Rides and Races - Toronto Fixed

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jeremywhitehorn
05-06-08, 11:16 AM
so in my attempts to clean up a my bike stash before moving i ended up procuring another frame! i have to get rid of stuff now. anyone interested in giving a 90% completed SS MTB a good home?
3 posts in a row! paging mr. halen....
iherald
05-06-08, 11:26 AM
so in my attempts to clean up a my bike stash before moving i ended up procuring another frame! i have to get rid of stuff now. anyone interested in giving a 90% completed SS MTB a good home?
3 posts in a row! paging mr. halen....
size?
somnambulant
05-06-08, 11:31 AM
man, the bikes on that guy's photostream could be a wet dream of mine.
That's for damn sure. Probably one of my fav custom builders along with Circle-A. Ira made the bikes for the Rapha Continental team: http://www.rapha.cc/continental/index.php?page=270
jeremywhitehorn
05-06-08, 11:34 AM
size?
i believe it's a 17"
pyze-guy
05-06-08, 11:36 AM
i believe it's a 17"
If no one else wants it I`ll grab it for my wife and keep her bike as my backup frame for the fixed gear. 17" would be abetter fit for her.
jeremywhitehorn
05-06-08, 11:42 AM
If no one else wants it I`ll grab it for my wife and keep her bike as my backup frame for the fixed gear. 17" would be abetter fit for her.
yeah sure - it's a full on XC MTB though, suspension and all. might not be ideal as a commuter but could be good depending on how you build it up.
iherald
05-06-08, 11:46 AM
i believe it's a 17"
Too small for me (thankfully, I don't think I could fit another bike in my life).
jet sanchEz
05-06-08, 12:30 PM
Speaking of having too many bikes, I rolled by a dumpster yesterday and found a nice 700c front wheel (skewer and everything) and a very new looking KHS mountain bike frame that has a cracked derailleur hanger. I am going to see if my bro-in-law wants it and, if not, if anyone here can use it, let me know. I'd say it is for a bigger guy, maybe about 6 feet and up, I don't have the frame with me right now so I cannot measure it.
garethlewis
05-06-08, 12:58 PM
so in my attempts to clean up a my bike stash before moving i ended up procuring another frame! i have to get rid of stuff now.
hey - check your PM pleasethanks re: a post from last friday.
nerdsgirth
05-06-08, 02:49 PM
This my second time typing this because I accidentally closed the box. bout to go postal.
Title: Do not ride listening to 'And you will know us by the trail of dead' (or) Button your pockets jackazz.
I was having a wonderful day. Got a tonne of work done and removed ring and cog from 105 hub using the rotafix method http://204.73.203.34/fisso/eng/schpignone.htm (thanks pyzer) That was awesome - I felt like Keith with all the tricks.
I decided to cruise over to Cycle solutions to pick up a utility/cruiser kronan from John. I was so stoked. I took my camera to show him pics of the new frame I recently got and he said that it might have once been owned by Canada's own Curt Harnett! Awesome. I was on cloud 9 riding out of there on my new 2nd hand cruiser blasting back to UofT Carlaw-Dundas-Broadview-Bloor rocking to my headphones FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER, making the devil strips my bia ch. I got to the school and realised that my Canon Powershot had worked its way out of my jacket pocket due to the new riding style and subsequently hit the ground somewhere enroute. If I wasn't happily rocking out I would have heard it! So please keep an eye out for a canon powershot sd750 with some seriously random photos on it.
The weirdest thing about this is when I was walking to the subway, I came across a polaroid on the sidewalk of some dudes dong and I threw it in the garbage so some little kid wouldn't find it coming home from school. What the f does that mean? old media lost, new media lost...
Too many highs and lows in one day.
iherald
05-06-08, 02:51 PM
that sucks Nerdsgirth.
The weirdest thing about this is when I was walking to the subway, I came across a polaroid on the sidewalk of some dudes dong ...
Darn, if I hadn't been wearing headphones, I'm sure i would have noticed that dropping out of my pocket...
nerdsgirth
05-06-08, 03:40 PM
Darn, if I hadn't been wearing headphones, I'm sure i would have noticed that dropping out of my pocket... lol
On the way to DSR dirt. Hopefully the fat fairy will stay away this time.
TRaffic Jammer
05-06-08, 03:55 PM
On the way to DSR dirt. Hopefully the fat fairy will stay away this time.
