Could Grant out tentacular this Bilenky Tandem?
https://cyclingabout.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/wpid-Photo-201405021227482.jpg
I do love that fork crown. Maybe Riv'll make 'em available, and I could put
it on my Hunqapillar.
Eric, don't over think this-- the Hunqapillar is terrific at
Huh? This isn't Over Thinkers Anonymous? Grin.
Patrick
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 8:36:34 AM UTC-6, Shoji Takahashi wrote:
Eric, don't over think this
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I have a compact double, 42/25T, 12-29 rear, and the Ultegra CX-70 that Riv
sells is the Perfect front derailleur.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v728/bulldog1935/Raleigh/Viner/aP3150004.jpg
As far as the RD and range, just do a chain wrap calculation, compare to
the RD spec, and
Eye candy!!!
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Rene,
When I first got my Atlantis it was completly bare bones. No racks, no
fenders, just some 42mm touring tires and moustache bars with friction
barends. I had an absolute blast bombing around town. The bike felt sporty
and fast.
So I get where you're going with the Compass 38s and the
My kids nicknamed me Khaki Man... I also FAR prefer the tan color on
everything.The reason why all my stuff is Acorn instead of Sackville
was that they didn't have the tan RBW stuff when I was buying but Acorn
did...
-L
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 12:12:53 PM UTC-4, Thomas
ok, you've got my interest. the cable splitters, im assuming, are little
ends that let you attach and de-attach cables at a midpoint of your
choosing? ive seen them, but im not 100% sure about how they work. so...
do they need to be attached on bare cable, or is there a way to do it in
the
Oh, and Divinci sells a bar swap kit that includes four males and two
females for this exact purpose.
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I typically ride my bike a short distance (1-5 miles) to a train, then a
train 40-50 minutes into work.
Recently I've settled into using my SaddleSack Medium as my daily commute
bag. On a normal day it's pretty empty; lunch, hat, minimal gear don't
really challenge it. (I store tube/tools/etc
Note that even though the cx70 is a double front derailer it worked well for me
with a triple sugino too.
Clayton Scott
SF, CA
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You use them on bare cables, not in the middle of a housed section.
If you have mtb brake levers, you can sneak the cable nipple out of the
lever. This works well for swapping between Albatross and Bullmoose
(provided you can live with the same length of brake housing). If you are
swapping
sorry everyone, that's obviously an NOS Superbe Pro on my Heron, not a new
Sun XCD.
Both work well. I did put a Sun XCD on my Legolas (which has the new
Sugino wide range 26-40) and it works very, very well.
Legolas here:
If you use Centerpulls then you can make sure you have slotted cable
hangars and you can unhook and remove the brakes without needing splitters.
Then you just have to do new runs for the new bars. You do need enjoy
barrel adjusters and straddle carriers (what are those called!).
If you use
Clayton-
The CX-70--and many other double FDs--can work fine with a triple
crankset. Except with Shimano STIs, which is the OP's question.
Jan Heine covered this particular issue well. It's the same article where
he praises the CX-70, btw.
Ha ha ha ha!!! Nicely put! One of the Santa Cruz bikes is also departing.
My son really doesn't want to mountain bike and I have to respect that.
Besides, he's now tall enough to ride one of the other Rivs in my stable,
so we'll still be doing some rides together every now and then. Just not on
Hello all. Prices include shipping inside conus, farther will be a few $ more.
Brooks swift Ti Honey. Used not abused, it was on a spare bike. $150
Nitto technomic 12cm 25.4 clamp 220 height. $40 shipped
Thanks
Paypal friends and family accepted
Email offlist / private
Jason
SF,CA
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Whoa. Those cranks need to be tagged NSFW.
Jeff Hagedorn
Los Angeles, CA USA
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 10:22:33 AM UTC-7, reynoldslugs wrote:
sorry everyone, that's obviously an NOS Superbe Pro on my Heron, not a new
Sun XCD.
Both work well. I did put a Sun XCD on my Legolas (which
If I ditch the derailer will the chain stay properly. I actually assumed
that would be the way it worked but I wasn't sure. I thought maybe it would
still need it as a guide.
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http://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/people-in-toronto-created-a-memorial-to-a-dead-raccoon-after?bffbtrendingutm_term=4ldqphx#.wmOnKXK9w
You ask about Riv content...
Fellow list member's tweet is featured here...
Also it's hilarious .
