Rains providing time to locate odds and ends and wrestle the Devil in details, so I'm sharing some rough photos.
In front, replaced the stock SS and Rubber 'P' clamps w/ SKS stay (plastic) clamps and titanium fasteners.
Eliminated 70gms of weight and the 'Manitou' logo (quite elegant with it's 3D colors) is no longer hidden.
Awaiting more Portland Design stay clips for the front. A very nice product - so far. Maybe next I'd have one milled outta a small chunk of alloy - but their plastic interface looks most correct to me.
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I back into stuff.
So my tire making
first contact (my bumper) not my fender, is a MUST for me.
Quick rant: If this was a car and every time I backed wheels to curb, first that hit was the fender ???
Unlike the 4.5" of 18psi blimp tires, that can 'do the boing - boing' and hang tough slam dancing, one 'fender encounter' with an electric gate will convinced anyone rational it's not the Sacrificial Goat.
So
'losing it' - from making
the same mistake again and again - I hacked 7" off and eliminated the
chain cut-out.
On 12mile shake down cruise my chain never touched fender. I have 0.425 (min.) clearance in the largest gear.
While I could cut the area out - even leave a tab at the end to fasten the right side - if there's a reason too, I can't see it.
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Eliminated: one SS fender stay (& it's fasteners); the entire Axiom's steel extension bracket assembly; the SKS 'multi-stay' clip & SS fasteners.
I weighed 205gms
more before than after, not including the 7" of SKS plastic I trashed without weighing.
The
Portland Design Works alloy
safety tabs are light, w/ improved adjustment length.
The screw lock's a better design and they have a bend point for side-to-side angle flex built into the plastic part.
I've ordered a few more to install on the front and have a couple spares on hand. So far I'm impressed. They don't brag their stuff up enough.
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For the seat stay bridge fender mount I used a
Honjo fastener w/ it's brass backing plate.
It feels (and weighs) like a Snap-On tool. The chrome's
deep and it's
beautifully crafted,
but (1) using washers, the fender bolts are too short for thicker plastic fenders, (2) the nuts supplied reduce clearance, and (3), on the inside, neither the nuts nor washers fit the concave curvature of the plate.
Hey. Maybe
tap the plate's holes and dump the nuts ? Such a Loctite fan, what do I know ? One thing's titanium fasteners are 55% steel wt.
Now, fender is firmly attached to the chain-stay w/ no 'buzz', resonate/ rattles.
By
offsetting fender attachment
holes at the bottom (virtually invisible), zip-ties can attach at the chain stay's 'braze on' 'cable/ wiring fastener' (innermost) points. WARNING. You try this, better have a geometrical 'minds eye', measuring and visualizing over and over before boring holes. Maybe it's just me. Mia Culpa, I'm new at this, but my fender aligned dead-on; the zips were tightened, the accurately drilled holes were correct and it snugged up tightly without any 'deforming'.
Awaiting 3mm and 5mm silicone (insulation) for fender contact points, to finish the job - no slip/ vibration.
I could get weird and calculate the sonic vibration potential over non-suspended area of ABS; come up with some hard facts - and nobody'd care.
Better pedantic:
Harmonic frequencies resonate between (firmly attached) points - and not beyond.
That statement (published and reviewed) accompanies a sum, parameters and (attenuation) limits for alloy ... not for plastic which given the variations in composite reinforcements would be
intellectually honest to do so.
Suffice: My rear fenders are quieter than the wires slapping.
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Axiom rack's now moved back/ and lowered about 1" respectively.
Whereas it was 'the last hole on the rack set to the first hole on the frame', it's now 'the first hole on the rack to the last hole on frame'.
Both sides of fender are fully elegantly attached.
Now I'm adding some weight.
Wrapping Leh's '
Distressed Bison' on the
Jones' bar's grip-points.
Still lighter than stock Moloko's - or my choice of ti bars
. I'd recommend self-installing only to those (w/ 'gorilla-grip' hands and) with experience in leatherwork. Seamanship cred, like 'wrapping harpoons' is also a plus !!!
Regardless videos, I cheated using contact cement under the starting wrap points.
I imagine (what this stuff's made for) wrapping bicycle drop bars is much easier. I don't get to use end plugs
and have four sections that need to be
tight, to muscle the WW around.
I hid the display switch wires under the left, front wrap - the plan from the outset.
Wiring/ hydraulics' are right where I want them.
Fishing rod holder's ultralight, minimalist, under 3oz, though the SS 'P' clips are up for replacement. Black bolts and washers are also ti.
My thanks to Watt Wagons, their invisible build team and forum contributors. Kicked me off right - or right where I got it.
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I
can wait to tweak the programing - anticipate mid-2023.
Not sure what happened, but the suggestion a member made that 'the server went down' sounds reasonable.
Meanwhile, this Bike is blazing fast - unusably so in Sports Modes. A masterpiece exceeded my expectations.
Sorry for poor photos/ grime.
Ride on,
Fn'F