Cam, fer real dude you need to worry about the fat fairy, like I need a hole drilled in my skull. Have fun tonight, y'all.
cupcrazy4
05-06-08, 05:34 PM
say, where's a good place to pick-up a decent (preferably used/cheap) fixie?
Want to see if it's all everybody say it is...
freecycle
05-06-08, 06:28 PM
say, where's a good place to pick-up a decent (preferably used/cheap) fixie?
Want to see if it's all everybody say it is...
omg dont say fixie :)
I would say build your own. However easier routes include referring to craigslist and checking the LBSes, I think a number of shops stock factory fixed gears, and as far as I know most will convert a bike for you as well, you can poke around and find something solid for nearly every price range.
How many were at DSR today, four? I think I happened to be sparking a bowl across the river when you rolled by near pottery road.
cupcrazy4
05-06-08, 06:33 PM
omg dont say fixie :)
I would say build your own. However easier routes include referring to craigslist and checking the LBSes, I think a number of shops stock factory fixed gears, and as far as I know most will convert a bike for you as well, you can poke around and find something solid for nearly every price range.
How much am I looking at to convert an old 1980s road bike to a FG?
freecycle
05-06-08, 06:40 PM
i did that! :D
you can do it for the price of a cheap wheel with a fixed hub, and a cog and lockring. if youre lucky you can get a decent chain line on it. my guess would be aboot 120 bucks max for that? but thats assuming you dont care for matching wheels, or foot retention, etc.etc. It can get expensive fast.
sometimes a fixed rear wheel will come up on craigslist, i saw one just a little while ago fully assembled with a 15t cog and lockring included for 100 bucks.
(i recommend converting, i did it and i love the result)
If you have a bike and just want to try it out, I have a spare fixed wheel you can borrow. The hub is a little rough but it should be fine for just trying it out. I'm planning on rebuilding the wheel with a new hub in a few weeks anyway.
somnambulant
05-06-08, 06:45 PM
omg dont say fixie :)
How many were at DSR today, four? I think I happened to be sparking a bowl across the river when you rolled by near pottery road.
Call it what you like, damnit. I say fixie all the time. Fixie fixie fixie.
Yeah, there were just the four of us on the dirt ride. Had a total blast. I think we had a pretty good progression of abilities. All of us had someone a little faster to chase! :)
Like all things bikes, you can do it cheap or you can do it not so cheap. Depends where you're willing to make compromises
I spent ~700 on my conversion. Half of that was for the wheels, the rest was on all the stuff that makes a frame a bike.
Call it what you like, damnit. I say fixie all the time. Fixie fixie fixie.
Yeah, there were just the four of us on the dirt ride. Had a total blast. I think we had a pretty good progression of abilities. All of us had someone a little faster to chase! :)
For me, it was like everyone.
One day I hope to make it out to that ride. I'm gonna try and get out to the Don on Thursday eve if I can swing it.
freecycle
05-06-08, 07:00 PM
Call it what you like, damnit. I say fixie all the time. Fixie fixie fixie.
Yeah, there were just the four of us on the dirt ride. Had a total blast. I think we had a pretty good progression of abilities. All of us had someone a little faster to chase! :)
Fixed fixed fixed!! :)
I had an inkling it was you guys! The beard is also a dead giveaway.
LordFoo
05-06-08, 07:07 PM
If you have a bike and just want to try it out, I have a spare fixed wheel you can borrow. The hub is a little rough but it should be fine for just trying it out. I'm planning on rebuilding the wheel with a new hub in a few weeks anyway.
You should call that wheel "the proselytizer" for all of the conversions it has led to :D
Hoping I can make it out for a DSR (road) ride one of these weeks -- what's the usual start time?
~Stuart~
05-06-08, 07:19 PM
awesome ride to hamilton, kinda cold but worked great with the workout, little traffic (one old lady started honking at me for riding on the road, and was very startled when i gave her the finger and told her to, and i quote, "SUCKIT"). some beautiful paved roads out side of toronto, butter smooth and perfect for doing 35km/h on... then it happen a flat... not just a flat, a shredded tire, :( it had a good life, 2 years in Toronto (same tube) never got a flat, survived the countless rides with less then perfect psi, dropping curbs, the odd 2 set (rolling down, of course)... but not 100m into Burlington i get a flat, 1 big slash (like 1cm long and big enough for the tube to pop through) and one hole straight through, and countless small holes, some through the kevlar belt...
