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Rode on drops for the first time

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Rode on drops for the first time

Old 09-17-13, 07:56 AM
  #26  
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Originally Posted by ThermionicScott
The "pulling on the upstroke" benefit is largely overstated. The main reason to have clipless pedals is solid foot retention that you can easily operate with your feet (as opposed to reaching down to tighten/loosen toe clips.)
Agree. I don't pull up on the upstroke and pulling out of clipless pedals involves the calves mainly. After three falls in three successive days I adapted quickly and swear by them. Heck, I'm seventy-one and if I can do it you can too!

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Old 09-17-13, 08:40 AM
  #27  
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Awesome. Are there clips that strap to an existing shoe or do I have to go with a full on shoe? One of the disadvantages I have is a stupid shoe size (6.5 EEEE).

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Old 09-17-13, 08:53 AM
  #28  
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How was the level of effort to pedal different from the bike you had prevously?
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Old 09-18-13, 05:10 AM
  #29  
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I think it's around the same, but I haven't ridden it enough to really compare. It hits different muscles differently though.

I just installed these last night: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Extremely heavy duty pedals. I'd expect these to last a good long while without any issues, though I swear the pair weighs almost as much as the rest of the bike!

I also installed a new saddle. The wifey took a shining to it and it appears to fit her perfectly, so it's becoming her commuter for the short term while I get fixing her other bike's bottom bracket. I ended up replacing the salvaged thin "road bike" style saddle (which she thought was horribly uncomfortable) with a regular standard "Schwinn" one we took off her old bike, so the whole unit's now heavier than before. Might be a good thing though - still much lighter than her step through and we're not exactly doing centuries.

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Old 09-18-13, 06:58 AM
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Originally Posted by MEversbergII

I just installed these last night: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...?ie=UTF8&psc=1


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Good Lord man. Why?
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Old 09-18-13, 07:34 AM
  #31  
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Well, they seemed like decent enough pedals. Realistically I was after something hard wearing that wasn't clip or cleat. What's wrong with these?

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Old 09-18-13, 07:51 AM
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Well, like you said, they weigh as much as the rest of the bike. And it's rotating weight.
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Old 09-18-13, 12:49 PM
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Dunno, I don't think it's that big of a deal. What's a better choice, in your opinion? I can always recycle them onto my commuter.

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Old 09-18-13, 01:29 PM
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IDK, I ride clipless. But I can guarantee there are sturdy options that weigh half that available at a reasonable cost.
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Old 09-26-13, 08:38 PM
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Pictures! I'm not a wealthy man, so I used a cell phone. Not a great one, either.


















Two questions!

1) Can a rear rack be attached to this kind of bike? The better half has appropriated it as her commuter (which feels wrong, but she's loving it). There's a mount point near the rear dropout, but best I can figure is I'd need a type that attaches to the bolt shown in the second to last picture, which otherwise doesn't seem to do anything.

2) What is that nub in image 4? It's this random nail-like thing on the right seatstay. Doesn't seem to do anything.

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Old 09-26-13, 10:29 PM
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That nub is a chain hanger. When you need to pull the rear wheel off, loop the chain over the nub and it keeps it up and out of the way. It's a nice touch, like a pump peg, that's rarely seen on frames anymore.
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Old 09-27-13, 09:06 AM
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Ah, that makes sense.

Overall this is a great bike. Now I'm going to go and learn how to use that adapter kit I got to take the shifters from the frame and put them elsewhere...

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Old 09-27-13, 05:42 PM
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Originally Posted by MEversbergII
1) Can a rear rack be attached to this kind of bike?
Possibly.


The green arrow should be a threaded hole for the lower mount. The red arrow looks like it could be the upper mount,provided it's also threaded. Do to the location of the upper left hole,you'll want to make sure that the rack doesn't interfere with the brake cable.
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Old 09-27-13, 06:19 PM
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Cheers. Blackburn style I presume?

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Old 09-29-13, 04:25 PM
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There's many different racks,not all fit all bikes the same. I'd swing by an LBS and try at least test fitting a couple to see what works.
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Old 10-01-13, 10:48 AM
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Alert!!!!

DANGER!!!!
*Before riding this bike again learn the proper use of wheel quick releases. The last picture of the complete bicycle shows the front QR used inproperly. QR are a cam device not a thumb screw. The wheel can fall off without warning! Find an experienced rider to show you how to operate them.

Last edited by 1bratt; 10-02-13 at 02:11 AM. Reason: speeling
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Old 10-01-13, 08:19 PM
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Oh?

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Old 10-01-13, 09:17 PM
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Originally Posted by dynaryder
Possibly.


The green arrow should be a threaded hole for the lower mount. The red arrow looks like it could be the upper mount,provided it's also threaded. Do to the location of the upper left hole,you'll want to make sure that the rack doesn't interfere with the brake cable.
I don't think the upper red arrow is a rack mount, but a fastback seat post. See https://lovelybike.blogspot.com/2010/...f-lugwork.html
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