larry-new
Active Member
First was the air in the tires...you laugh, but 80#f/90r has its own issues...two inside flats, solved by Velox cloth rim tape, 19mm. Rolls on the center rib of the stock Kenda 2.3".
While we're on tires, next year will see Schwalbe Marathon Plus in 1.5 width. Btw, each width (2.0, 1.75, 1.5, 1.35 has it's own operating pressure.
Next Brooks B17...will allow any riding position, and is comfortable already before fully breaking in.
Today installed drop ends. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0013G6PB8/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
What you do not see are a pair of nifty 20mm bar end extensions: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B079M8YFMQ/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
...necessary to extend the short rh side....they are what the drop bars attach to. They're so neat I may add another pair to the ends of the drops.
Ahh, the drops! I didn't realize how much I missed them....it gives a whole new attitude riding them... actually I ride on the tops mostly, it is good for stretching out, thumbs and wrists wrapped either way, and I brought the stem back to 25* from about zero*, now that there's so many more hand positions. The brakes are accessible from anywhere on the top, and even on the drops, with just my thumbs! Road riding does not have the immediate need for hard braking that more crowded streets do, and I still cover the brakes when encountering any intersections.
The hand numbness that led me to switching from factory to Ergon to these drop grips seems better. A real set of randonneur bars would involve brake lever changes, so this compromise will do for now. Today's ride included multiple stops for adjustments. Missing is a center bar hand grip, due to all the controls and throttle. Oh, well.
When I pull the wheels in the Spring for tire changes, I'll switch the freewheel to something more road friendly...IRD 13-30 should extend the top end a bit. I'm spun out now in top gear at about 23 mph, and only need a little bit more...this will move my top from 85" to 92".
Throughout all this, I'm aware that this is a 60#bike with touring, not racing, geometry...but the rider isn't exactly boy racer either, except in dim memory...it's such fun modifying this sturdy well designed bike!
While we're on tires, next year will see Schwalbe Marathon Plus in 1.5 width. Btw, each width (2.0, 1.75, 1.5, 1.35 has it's own operating pressure.
Next Brooks B17...will allow any riding position, and is comfortable already before fully breaking in.
Today installed drop ends. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0013G6PB8/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
What you do not see are a pair of nifty 20mm bar end extensions: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B079M8YFMQ/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
...necessary to extend the short rh side....they are what the drop bars attach to. They're so neat I may add another pair to the ends of the drops.
Ahh, the drops! I didn't realize how much I missed them....it gives a whole new attitude riding them... actually I ride on the tops mostly, it is good for stretching out, thumbs and wrists wrapped either way, and I brought the stem back to 25* from about zero*, now that there's so many more hand positions. The brakes are accessible from anywhere on the top, and even on the drops, with just my thumbs! Road riding does not have the immediate need for hard braking that more crowded streets do, and I still cover the brakes when encountering any intersections.
The hand numbness that led me to switching from factory to Ergon to these drop grips seems better. A real set of randonneur bars would involve brake lever changes, so this compromise will do for now. Today's ride included multiple stops for adjustments. Missing is a center bar hand grip, due to all the controls and throttle. Oh, well.
When I pull the wheels in the Spring for tire changes, I'll switch the freewheel to something more road friendly...IRD 13-30 should extend the top end a bit. I'm spun out now in top gear at about 23 mph, and only need a little bit more...this will move my top from 85" to 92".
Throughout all this, I'm aware that this is a 60#bike with touring, not racing, geometry...but the rider isn't exactly boy racer either, except in dim memory...it's such fun modifying this sturdy well designed bike!