoided the backpacker meals, and still spent a bunch on dried fruit
and such.
Tim
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 3:02 PM, BSWP ashtab...@gmail.com
Thanks for the explanation, Bill. I'm filing this away for future reference.
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 3:36:08 PM UTC-5, Bill Lindsay wrote:
Best of luck with it. Your bike looks terrific all the same
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 12:32:04 PM UTC-8, Tim Gavin wrote:
Bill-
Thanks for
I don't take a stove most trips anymore. We dehydrate our own jerky, mashed
potatoes, and anything else we want. I use a lot less brain energy not
having to cook. Just open the bags and munch away. Amazingly good too, the
homemade stuff. When I do take a stove, it's a Kelly Kettle, and I grill
They move the front fender rearward, but not directly rearward, the main
benefit is you've moved the whole fender back by about 5-10 degrees.
This means your mudflap comes even lower. Let me illustrate:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lumachrome/10730758796/
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:13 PM, Tim
On 11/07/2013 03:49 PM, Deacon Patrick wrote:
I wouldn't care if Ernest Hemingway sucked martinis out of that water
bottle during the liberation of Paris, it's still absurd.
In that case it would be well worth $100 for proof of the Tardis'
existence.
The water bottle fiasco is arbitrage. It happens all the time.
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 12:46 PM, Steve Palincsar palin...@his.com wrote:
On 11/07/2013 02:11 PM, Christopher Chen wrote:
I agree that worth is an artifact (it's what we make of it) but, I'm
happy to pay a few thousand for a bike
Thanks for the visual, Christoper. I'm afraid that moving the fender back
may cause the flap to get very close to the ground; these are a bit low
already (650B wheels). I'll give it a try and measure. I can always trim
the flap, or--worst case--buy the shorty flap from Riv.
Here’s my solution to pump rattle, which for some reason (the rattle) seems to
be specific to my Rivendell Road. I wrapped the pump handle with several turns
of cloth bar tape, and topped that off with a wrapping of heavy black thread.
This stopped the occasionally clunking of the pump against
On 11/07/2013 04:35 PM, Christopher Chen wrote:
The water bottle fiasco is arbitrage. It happens all the time.
According to Wikipedia, arbitrage is a transaction that involves no
negative cash flow at any probabilistic or temporal state and a positive
cash flow in at least one state -- yes,
Tim, your bike does,indeed ,look very classy. I love those 1st generation
Rivs
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 10:20:37 AM UTC-6, Tim Gavin wrote:
I finally mounted fenders to my Riv last night. Looking pretty classy,
but I need to tweak the fender line. The front is especially tricky; I
Sweet looking bike Tim, although I'm not sure what this thing you call Fall
is. Here in Vt we have had a week of hi winds and low chill factors.
As for 650B, I would recommend going for it. I bought a new-to-me Saluki
with Pari-Motos last Spring and have fallen in love with it. So much so
An ounce of prevention...
~Hugh
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 7:53:28 AM UTC-8, Peter M wrote:
Got my nice shiny new frame pump from Rivbike today. The super short mini
is good for the occasional pump up on the road but I have been doing some
mixed terrain where I had to take some air out
I have a standalone L shaped pump peg (which is part of the frame) on my
Riv Custom on the underside of the top tube that I mounted a Zefal frame
pump to. The pump has only come off when I inadvertently lifted the bike,
not realizing the pump was there; no rattles. I have to compress
I have a standalone L shaped pump peg (which is part of the frame) on my
Riv Custom on the underside of the top tube that I mounted a Zefal frame
pump to. The pump has only come off when I inadvertently lifted the bike,
not realizing the pump was there; no rattles. I have to compress the pump
Tim,
Love the look of the bike, I agree the cream fenders compliment the cream
head tube. I have a pair that are going on the wife's Betty.
Bill,
Thanks for the explanation as I was wondering about the fender nuts and the
whole fendering process.
~Hugh
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 8:20:37
There is still hope for others! Mine just arrived today in WV!!
On Sunday, November 3, 2013 2:19:39 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
I had a pleasant surprise last week when I found the new Riv catalogue in
the box. As good as a reader! If Grant keeps up his diary, the dearth of
bike stuff
Tim,
You've obviously converted your Riv from 700c to 650B. How has that worked
for you? Most of the information I've seen, including some from Grant
himself, is that the original Rivendell Road Standards were not good
candidates for a conversion because of the low bottom bracket that Grant
For frame pumps, I use a strap. Had one fall off on a bike trail once.
For me, Planet Bike models seem more likely to do this than a Zefal.
The other reason - it helps cut down on the brake cable bouncing off the
top tube.
Eric Platt
St. Paul, MN
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 5:33 PM, djbardwil
On 11/07/2013 06:30 PM, djbardwil wrote:
I have a standalone L shaped pump peg (which is part of the
frame) on my Riv Custom on the underside of the top tube that
I mounted a Zefal frame pump to. The pump has only come off
when I inadvertently lifted the bike,
Anton, thanks so much! I mounted the rack this morning before riding into
work. I did have to bend the stays 'down'and as you predicted the reach angle
is nose down. Great suggestion about the spacers, I'm going to try that tonight
and will get back to you.
Thanks again!
Tony
--
You
Still nada next door in Ohio.
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 6:51 PM, jpp paste...@notes.udayton.edu wrote:
There is still hope for others! Mine just arrived today in WV!!
On Sunday, November 3, 2013 2:19:39 PM UTC-5, Patrick Moore wrote:
I had a pleasant surprise last week when I found the new
That bike is gorgeous, first red with the cream had tube I've seen. Some one
said 'stunner' and that sums it up for me. I just put SKS fenders on my
Atlantis and was thrilled at how easy the install went.
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Wow - 5-10 minutes with a big plier sound like some serious effort - they
must be strong.
Curious - did it come off clean and leave an unpainted surface spot or was
it inserted into a hole in the frame?
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 8:17:12 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:
On 11/07/2013
On 11/07/2013 08:39 PM, djbardwil wrote:
Wow - 5-10 minutes with a big plier sound like some serious effort -
they must be strong.
Curious - did it come off clean and leave an unpainted surface spot or
was it inserted into a hole in the frame?
It left a raggedy stump. IIRC the bike in
Got some M6 x 22 security bolts from bicyclebolts.com
Took off original Bleriot bolt. Had a washer on it. Can't get washer off -
too tight a fit on the bolt.
OK to use new bolt without washer in the seat clamp hole?
Can I throw any ol' washer on the new bolt, or is it a curved washer?
I know this is seems sacrilege but I'm pairing down and have for sale a Hilsen
complete in excellent condition. Two seasons of use; everything on this was
purchased new. I have $3900 invested and will sell for $2900 including:
• 61cm A Homer Hilsen frame - purchased new
• Frame Saver prior to
I know this is seems sacrilege but I'm pairing down and have for sale a Hilsen
complete in excellent condition. Two seasons of use; everything on this was
purchased new. I have $3900 invested and will sell for $2900 including:
• 61cm A Homer Hilsen frame - purchased new
• Frame Saver prior to
Tom,
Which stove do you have the 27-7 or 25-7?
~Hugh
On Thursday, November 7, 2013 8:24:22 AM UTC-8, Tom Virgil wrote:
I am going to see if the Trangia has the umph to pull this off this
weekend.
http://www.lottieanddoof.com/2013/06/one-pan-pasta/
I think I will get the water boiling in
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