Originally Posted by
Tourist in MSN
My rack is a standard run of the mill rack, not one with the odd bottoms of the legs to push it further out. Such a rack would not be needed on a Backroad because the disc unit is on the chainstay, not on the seatstay. You can see in the photo below that the rack and brake are not anywhere near each other.
Lynskey occasionally sells frames on Ebay. And I bought mine on Ebay. Before I had my frame in my possession, when I asked questions about the frame by e-mail, Lynskey would ask what my serial number was, which I of course had no clue about. And the Ebay photos were older, showed the older style of disc mount. So, after I won the auction, I ordered the parts I needed including a post mount disc brake. Lynskey sent me a frame with a flat mount brake.
You will note in the photo that there are three bolts that go through the chainstay to hold a brake mount and they sent me a mount that differed from the photos. Lynskey then sent me a mount like in the photo so that I could install the brake, but that mount interfered with the bolts on the hub that hold the disc to the hub, thus the wheel would not turn. At ths point the clear lack of quality control for designing the brake mount gave me some significant concerns. On the next try, Lynskey got it right and sent me a functional brake mount. But by then almost a month had passed after I had paid for it. There were some other hiccups in our communications too, but the rear brake mount and the incorrect photos on Ebay were the main points. If you are curious, I got a great deal on the frame, that is one reason that I was much happier with Lynskey once I had a chance to start riding the bike. And now a year later, I am still very happy with the bike.
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My brake mount looks nothing like yours. I am afraid the same thing that happened to you happened to me. Mine is flush with the chain stay, not bridged like yours. Is that "riser" piece on yours threaded?
I will post a pic later. I guess I need to call them.