Manny
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As Patrick says, you should be ok. Just avoid slamming up-shifts while
going over big-old bumps..that's moment when tension at the rear derailer
would be reduced, giving the chain enough slack to jump off the ring with a
good bounce behind it.
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 6:45:14 PM UTC-7,
IME, which extends across the gamut of fully 2 bicycles -- old 5 speed
Raleigh Sprite, and '03 Curt Custom 1X10 -- a chain will stay put very
securely on a relatively close ratio cluster ridden on pavement. What one
will do if subjected to the jarring of rough dirt roads, I can't say.
Someone
The IRD thumbshifter is a shortened Silver ratchet shifter, so it should fit
onto the IRD stem mount just fine. But you might be able to skip this step
altogether and just mount your shifters-with-clamps onto your quill stem. The
diameter of your clamps and the stem mount is the same, so just
When I bought my Hillborne from the fine Riv folks I got the Albatross bars
with IRD thumbshifters set up. When Brian was building it up he warned me
that while those thumbshifters are fantastic (and they are) that it might
be better to go with the stem shifter mount or bar ends to give me max
It's been huge fun so far. I've had a plethora of 20-inch-wheel folders,
but this is the first one with drops. It's also the first one which handles
like a regular bike..very impressive.
It sounds like y'all are happy with brifters on Noodles, so I'll get my
order in to Riv. Sorry, it'll be
Shoji that Flickr album is inspiring, love the multi-bar Hunq!
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This is great entertainment , every time Riv releases an photo of an
object . silly season ensues ! It's just a fork crown after all :-)
60mm clearance is the same as the Clems . it's pretty clear that this
clearance will be the standard clearance for future frames intended
I believe the production frame Clems and Clementines will have two bottle
mounts.
With abandon,
Patrick
On Wednesday, July 8, 2015 at 11:23:01 PM UTC-6, A. L Young wrote:
I saw only one bottle mount on the Clementine. The Blug shows a bottle
behind the seat tube on that black Clemmy. It
Another not directly related answer, but I use campagnolo ergo shifters with
8 speeds in the back, and a wide-low double up front. Works great. I can shift
all 8 gears in the back with the front on the 42 tooth, no rubbing or noise,
and don't even need to trim.
That said, campy ergo front
60 mm clearance still isn't enough for a 60 mm Super Moto, quite possibly
the dreamiest all-rounder tire.
If it is a tandem, will they use the same seat lug as the Clem, and
therefore the curved chainstays?
And imagine the tentacular diaga-stay tomfoolery Grant could design, with
nearly double
I am as interested in the possible crown mounted rack that Riv may be
introducing as the bike that will get the crown.
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As others have mentioned, the biggest issue will be finding a compatible
front derailleur.
Shimano STI shifters work with road front derailleurs, not with mountain
ones. Road triples are optmized around a larger crankset, like 50/39/30,
and generally have longer cages that could hit the
Yes, that should present no problem. Double shifting isn't so picky, and
the CX-70 should clear the frame (it's designed for smaller rings).
Newer double STI shifters have additional cross-chain detents, for
trimming. I don't know when / what product level Shimano incorporated
these, though.
A
Thanks for the photos, Shoji. Also, you're killing it with that coordinated
red/grey tape on the moustache bars
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 7:50:27 AM UTC-7, Shoji Takahashi wrote:
I've set up my Hunqapillar with all of 'em:
Noodles (48cm, 10-cm stem)
Albatross (12-cm stem)
Bullmoose
They could use it on the Clem now that it's cast for, I assume the same
price as a hunq crown, but it wouldn't have saved them money to get the
tooling molds made in the first place. Far cheaper to use a crown they
already had.
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 3:39:38 PM UTC-4, Christopher
Any idea if Shimano Double STI Shifters (sora, tiagra) would be compatible
with the CX70 FD with the Sugino wide/low double crank?
On Wednesday, July 8, 2015 at 4:22:25 PM UTC-4, RDS wrote:
Are the Sugino cranks that Riv sells (Triple (46/36/24) or Wide/Lo double)
compatible with 9 Speed
What about the possibility that this is the new Clem fork? Wouldn't this be
cheaper/ easier to make? The sockets remind me of the Clem seat tube lug and
hark back to the Heron seat cluster. Is this a stretch?
Oh, and I love it!!!
Cheers!
Chris
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I do this same thing with my two Hillbornes. Though in my case I confess I
tend to use the Bosco and Albatross bars most of the time (80%). I've used
my Moustache every now and then and I've only rarely used the Noodles
and Bullmoose over the past year or two.
