The Anti-Brifter Club
#151
Phyllo-buster
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#152
52psi
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Dammit. I totally qualified for this club until Sunday. But as of this moment?
DISQUALIFIED.
DISQUALIFIED.

__________________
A race bike in any era is a highly personal choice that at its "best" balances the requirements of fit, weight, handling, durability and cost tempered by the willingness to toss it and oneself down the pavement at considerable speed. ~Bandera
A race bike in any era is a highly personal choice that at its "best" balances the requirements of fit, weight, handling, durability and cost tempered by the willingness to toss it and oneself down the pavement at considerable speed. ~Bandera
#154
Banned.
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Before I began this thread, I'd have been knocking down your door to be a member: https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-vi...blasphemy.html
It's okay, tho - I've got my own club
DD
It's okay, tho - I've got my own club

DD
#155
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#156
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#157
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Welcome to The Dark Side.
Looks fabulous Randy!
Brent
Looks fabulous Randy!
Brent
#158
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LOOK! Brifterzzz

#159
Banned.
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it's like bob dylan releasing a christian album.
or the sag union president running for office as a republican.
or porsche developing an suv.
this club will never be the same.
sadness.
#160
Senior Member
If you're getting kicked out, at least you did it with style. Nice build.
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My bikes: '81 Trek 957, '83 Trek 720, '85 Trek 500, '85 Trek 770,'81 Merckx, '85 Centurion Cinelli, '85 Raleigh Portage, '92 RB-2, '09 Bianchi
My bikes: '81 Trek 957, '83 Trek 720, '85 Trek 500, '85 Trek 770,
#161
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Oh, Mercy, I knew this day may come. It was like A Slow Train Coming. I felt like I was destined to have this frame, so I'm glad I Saved it. I know how I built it is not for everybody, but It's Gotta Serve Somebody (me).
#162
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#163
Extraordinary Magnitude
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Yucky.
Wait...

OK, I had to look- Spanky wasn't making out with Darla... but she was the queen of the He Man Woman Haters Club.
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*Recipient of the 2006 Time Magazine "Person Of The Year" Award*
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
#164
Bike Butcher of Portland
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I've been riding bikes with multiple gears for 43 years. Not a single one of them has had, or ever had, brifters. Hell, I gave up on indexing years ago-too much adjusting, all the time. I don't like being stuck with one system. And what brifters qualify as C&V?
Please allow me entrance into this club. I submit my signature for evidence.
Please also note that I have no hate for those that use brifters. I just hope that someday they all will learn how to keep them adjusted.
Please allow me entrance into this club. I submit my signature for evidence.
Please also note that I have no hate for those that use brifters. I just hope that someday they all will learn how to keep them adjusted.
__________________
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
#165
Bike Butcher of Portland
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Damn, I feel like an idiot.
I was set up!
Here I thought I'd found the One True Leader...
Now I'm back on my own.
I was set up!
Here I thought I'd found the One True Leader...
Now I'm back on my own.
__________________
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
#166
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I put some brifters on my wife's bike. When I took it out for the test ride, I encountered a few hills. I had to start slapping on the lever until I got to the other end of the cassette. I decided that brifters, or indexed even, was not for me.
#167
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The Anti-Brifter Club is seeking new members! Do you currently own a bike with brifters--STIs, Ergos and such? If yes...sorry. You are not welcome. Does the 1' reach from the drops to the down tube seem a trivial distance? Do you appreciate the beauty of an unencumbered brake lever? Do you have to take your hands off the hoods to shift? Yes, yes, yes? Good. You are not alone. Come ride with us.
The Rules:
1. In order to be eligible to join the Anti-Brifter Club (hereafter "ABC"), you must not currently own a bike equipped with brifters, a.k.a. integrated shift levers, including but not limited to Campagnolo Ergo, STI, SRAM Double Tap, Kelley Take-Off Shifters, etc. Ownership of a bike equipped with bar-end shifters does not constitute ineligibility.
The Rules:
1. In order to be eligible to join the Anti-Brifter Club (hereafter "ABC"), you must not currently own a bike equipped with brifters, a.k.a. integrated shift levers, including but not limited to Campagnolo Ergo, STI, SRAM Double Tap, Kelley Take-Off Shifters, etc. Ownership of a bike equipped with bar-end shifters does not constitute ineligibility.
Mitey-mites that mostly resemble the stature of a Basque climber spinning around on their 57cm and under frames might scoff at those using alternative placement points for downtube shifters, but keep in mind that most cyclists have no frame of reference regarding how bikes for true Clydesdales ride. I'm not talking about Fat Ponies, but rather the big draft horses in the cycling community. When the frame sizes get big (67cm and up) strange things start to happen for frames built with "too small" 622/700c wheels. Zinn specializes in building frames for those playing in the Association, and others that need and can afford a custom Project Big. He knows a thing or two about bikes, has an undergraduate Physics degree, was an amateur racer, and considering he's been the Author of the Zinn how-to books and also the Tech Editor for Velonews, for seemingly forever. Even Zinn's custom frames made from magnesium, aluminum, and titanium (also obviously his steel bikes) still are affected by issues related to "death wobble." It has nothing to do with his materials or his geometry. In fact the opposite.
Zinn customs and stock Project Big bikes have a signature geometry characteristic to help minimize the "death wobble" that is endemic in ALL large frames. Zinn uses raised head tubes to approximate a larger frame, while utilizing a smaller triangle. The real issue with large frames is that the frames can NOT manage to find the same relative stiffness using given tubing than can be achieved with smaller frames. In frame building smaller triangles are better. There is NO simple solution. Most small cyclists think they are good bike handlers because they can impress themselves riding "with no hands" without understanding that the weight distribution and relative perch on the bike has a lot to do with frame size and the interaction with the given standard 622/700c wheel set. Put the average diminutive cyclist on something approximating the "bike fit" that a 6'8" and taller cyclist have to conform to and they would be flabbergasted by the poor handling characteristics of that "too small" wheel size and frame geometry. It has a lot more to do with how a diminutive cyclist naturally has a lower center of gravity as they sit in the compartment of a typical "normal" frame size on 622/700c wheels than anything relating to actual bike handling skills.
The point? Show me someone 6'8" and up and I'll show you someone terrified of the reach to downtube shifters in the "typical" down tube position. On micronaut sized frames that's a comfortable reach. For Clydesdale cyclists that reach is downright dangerous considering how twitchy the frames already behave (even with stiff aluminum and carbon, or vibration absorbing magnesium).
So I'd recommend that the ABC cartel consider reconsider such alternative shifting mounts as Kelly Take-Offs. Kelly Take-Offs aren't shifters, just a different position mount that completely transform a grown-up size bicycle into something less harrowing, to mitigate the spooky "death wobble" inherent in all large frames.
I have no problem with Kelly Take-Off cyclists being banned for having Brifter bikes, or upon being discovered that Brifters or Ergo equipped bicycles/componentry were shipped to them (or their wives…yes I'm poking fun of you Peyton Manning). However, to categorically dismiss membership into the ABC because of where one mounts their downtube shifters assumes that all cyclists fit bicycles for which mounting the shifters at the downtube is actually feasible. For Clydesdale cyclists, the actual position where the downtube shifters "should be" is just open space in our frames. The downtube is much much much much lower than that. No one should feel like they are having to reach to the bottom bracket just to shift, a bit of hyperbole, but not as much as you think.
Clydesdales everywhere await the just and merciful decision of the ABC cartel.
#168
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@mtnbke, sounds like this club is not for you. Tall riders have longer arms. The ABC scoffs at inclusionary politics.
#170
I'm a Classic Man.
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I have yet to keep a set of brifters...... Maybe one day..... But not today. Long live the ABC (anti-brifters club)
#171
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@mtnbke, sounds like this club is not for you. Tall riders have longer arms. The ABC scoffs at inclusionary politics.
I don't think mitey-mites understand just how far of an impossible reach from the drops to the down tube stops it is on say a 70cm-73cm frame. Its actually insane.
Tall people…out of the ABC. Got it. We'll be back when 36er wheel size catches on and we can get "racing" tire 36er wheels built up! Then our down tube stops will be positioned like all the little people's bikes. Until then…ABC isn't for us. Which sucks. I guess we can dunk, or at least used to be able to. There's that.
#172
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Tall people aren't out. Tall people with brifters are out. Rules are rules and the ABC doesn't care. Not everything is for everybody and that's okay. (This thread is ridiculous.)
#173
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Uhmmmm...... will you just send me any Simplex/Spidel/Mavic Retrofriction DT shifters you might still have in your stash then???.....Former great leader of the anti-brifter club....