While im fixing my flat (minor problem, i forgot my tire lever +wire bead *dumbass*) a group of roadies rocks by, not one asked if i needed help, kinda lame, i always try and give a hand when i see a bike in need...
but apart from the flat... it was a KICKASS ride, so much fun i overshot the city by like 10km because there mutiuse path kicks ass
and yea, what they say, convert for your first fixie... cheap and you get to do it yourself
freecycle
05-06-08, 07:23 PM
duude, that makes me want to ride to hamilton now =(.
somnambulant
05-06-08, 07:26 PM
Hoping I can make it out for a DSR (road) ride one of these weeks -- what's the usual start time?
Group rides are done for the season, methinks. Wednesdays are back to being sprints at the Ex. Tuesdays are dirt rides.
Brad: I'll likely be in there again on Thursday evening.
jet sanchEz
05-06-08, 07:32 PM
I just saw this on the Kingston CL, a Soma Rush with BB and headset for a pretty good price (I think it is a good price---is it?). Maybe it will suit someone's needs...
http://kingston.en.craigslist.ca/bik/638394008.html
exhibitx
05-06-08, 07:58 PM
i need to tune my MTB up and get out to DSR dirt
Call it what you like, damnit. I say fixie all the time. Fixie fixie fixie.
Yeah, there were just the four of us on the dirt ride. Had a total blast. I think we had a pretty good progression of abilities. All of us had someone a little faster to chase! :)
I'm with Wes... really fun ride and it was great to see portions of the trail I haven't ridden in a while. It was especially fun to "beta test" some freshly cut trail that's not yet ready for prime time.
pyze-guy
05-06-08, 09:35 PM
Group rides are done for the season, methinks. Wednesdays are back to being sprints at the Ex. Tuesdays are dirt rides.
Brad: I'll likely be in there again on Thursday evening.
Thurs will be good for me.
Flimflam
05-07-08, 05:48 AM
Man that sucks a lot, nerdsgirth - any idea what street(s)? I'll keep an eye out.
I took Dufferin down (well, and up for a nice burn) from my buddy near St. Clair again, man that's a great hill - this time it didn't scare the hell out of me with the cadence ;)
I rode in the Taylor Creek a few times the past few days, once to get into East York from the DVP (I may or may not have ridden on the highway while it was closed *cough*) and another to cut through to the cookie factory - I had trouble the second time, getting out of the valley up the rough hills, but even with ~71GI I got up there - *just* (threw the chain shortly after, my tension got all ****ed up somewhere in there :() which brings me to my question of the moment...
How often do you guys alter/adjust your fixed/SS chain tension? Mine seems to be slacking off after around 400 miles - am I not tightening properly, or is this 'normal'? I was/am scared of overtightening, to be honest.
Are there any plans for the group rides to be held on another night? I love the sprints, but enjoyed having the roll around town, too - it'd be nice to have it still as well as the sprints.
Flimflam
05-07-08, 06:02 AM
Also I just checked ol' Facebook...
Happy Birthday TJ! :bday: :beer:
:beer: :D
Herbie_Glick
05-07-08, 06:14 AM
Yeah TJ!!!! Happy Birthday!
About sprints, we won't be having them every week this year. We are going to mix things up a little just to keep it fresh. We will call it from week to week but tonight and next week sprints are on based on the weather cooperating.
nerdsgirth
05-07-08, 06:21 AM
Man that sucks a lot, nerdsgirth - any idea what street(s)? I'll keep an eye out.
ts.
Thanks homie. I rode straight from edit: Cycle Therapy up Carlaw or another side street to Dundas, West to Broadview, north to Bloor and west to UofT. I was meaning to put up some "have you seen me" signs enroute lasnight but was too tired. Too bad, that route is so heavily traveled.
somnambulant
05-07-08, 06:37 AM
How often do you guys alter/adjust your fixed/SS chain tension? Mine seems to be slacking off after around 400 miles - am I not tightening properly, or is this 'normal'? I was/am scared of overtightening, to be honest.
I just check the tension whenever I lube/clean my chain (which I basically do every week of riding, assuming normal weather conditions), or if it feels loose enough that it annoys me while track-standing. You're afraid of over tightening the nuts? Or the chain? Either way, I check mine far more regularly than every 400 miles.
