Thread: Pick One
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Old 05-01-26 | 11:35 AM
  #7  
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northbend
Matt Pendergast
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Joined: Mar 2008
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From: North Bend, Washington State

Bikes: 1937 Hobbs; 1977 Bruce Gordon; 1987 Bill Holland; 1988 Schwinn Paramount (Fixed gear); 1999 Fat City Yo Eddy (MTB); 2018 Woodrup (Touring) 2016 Ritchey breakaway

The Pink One....

1988 Schwinn Paramount, originally bought on eBay about 20 years ago as a birthday gift for my son.
Outfitted with full Suntour Superbe Pro.
He was totally into David Bowie "Ziggy Stardust" at the time and I thought he'd dig the Pink color (I was wrong - he hated it).
It arrived damaged in transit, a big hole punched through the box ruining the wheels and putting a dent on the inside of the right fork leg.
I worked out a deal with the original seller and kept it, parted it out, then frame hung in the garage neglected for years.
Taking my son down to Elliott Bay Bicycles in Seattle for a replacement, he selected a Pinarello "Team Banesto" frameset from Bob Freemans used frames collection.
And I built up a bike he was happy with that he still rides today.

Eventually I took the dented fork to Elliott Bay Bicycles to see if it could be repaired affordably.
Bill Davidson looked at it and deemed it structurally sound and gave it back to me after aligning it.

I bought a cheap fixed gear wheel set and assembled it with spare parts I had laying around.
Maybe I'd like riding fixed? If not, I wasn't into it for much money.


Initially it was like learning to ride again, kinda of freaky starting and stopping.
A few scary moments when I'd forget you can't coast and it felt like I was going over the handlebars.
But you learn pretty quickly and soon I was taking it out for longer rides.
There is something really engaging about riding fixed.
You're always in the wrong gear :-) and you have to adapt to that.
The drivetrain is so quiet.
And the bike itself is so light and simple to maintain.
You're so much more attuned to the road surface and terrain.
Over time, riding fixed gave me much better leg speed and that helped me to relax.

I was in my mid-50's and going through a phase in life where I was challenging myself physically.
Am I still viable enough to do hard things?
One thing I set my sights on was riding RAMROD in 2010 on the fixed gear.
It's one of the premier cycling challenges in Washington State where riders Ride Around Mount Rainier in One Day.
150 miles, 10,000 feet elevation gain. It's something you have to prepare for; you can't just 'wing it'.
Much of my training, was riding the Paramount to work each day (56 miles R/T, lots of climbing).
Weekends, I'd go do rides in the mountains.


A month before the Event, I rode the Seattle to Portland (STP) one day ride. That proved the distance was possible.


So in late July, I did it, finishing in 10 1/2 hours.




I continued to ride fixed a lot after that ride but my desire to prove myself through challenges pretty much ended after RAMROD.
No more training.
About 5 or 6 years ago I wore out the rims on that cheap wheelset and the bike ended up hanging forlorn and forgotten in the garage.
Until last Fall.
Bob Freeman laced me up a fresh rim and I re-assembled the bike with a new Saddle and Crankset and started riding it again.


I had forgotten how fun and engaging riding fixed is.
Even though the bike is put together with a mix-mash of parts, I think it is one of the most visually appealing bikes I own.




I'm slower and not as strong as I used to be but I can still turn over the pedals on this thing comfortably.
I love how responsive acceleration is riding fixed, riding hills on it is so appealing.
I can always switch to a smaller chainring or a bigger toothed sprocket in back to keep this going into the future.
And it's funny how a bike falls into or out of favor with you over the years.
I'm just glad I never got rid of this bike.
A few years ago, when I was building up my touring bike I looked into culling one from my small herd.
Eventually, I've let the Merckx and Singer go.
But I had asked my son "which of my bikes would you want when I can no longer ride them?"
He had a choice of a Bruce Gordon, Merckx MXL, Bill Holland and Singer...
And he said he wanted the pink Paramount :-)








Last edited by northbend; 05-03-26 at 12:01 AM.
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