Had to Laugh...
#101
Global warming and oil crisis is growing the idea in the back of our minds that one day we'll have to use our hands to find food and survive. Just look at that movie with Will Smith hunting deer in a post-apocalyptic Manhattan.
Maybe in the smallest ways, kids are going to develop a tendency to want to train themselves to have better manual control over their environment.
Last edited by krems81; 09-25-09 at 01:35 PM.
#102
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 159
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From: France
Bikes: A few
So we now have a profile of the steel bike enthusiast : if a guy has good quality old stereo, plays guitar and grouches about what's the point of educating 90% of the young beyond there mental capacity, therefore ensuring they don't even know the basics, the odds are he is a bike collector.
#103
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
So we now have a profile of the steel bike enthusiast : if a guy has good quality old stereo, plays guitar and grouches about what's the point of educating 90% of the young beyond there mental capacity, therefore ensuring they don't even know the basics, the odds are he is a bike collector.
London buses are red ergo: everything red is a London bus. I see now 
I sometimes wish I hadn't started this thread
. It was only intended as an amusing anecdote, not as a means to bash young folks for lack of knowledge. There will be just as many kids who want to learn how things work, its just that their interests will fall upon different things. There will also be lot's of "old stuff" for them to play with, but it won't be the old stuff we had, because that is all worth $$$ on Ebay thanks to the rabid nostalgia economy. For example, the last, rather shabby "bike boom era" Motobecane that I saw in a goodwill store in Mountain View was priced at $250
What lucky kid wouldn't be happy to give up his playstation for that treasure?It's a funny old world, but I like it.
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Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
#105
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
#106
Fueled by Scoobie Snacks!
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 387
Likes: 0
From: Citrus County, Fl
Bikes: 1983 Puch Odyssey, 2004 Giant OCR3
I have 35+ year old Dynaco speakers hooked up to a 3 year old Onkyo receiver, I'll take those speakers to my grave! Up until a month ago, I had my sound card on my computer hooked up to the 35+ year old JVC receiver that came with the speakers so I could run regular speakers on my computer. Then the receiver finally died, so now I have to find another old receiver for cheap!
As for albums sounding better than CD's, not to my ears! I have 100's of albums and a good turntable, there is no sound that can be produced by an album that can't also be reproduced by a CD. The opposite is true though as CD's have a larger dynamic range. The big problem is that so many CD's are engineered and mixed by people with less talent than the people who mixed the albums in the past. Pops and clicks aren't warmth to my ear.
As for albums sounding better than CD's, not to my ears! I have 100's of albums and a good turntable, there is no sound that can be produced by an album that can't also be reproduced by a CD. The opposite is true though as CD's have a larger dynamic range. The big problem is that so many CD's are engineered and mixed by people with less talent than the people who mixed the albums in the past. Pops and clicks aren't warmth to my ear.
#107
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
I have 35+ year old Dynaco speakers hooked up to a 3 year old Onkyo receiver, I'll take those speakers to my grave! Up until a month ago, I had my sound card on my computer hooked up to the 35+ year old JVC receiver that came with the speakers so I could run regular speakers on my computer. Then the receiver finally died, so now I have to find another old receiver for cheap!
As for albums sounding better than CD's, not to my ears! I have 100's of albums and a good turntable, there is no sound that can be produced by an album that can't also be reproduced by a CD. The opposite is true though as CD's have a larger dynamic range. The big problem is that so many CD's are engineered and mixed by people with less talent than the people who mixed the albums in the past. Pops and clicks aren't warmth to my ear.
As for albums sounding better than CD's, not to my ears! I have 100's of albums and a good turntable, there is no sound that can be produced by an album that can't also be reproduced by a CD. The opposite is true though as CD's have a larger dynamic range. The big problem is that so many CD's are engineered and mixed by people with less talent than the people who mixed the albums in the past. Pops and clicks aren't warmth to my ear.
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Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
#108
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 159
Likes: 1
From: France
Bikes: A few
Steel bikes and "Vintage" stereo, same thing: vibes.
"...As for albums sounding better than CD's, not to my ears! I have 100's of albums and a good turntable, there is no sound that can be produced by an album that can't also be reproduced by a CD. The opposite is true though as CD's have a larger dynamic range. The big problem is that so many CD's are engineered and mixed by people with less talent than the people who mixed the albums in the past. Pops and clicks aren't warmth to my ear.""
The parallel with vintage steel bikes ? Harmonics play a great part in the rider's perception of what a bike "feels" like, and with steel there is a heck of a lot of vibrations and harmonics of all lengths going on, and those vibes affect as said what you feel, but also how the bike performs for you. Making a bike too rigid as in carbon, not counting the damping effect of the medium (araldite basically), makes for a poor ride. So maybe the hippies were right about "vibes" .
Anybody doesn't agree with me can nominate me for an honorary phd in aggravated bs., because this "demonstration" suffers no possible argument, the only contradiction can be deliberate misunderstanding
#109
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
CD can sound good, but it takes the Norton sampling theorem to its absolute limit at the highest range of the frequency response, that is: only two samples of the signal per period of it's oscillation. Luckily few of us have ears that can hear 20Khz. Maybe dogs love vinyl
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Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
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#110
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,248
Likes: 6
From: Hills of Iowa
Bikes: all diamond frames
#111
Passista


Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 8,241
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Bikes: 1998 Pinarello Asolo, 1992 KHS Montaņa pro, 1980 Raleigh DL-1, IGH Hybrid, IGH Utility
#112
Fueled by Scoobie Snacks!
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 387
Likes: 0
From: Citrus County, Fl
Bikes: 1983 Puch Odyssey, 2004 Giant OCR3
The parallel with vintage steel bikes ? Harmonics play a great part in the rider's perception of what a bike "feels" like, and with steel there is a heck of a lot of vibrations and harmonics of all lengths going on, and those vibes affect as said what you feel, but also how the bike performs for you. Making a bike too rigid as in carbon, not counting the damping effect of the medium (araldite basically), makes for a poor ride. So maybe the hippies were right about "vibes" .
#113
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
15,000? By 'eck lad, thee were lucky. I 'ave to check 't points every 5,000 miles and change the oil and set 't valves. And them king pins don't grease'emselves. Kid's today, they don't know their born.
[/Monty Python]
[/Monty Python]
__________________
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
#114
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,248
Likes: 6
From: Hills of Iowa
Bikes: all diamond frames
I had a MGA that was lucky to get a thousand without something needing tweaked.
#115
Very few days go by in which I am not thankful for how much easier my old bikes are to fix and maintain, compared to my 1974 Saab 99 (which I drove 'til 2007). One time the throttle cable snapped as I was getting on the Washington, DC beltway (scary); after being stranded in the median for several hours, I had it towed to a bike shop and replaced it with a good quality MTB brake cable. Worked great for years after that.
(Now, I'm up to a comparatively modern '83 Volvo...I locked my keys in it the other day and was surprised that the tow-truck guys no longer have "Slim Jims" to get into cars with manual door locks.)
I also have a rotary phone, which works great when my cell phone doesn't. Which is most of the time.
The thing about records, though: I bought tons of vinyl in the '90s and early '00s -- the CD era -- when no one wanted it and it was cheap. Now CDs are getting antiquated and vinyl is getting expensive. I liked it better before.
(Now, I'm up to a comparatively modern '83 Volvo...I locked my keys in it the other day and was surprised that the tow-truck guys no longer have "Slim Jims" to get into cars with manual door locks.)
I also have a rotary phone, which works great when my cell phone doesn't. Which is most of the time.
The thing about records, though: I bought tons of vinyl in the '90s and early '00s -- the CD era -- when no one wanted it and it was cheap. Now CDs are getting antiquated and vinyl is getting expensive. I liked it better before.
#116
Oh, and +1 on the external-frame backpacks. I use my dad's circa-1988 Jansport; for his part, he's gone Golight (no frame at all...basically just an ultralight duffel bag with straps. Weighs nothing, but you have to pack it strategically).
#117
Sounds exactly like my '67 MGB. For goodness sake, it doesn't even have synchromesh on first gear! However, it is fantastic fun and I can fix it - engine, gearbox, wiring.... You can see where all this is heading for me...
And my son is interested, I hope he remains so 
p.s. my bike shoes have velcro on them....
And my son is interested, I hope he remains so 
p.s. my bike shoes have velcro on them....
#118
.


Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 12,769
Likes: 38
From: Rocket City, No'ala
Bikes: 2014 Trek Domane 5.2, 1985 Pinarello Treviso, 1990 Gardin Shred, 2006 Bianchi San Jose
I'll agree with the buying cheap part and "challenge" that setup
Thorens 145 with good needle at 0,5 g, Naim audio seperate amp/preamp, Cambridge CD, what started out as Wharfedale speakers. Basic stuff, until a guy who designed all but the casing of the Goldmund Apologues in the Met (C.Y.) revisited the speakers, which were then split out as pic'd by another guy. Cost to me maximum 50 bucks and when I'm in the mood, the system is on and it's Heaven on Earth. There is lead in there, sand, and a piece of chewing gum. So this is off topic, without being totally so, because the kids just know "boom boom boom" with 12" subwoofers with a few exceptions. Levelling to the lowest possible common denominator to increase sales and reduce costs. And that is what is happening in the bike world too. That and the hi-IQ idiots for whom everything NEW HI-TECH is better. So, I'm not totally off topic, I hope...

Thorens 145 with good needle at 0,5 g, Naim audio seperate amp/preamp, Cambridge CD, what started out as Wharfedale speakers. Basic stuff, until a guy who designed all but the casing of the Goldmund Apologues in the Met (C.Y.) revisited the speakers, which were then split out as pic'd by another guy. Cost to me maximum 50 bucks and when I'm in the mood, the system is on and it's Heaven on Earth. There is lead in there, sand, and a piece of chewing gum. So this is off topic, without being totally so, because the kids just know "boom boom boom" with 12" subwoofers with a few exceptions. Levelling to the lowest possible common denominator to increase sales and reduce costs. And that is what is happening in the bike world too. That and the hi-IQ idiots for whom everything NEW HI-TECH is better. So, I'm not totally off topic, I hope...
Questionable speaker placement.
The cloud of smug hanging over this thread is suffocating.
Try to remember when you were young and dumb and full of ..... something.
#120
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 213
Likes: 0
From: Philly
Bikes: 2009 Downtube FS8, 1970 Raleigh Gran Prix, 2009 Citizen Tokyo
I had a funny Classic & Vintage meets 21st century moment the other day. Riding home on the '78 Raleigh Super Course, I happened to meet a friend riding his fancy new carbon fibre Trek. He'd not seen this bike before and asked, pointing at the down-tube "what are those things?"


#121
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 159
Likes: 1
From: France
Bikes: A few
#122
Thread Starter
8speed DinoSORAs

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,749
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From: Oxford, UK or Mountain View, Ca
As for smug, I try not to be. I enjoy my old stuff, and try to explain that joy to others. I like some new stuff too!
__________________
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
Get a bicycle. You will certainly not regret it, if you live.
#123
This entire thread is like a Billy Joel song!
and I quote:
"You know the good ole days weren't always good
And tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems
Now I told you my reasons for the whole revival
Now I'm going outside to have an ice cold beer in the shade
Oh, I'm going to listen to my 45's
Ain't it wonderful to be alive
When the rock 'n' roll plays, yeah
When the memory stays, yeah
I'm keeping the faith"
and I quote:
"You know the good ole days weren't always good
And tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems
Now I told you my reasons for the whole revival
Now I'm going outside to have an ice cold beer in the shade
Oh, I'm going to listen to my 45's
Ain't it wonderful to be alive
When the rock 'n' roll plays, yeah
When the memory stays, yeah
I'm keeping the faith"
#124
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,985
Likes: 709
From: Boulder County, CO
Bikes: '80 Masi Gran Criterium, '12 Trek Madone, early '60s Frejus track
#125
Seņor Member



Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 18,462
Likes: 1,554
From: Hardy, VA
Bikes: Mostly English - predominantly Raleighs






