2019! The “How was your commute?” thread!
#701
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 9,686
Likes: 2,605
From: northern Deep South
Bikes: Fuji Touring, Novara Randonee
Warmer than expected (meaning sweatier than expected!). I took the long way, ran late, and had a good time revving it up on the 3-4 mile fast flat section.
I noticed a dogwood tree coming out. Most of it was white, but it looked like one pink-flowering branch had been grafted on many years ago. Wonder what's the story behind that tree.
I noticed a dogwood tree coming out. Most of it was white, but it looked like one pink-flowering branch had been grafted on many years ago. Wonder what's the story behind that tree.
#702
My afternoon commute started off beautiful. Warm weather, and I found a new shortcut through an area at work that means I don't have to get on the dreaded 60mph road at all - awesome!
Then I started loudly losing air in the rear. I immediately stopped and did a quick roadside inspection. The tire wasn't flat and I didn't see anything or any sealant spots so I figured it was a fluke and carried on. Couple miles later, it happens again. Uh oh. I manage to get home and I sit down to do a thorough inspection, and I find this:
Yup, that's a tread broken all the way through the tire, and a cut sidewall filled with sealant. Amazingly, through the miracle of sealant, the tube only lost about 20 psi. I'm probably (stupidly?
) gonna try to ride it again tomorrow and then replace the tires when I'm off on Friday. I guess this answers the question of "can Lylo get away with a faster, less durable tire" with an emphatic "nope".
Then I started loudly losing air in the rear. I immediately stopped and did a quick roadside inspection. The tire wasn't flat and I didn't see anything or any sealant spots so I figured it was a fluke and carried on. Couple miles later, it happens again. Uh oh. I manage to get home and I sit down to do a thorough inspection, and I find this:
Yup, that's a tread broken all the way through the tire, and a cut sidewall filled with sealant. Amazingly, through the miracle of sealant, the tube only lost about 20 psi. I'm probably (stupidly?
) gonna try to ride it again tomorrow and then replace the tires when I'm off on Friday. I guess this answers the question of "can Lylo get away with a faster, less durable tire" with an emphatic "nope".
#703
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 119
Likes: 6
From: North of LA, CA
Bikes: FX3 Frankenbike, Emonda SL5
Which Bontrager tire is that? I have a pair of T2s that I've ridden on 3 bikes, I have probably 3,000 miles on the pair now. A little heavy, but good ride, decent grip, and had few flats with them. They're 27 x 1 1/4 and won't fit my current commuter and I'm starting to shop around for my summer tires. Was considering Bontrager among others.
#704
Thank you. The roads on my commute are also pretty rough. The only tread failure I've ever had was on a super light skinwall tire, ran over a sharp rock and it ripped the tire from the sidewall up through the tread. But I think those tires were probably 20 years old. Fastest tire I ever rode until that rock though! I weighed the tires before I disposed of them, 280g for a 27 x 1 1/8. Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure those tires were Bontrager too.
#705
Disco Infiltrator




Joined: May 2013
Posts: 15,341
Likes: 3,530
From: Folsom CA
Bikes: Stormchaser, Paramount, Tilt, Samba tandem
I guess it’s puncture day!
I'm considering carrying a little bottle of Stan’s and just putting it in rather than fixing tubes any more. I’m already tubeless on my main bike but I’m about to start on the trike which should maximize opportunities to pick up thorns. At least it has Marathons.
something occurred to me about my heart surgery recovery and cycling. I might not be able to pump! And CO2 isn’t friendly with sealant. I might have to get one of those little lithium battery pumps. God they seem expensive though.
I'm considering carrying a little bottle of Stan’s and just putting it in rather than fixing tubes any more. I’m already tubeless on my main bike but I’m about to start on the trike which should maximize opportunities to pick up thorns. At least it has Marathons.
something occurred to me about my heart surgery recovery and cycling. I might not be able to pump! And CO2 isn’t friendly with sealant. I might have to get one of those little lithium battery pumps. God they seem expensive though.
#706
Senior Member


Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 6,169
Likes: 1,798
From: Madison, WI USA
The ones I see at first glance are about 2" in diameter. I wonder if there's one just a little "fatter", that could be held in a bottle cage. I suppose you could wrap it in something for a snug fit.
#707
Disco Infiltrator