Now that your TVT is irreversibly contaminated with the brifter/ergo bar virus, those DT shifter might cause a nasty asplosion if you get them too close to that newly built up bike......


Now that your TVT is irreversibly contaminated with the brifter/ergo bar virus, those DT shifter might cause a nasty asplosion if you get them too close to that newly built up bike......

Last edited by Chombi1; 01-11-16 at 02:02 AM.
#175
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That pretty much sums up the baseline of my POV. Only the small details differ. I road through the 80s & 90s +, on bikes built in or prior to 1981. Isolated, so I emerged as Rip van Winkle. Thus, the familiarity of the mid-80s and prior hardware.
Yet a third supporting reasons exists: budget. Middle of the road carbon bikes are pricey and seemingly disposable. For less money - although sometimes getting close - I can have spectacular specimens of hand-crafted steel art.
I ride because it makes me happy. I don't race, but love speed. I mostly ride alone, from convenience. Love riding with a few others, but I avoid any notion of a peloton.
As noted elsewhere, I belong only by default.
:-)
Yet a third supporting reasons exists: budget. Middle of the road carbon bikes are pricey and seemingly disposable. For less money - although sometimes getting close - I can have spectacular specimens of hand-crafted steel art.
I ride because it makes me happy. I don't race, but love speed. I mostly ride alone, from convenience. Love riding with a few others, but I avoid any notion of a peloton.
As noted elsewhere, I belong only by default.
:-)
@nlerner did point out a lower cost approach from Ribble. Very tempting to try them out at that price point.
I have appreciated the index shifting of the DA 7400 parts on the Pinarello. Now that I have more miles under me, I am about to go back to the friction shifting of the Colnago. The only other index shifting bikes I have are the Duet (Accushift barcons), Masi (105) and the RockHopper with twist grips. The others are all friction or SS/FX.
The 8 speed DA is the highest count block on any of my bikes. Most are 7 speed. Even the 8 spd is too much, as I only use about 6-7 of them. Either I need more time on the saddle or a smaller big ring (53 now). I have looked for a smaller DA 7400 ring around 50t but haven't found one.
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Bikes don't stand alone. They are two tired.
Bikes don't stand alone. They are two tired.