Jeremy McCreary
Bought it anyway
- Region
- USA
- City
- Carlsbad, CA
Exactly.Purple Haze, all in my brain!![]()
Exactly.Purple Haze, all in my brain!![]()
Quite the adventure indeed!Took my first trip of the season down to ride the trails in Southwest PA & MD this week. Usually, I've made several by this time, but the weather has been just awful here this spring. Overnight it went from too cold & wet to just plain hot. Got out on the GAP trail at 5:45AM to beat the heat.
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The ride was going well until I encountered this 12" Locust tree across the trail just north of Frostburg, MD.
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It fell between two fences, effectively blocking the trail. There was no easy detour and I had already invested an hour, and half a battery, on the 1700' climb up Big Savage Mountain. I could have unloaded the bike and dragged it on it's side under the trunk through mud and ankle deep water. It isn't easily seen in the pic, but there was a puddle in the grass under the trunk.
No one around at that hour to help move it so instead, I got out my 12" folding saw. In 10 minutes, I had enough of the tree removed to get the trail open. This was the sixth time that saw has come in handy and I never ride without it.
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The ride went well on the rest of the GAP and C&O Canal trails:
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The newly repaved Western Maryland Rail Trail was a real pleasure:
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That was until I hit an unseen rock in the shadows and busted a chunk out of the rim of my rear mag wheel:
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There's no tool you can carry that will fix that kind of damage, and I was 16 miles from my truck. luckily, the Tannus Armor tire insert kept the tube from blowing out, and I was able to limp slowly back. It's going to be an expensive repair since the rear motor is integrated into the mag wheel.
I was thinking of cutting the trip short anyway because of the heat, but this made the decision for me. All in all, quite an adventure, hopefully not to be repeated.
Bummer! Had my own hard lesson about deep road shadows on bright sunny days. Ran over a totally hidden, deeply recessed drainage grate right in the middle of a road at 12-15 mph. Launched me high off the saddle, hands barely reaching the bars, but somehow didn't fall.That was until I hit an unseen rock in the shadows and busted a chunk out of the rim of my rear mag wheel:
I cannot see you riding a bike!A cloudy day, and cooler than it should be at 17C. Rained a lot yesterday, and a bit this morning.
First of all, I'm a retired engineer and something of a gadget freak. Half the enjoyment I get when riding, comes from being able to see statistics and conditions at a glance. I'm also a DIY'er and get a lot of enjoyment modifying the bike to suit my needs.Holy hell, what the heck is in your cockpit? It looks like a MiG-21. Do you have a build thread?
No security devices, just battery locks and a hidden power switch. I maintain security by never letting the bike out of my sight.6zfshdb
"At my age, it's function over form and I've long since ceased to care what the bike looks like or what others think."
Looks sharp, Plus 2,
I like the dual GPS I don't see any mini cam's, for security or more photo's etc? On the back?
Tia,
I don't ride on road much and those cam devices aren't much good on the trail. I rely mostly on my helmet mounted mirror for anything approaching from behind.Thanks 6Z
On the mini cam's. I was thinking along the line of security while
riding on the roads, watching for stupid drivers from coming up from behind you etc.
Tia
I'd realized when I got home that I had neglected the obligatory bike shot/s.I cannot see you riding a bike!![]()
,.. I rely mostly on my helmet mounted mirror for anything approaching from behind.
No offense taken Stefan, I realize you are more of a "purist" than I am. I don't ride all the time with this much gear. I simply like the option to add as many devices as I deem necessary for a particular ride. Unfortunately, most of the pics I post are of my longer rides with the bars loaded. Someday, I post a few of a short ride with only a single GPS attached.@6zfshdb: I apologise for my laughter. I am the same data freak as you are (and saw the picture a long time ago) but I would not put that many gadgets on the e-bike myself.
Fancy you own a modern connectable e-bike (Like Specialized, Giant/Yamaha, Shimano, TQ or Fazua system but not Bosch). You put a single Garmin on the bars (touchscreen to flip the pages). Now, with multiple data screens selectable you have everything you need of the information on a single device with a lightweight e-bike and a minimalist cockpit...
With a Bosch E-bike, you would have a smartphone with all e-bike and ride parameters, and a Garmin for navigation; or, you could navigate with a new Kiox display. That's it.
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Probably the same data as you are getting,