Even with my limited exploitation
bump and price reduction to 175$ shipped
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The Sun XCD front derailleur works well for the wide-range front double. I
am using that setup on my Heron 650B:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/41563482@N06/13018667345/in/album-72157642068014924/
Works great.
Max
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Good to know that there will be a couple of fellow travelers on the route.
I'm well aware of the potential for carnage and cluster*!$$#@@# at the
beginning of the route, as well as the examples of bad behavior and poor
manners all the way to Portland.
When I ride STP, I wonder why I do it.
Thinking harder for Bill brought to mind an old Reader story about a man for
whom a Super Duty fork and frame facilitated a life-saving lifestyle change.
Maybe this crown goes that way? Maybe that's Buffalo talk?
Ben
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I've set up my Hunqapillar with all of 'em:
Noodles (48cm, 10-cm stem)
Albatross (12-cm stem)
Bullmoose
Moustache (7-cm stem)
I use cable splitters for quick changes of handlebars. Takes ~10 min to
swap from one to another. (Takashi, who's also on this group with a
Hunqapillar, is also a bar
How do you use/shift this? 1 by x with a granny? Or do you use it like a
real double?
- Original Message -
From: Ron Mc bulldog...@gmail.com
To: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com
Sent: Thursday, July 9, 2015 5:34:55 PM
Subject: Re: [RBW] Re: Sugino Wide/Low Feedback + Are Sugino
I use mine as a 1x, with a bailout granny. Shift into it maybe a few times
a year.
On Jul 9, 2015 5:38 PM, Steve Palincsar palin...@his.com wrote:
How do you use/shift this? 1 by x with a granny? Or do you use it like
a real double?
- Original Message -
From: Ron Mc
I've been told that the term for what I've done to that B67 is 'scooped'... And
that it's fairly rare in the supposedly heavy duty sprung Brooks saddles. It
hasn't impacted comfort though, it fits 'like a glove!'
But I haven't done a ride over 20 miles with that saddle in a while either.
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 2:45:50 PM UTC-5, Tim Gavin wrote:
Yes, that should present no problem. Double shifting isn't so picky, and
the CX-70 should clear the frame (it's designed for smaller rings).
Newer double STI shifters have additional cross-chain detents, for
trimming. I
hi Steve,
I use it mostly as a granny, and am most always on the 42T for pavement
riding. However, I have 14% grades to get to my house. So I will shift to
the 25T and use the full range for approach gears. The range on the 25T
also covers most off-road needs and keeps the RD up out of
ps, the 5 narrow gears 63-88 inches is where I live on pavement
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 4:58:49 PM UTC-5, Ron Mc wrote:
hi Steve,
I use it mostly as a granny, and am most always on the 42T for pavement
riding. However, I have 14% grades to get to my house. So I will shift to
the
The big bike was called the Bison, right? Buffalo could be this tall
bike, maybe.
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I picked up a Bike Friday a few weeks ago, my first dropbar bike in 10
years. I'm liking the Shimano Sora brifters enough to stick with them for a
while (a vast improvement over the first-gen 9-speed Ultegras I tried years
ago), but the 42cm Salsa bars just ain't cuttin' it. My last dropbars
i have brifters on noodles...no problems
mike goldman
Old School Yearbook Pics
View Class Yearbooks Online Free. Search by School Year. Look Now!
http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL3131/559f056b5494056b59dest01duc
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Shoji! +1 on killing me with the maroon/ gray harlequin wrap on a bike that has
my all fave stock paint job! Plus it's my size!
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I have 46cm Noodles with Campy 10 Ergos on my Custom and it seems to fit me
fine. No complaints.
On Thursday, July 9, 2015 at 7:34:26 PM UTC-4, Joe Bernard wrote:
I picked up a Bike Friday a few weeks ago, my first dropbar bike in 10
years. I'm liking the Shimano Sora brifters enough to
Drop-bar 20-wheeled bikes are a blast... especially when a 46cm
noodle is involved! 48 should work too, but I've found as I widen my
bar, I prefer a little less stem (e.g. 1cm shorter than w/ 46 or gasp,
44).
=- Joe Bunik
Walnut Creek, CA
On 7/9/15, Call Me Jay callmehamt...@mac.com wrote:
I
I am pretty sure that another company took over that Bison project and saw
it to completion.
On Tuesday, July 7, 2015 at 6:52:18 PM UTC-4, EGNolan wrote:
When they teased a while back, I had no idea what part it would be, but
didn't dream of this beauty... http://rivbike.tumblr.com
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