Speaking of lube AND 400 miles, I just used this stuff on the Roger last night: http://www.pedros.com/products_bikecare.htm. Seems pretty nice. Hopefully it'll attract less dust from the trails than a wet lube.
Thanks homie. I rode straight from Cycle Solutions up Carlaw or another side street to Dundas, West to Broadview, north to Bloor and west to UofT. I was meaning to put up some "have you seen me" signs enroute lasnight but was too tired. Too bad, that route is so heavily traveled.
Cycle Solutions? Or Cycle Therapy?
shapelike
05-07-08, 08:01 AM
Muh ... *blows nose* ... *wobbles*
jeremywhitehorn
05-07-08, 08:12 AM
How much am I looking at to convert an old 1980s road bike to a FG?
you can go it pretty cheap if you're handy with a spoke wrench; strip all the parts off it (derailleurs etc) take off the freewheel and screw on a track cog and redish the rear wheel. voila! total out of pocket cost would be about $30. you've got most of the parts already.
+1 on the DIY conversion.
However you do need to know a bit about bikes. Checking chainline and either dishing a wheel or swapping BBs can be tricky of you do it for the first time. Bike are simple overall but full of idiosyncrasies.
jeremywhitehorn
05-07-08, 08:16 AM
i used to use that pedros stuff all the time. no complaints really but it still prefer triflow of finish line for it's stay-on-ability...
freecycle
05-07-08, 09:03 AM
how do you guys clean your chains anyway? do you all own one of those little chain cleaning deelies, or what?
no matter how much i clean mine it always rains the next day =(. Ive spent twenty minutes on it and can still hear the toronto grit in there.
Flimflam
05-07-08, 09:06 AM
I was worried about over tightening the wheel bolts in the dropouts.
I'm due for a clean and lube anyway, last weekend thrashed it hard with all that lovely rain gunk. Good to know re: milage, maybe I need to clean/lube each week as well - I wasn't that diligent with my roadie, perhaps I ought to be.
I have the MEC chain cleaning thing and their bio-cleaner stuff, for the fixie I'll remove the chain and pop it into an old bottle with the chain cleaning fluid, then go at it with a toothbrush. When I leave the chain on a bike, it usually gets a dose of soap and water after the chain cleaner as well. I use Triflow for lube, too. I've found this cleaner and fluid works really well for me, bear in mind I pretty much only stay on the streets, there's rarely any offroad grime for me to deal with.
jeremywhitehorn
05-07-08, 09:07 AM
nope - the chain on a fixie (fixie) doesn't have enough slack in it to run it through one of those cleaners. just wipe it down and add some fresh lube.
somnambulant
05-07-08, 09:18 AM
nope - the chain on a fixie (fixie) doesn't have enough slack in it to run it through one of those cleaners. just wipe it down and add some fresh lube.
I bought a giant container of bio-degreaser and put it into a spray bottle. A lot of the time I'll do what J does and just wipe it down, add fresh lube, work it in/let it sit, and then wipe it again. If it's particularly nasty I spray the drivetrain with some degreaser first, let it sit for a few minutes and then wipe it down (or spray it down with the hose if I'm doing a full-bike clean) and let it dry off before applying lube.
I also picked up a great thing for when there isn't a hose handy (eg. at races):
http://www.domyownpestcontrol.com/images/SureSpray_1Gal.jpg
TRaffic Jammer
05-07-08, 09:18 AM
Keith turned me on to that RockNRoll stuff, but I don't know who carries it now. I wipe and occasionally spray it all clean at the car wash. Thanks for all the birthday greetings!!!
freecycle
05-07-08, 09:20 AM
cool, ive never bothered investing in one of those chain cleaners, so thats what ive been doing. I think its likely time for a new chain as well, the one I have on the bike now is years old, and not very quiet anymore..
To clean my chain I spray some WD-40 (I have the biodegreaser too but the spray is more convenient), wipe the chain with a rag, wipe it again, and add a drop of oil on each link spin the chain a bit, and wipe it again carefully.
I tried the trick where you remove the chain then shake it in a bottle w. degreaser. I found the chain to squeak more after that. I think that cleans it too well and it's difficult to put the lubricant back between the rollers and pins. Plus I'm sloppy with a chain tool.
Oh and fenders/muflaps help a lot to keep the chain cleaner after a ride on wet roads. I could tell/hear the difference after I installed fenders.
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