Joined: May 2013
Posts: 15,341
Likes: 3,530
From: Folsom CA
Bikes: Stormchaser, Paramount, Tilt, Samba tandem
Well that's a lot better than I expected. The last one I looked at was this: https://www.fumpapumps.com/shop/ $140 and up. It is a lot more compact.
Do you mean this one? https://www.amazon.com/CYCPLUS-Porta...dp/B07B65GN6W/ You could put this in a cut-off bottle in the seat tube bosses. It maybe comes with a bike mount (not clear) that looks primitive. But weatherproof? It's not shown doused in water like Amazon bike lights always are.
Do you mean this one? https://www.amazon.com/CYCPLUS-Porta...dp/B07B65GN6W/ You could put this in a cut-off bottle in the seat tube bosses. It maybe comes with a bike mount (not clear) that looks primitive. But weatherproof? It's not shown doused in water like Amazon bike lights always are.
__________________
Genesis 49:16-17
"Well, well!" said Holmes, impatiently. "A good cyclist does not need a high road. The moor is intersected with paths and the moon is at the full."
Genesis 49:16-17
"Well, well!" said Holmes, impatiently. "A good cyclist does not need a high road. The moor is intersected with paths and the moon is at the full."
Last edited by Darth Lefty; 04-04-19 at 11:51 AM.
#708
Senior Member


Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 6,169
Likes: 1,798
From: Madison, WI USA
^^^^ Yeah, there are a bunch that are pretty-much the same as the one you linked. I doubt it's weatherproof either. I was just thinking of the bottle cage as a way of conveying it during a ride; I'd take it with when parking the bike away from home.
Or put it in a small boating dry bag, maybe. Cumbersome, but still a lot < $140.
Or put it in a small boating dry bag, maybe. Cumbersome, but still a lot < $140.
#709
Senior Member

Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,692
Likes: 440
From: Sioux Falls, SD
Bikes: '81 Panasonic Sport, '02 Giant Boulder SE, '08 Felt S32, '10 Diamondback Insight RS, '10 Windsor Clockwork, '15 Kestrel Evoke 3.0, '19 Salsa Mukluk
At lunch I went to ride across town to our office and had my 2nd flat of the day on the same tire. I triple-checked the inside of the tire for any foreign objects, and looked at the rim to see if maybe the rim strip had failed, but couldn't find anything. Replaced the tube (last spare!) and discovered that my frame pump had also bit the dust. After about 500 pumps (no exaggeration) I got the tire to maybe 20 psi. It was very noticeably under-inflated, but was holding enough air that as long as I rode slowly I wasn't hitting the rim on the ground. I creeped my way about 2 miles to my LBS and bought more tubes and a new frame pump. They also filled my front tire to proper pressure. I rode 6 more miles to the office and it held full pressure the whole way, so maybe it was just a fluke that I had two flats in one day on the same wheel. I guess I'll find out when I leave tonight to ride home.
#710
At lunch I went to ride across town to our office and had my 2nd flat of the day on the same tire. I triple-checked the inside of the tire for any foreign objects, and looked at the rim to see if maybe the rim strip had failed, but couldn't find anything. Replaced the tube (last spare!) and discovered that my frame pump had also bit the dust. After about 500 pumps (no exaggeration) I got the tire to maybe 20 psi. It was very noticeably under-inflated, but was holding enough air that as long as I rode slowly I wasn't hitting the rim on the ground. I creeped my way about 2 miles to my LBS and bought more tubes and a new frame pump. They also filled my front tire to proper pressure. I rode 6 more miles to the office and it held full pressure the whole way, so maybe it was just a fluke that I had two flats in one day on the same wheel. I guess I'll find out when I leave tonight to ride home.
#711
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 233
Likes: 30
From: netherlands
Bikes: van moof dropdown, btwin triban 100
downloaded strava yesterday and told myself i wouldn't worry about KOM, but I couldn't stop myself this morning on 2 segments on my way to work. I am such a child...
#712
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,306
Likes: 22
From: Mooresville, NC (Charlotte suburb)
Bikes: Cannondale Synapse, Trek 5000 TCT, Giant OCR
Bailed on riding today because of rain and needing to get home asap after work. Kids and I are going to a TobyMac concert tonight and will have to battle traffic to get there. I took the car opportunity to bring in a swap of pants and shirts that I leave at the office.
And geez I'm glad I don't normally drive. I left home early enough to go the gym for a bit, then left there early enough to get to work early. But this one intersection, well a combo of a right turn to then get into a left turn lane for a stoplight was backed up. It took about 15 minutes to go less than a quarter mile, mainly due to the left turn stoplight being so short and only letting about 5 cars through at a time. Throw in a couple of semi trucks and only 2 or 3 get through. While sitting there I was eyeing the sidewalk and shoulder of road that I usually use if I go that way on my bike.
Oh well, got to work on time instead of early.
And geez I'm glad I don't normally drive. I left home early enough to go the gym for a bit, then left there early enough to get to work early. But this one intersection, well a combo of a right turn to then get into a left turn lane for a stoplight was backed up. It took about 15 minutes to go less than a quarter mile, mainly due to the left turn stoplight being so short and only letting about 5 cars through at a time. Throw in a couple of semi trucks and only 2 or 3 get through. While sitting there I was eyeing the sidewalk and shoulder of road that I usually use if I go that way on my bike.
Oh well, got to work on time instead of early.
#713
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 58
Likes: 13
Bikes: 2016 Charge Plug 2, Citizen Miami folding bike
Almost perfect ride in this morning...no wind, perfect temperature in the low 50s. This is the best time of year to ride here in the DFW metroplex. Soon it will be 80 degrees at 6:00 AM and better than 100 for the commute home.
Trail animal count this morning: 3 bunnies, 0 skunks or opossums, and 0 coyotes.
Trail animal count this morning: 3 bunnies, 0 skunks or opossums, and 0 coyotes.
#714
Senior Member

Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,692
Likes: 440
From: Sioux Falls, SD
Bikes: '81 Panasonic Sport, '02 Giant Boulder SE, '08 Felt S32, '10 Diamondback Insight RS, '10 Windsor Clockwork, '15 Kestrel Evoke 3.0, '19 Salsa Mukluk
38F with pea soup fog, but no flat tires this morning so I'm not complaining one little bit.
Roads were unusually quiet as well. I kept thinking, "Is today a holiday that I forgot about?"
Roads were unusually quiet as well. I kept thinking, "Is today a holiday that I forgot about?"
#716
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 2,043
Likes: 17
From: Indianapolis
Bikes: Fairdale Weekender Drop, Motobecane 29LTD, Cannondale H400, Basso Coral
Today was the warmest morning of the year so far, 47F. It was wet from overnight rain - smells like Spring!
#717
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 233
Likes: 30
From: netherlands
Bikes: van moof dropdown, btwin triban 100
Stick with it, totally worth a week of discomfort! If you're sliding forward the seat nose is too low. Brooks adjust differently than other seats because you sit "in" them rather than on. Level is a starting point but you'll find most of the set up suggestions say the nose should point up slightly. I also found it impossible to get them right without a micro-adjust seat post. I rode for years hearing others sing the praises of Brooks saddles and discounted them as faddish. I caved and tried one about 5 years ago - won't ride anything else now.
Today was the warmest morning of the year so far, 47F. It was wet from overnight rain - smells like Spring!
Today was the warmest morning of the year so far, 47F. It was wet from overnight rain - smells like Spring!
#718
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 2,306
Likes: 22
From: Mooresville, NC (Charlotte suburb)
Bikes: Cannondale Synapse, Trek 5000 TCT, Giant OCR
Warmest morning ride in a long time: 60+ degrees so no jacket or gloves needed. Left early and went to gym for a bit. As I was leaving a guy there asked me how far I ride. He said he rides some too.
I made a big circle around the parking lot to hit 12 miles even before going into the office. Is that allowed?
I made a big circle around the parking lot to hit 12 miles even before going into the office. Is that allowed?
#719
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2019
Posts: 233
Likes: 30
From: netherlands
Bikes: van moof dropdown, btwin triban 100
Warmest morning ride in a long time: 60+ degrees so no jacket or gloves needed. Left early and went to gym for a bit. As I was leaving a guy there asked me how far I ride. He said he rides some too.
I made a big circle around the parking lot to hit 12 miles even before going into the office. Is that allowed?
I made a big circle around the parking lot to hit 12 miles even before going into the office. Is that allowed?
commute went good, still trying to get kom in a tiny downhill on my way to work, cause i am a child. warm enough not to need any jacket just an undershirt and polo. backpack in the morning as an extra semi layer. by the time i head out of work later backpack will be on rack.
#720
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 9,686
Likes: 2,605
From: northern Deep South
Bikes: Fuji Touring, Novara Randonee
Woke to Deluge in the Dark, but it had passed before I got out on the road. There was evidence of the rain (besides the wet roads), bark mulch washed out onto the road, a couple of gravel swooshes that came from I-don't-know-where, some branches downed and others washed out from the curb where they were left for pickup. And the creeks, the ones that are usually drainage ditches where the water might come over the soles of your shoes if you were really unlucky? They were 2-4' deep and flowing fast.
I got 2-3 minutes of sunshine before the next batch of clouds rolled in. And the dogwoods are out in full bloom -- gorgeous!
I got 2-3 minutes of sunshine before the next batch of clouds rolled in. And the dogwoods are out in full bloom -- gorgeous!
#721
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 119
Likes: 6
From: North of LA, CA
Bikes: FX3 Frankenbike, Emonda SL5
58F and very nice. This was the first ride on new tires - Schwalbe Marathon Plus, upsized from 32 to 38. I can't say I noticed a tremendous difference in speed or comfort from the tire or size change, but I'll look at the trend data in a couple weeks and see.
I got passed by a dude on a road bike today wearing all black kit, black bike, and NO LIGHTS. In the dark. Godspeed, dude. He was 100 feet in front of me after a few seconds and all I could see was his rear reflector. I guess some folks like to live dangerously.
I got passed by a dude on a road bike today wearing all black kit, black bike, and NO LIGHTS. In the dark. Godspeed, dude. He was 100 feet in front of me after a few seconds and all I could see was his rear reflector. I guess some folks like to live dangerously.
#722
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2017
Posts: 2,114
Likes: 239
From: Mid Atlantic / USA
Bikes: 2017 Specialized Crosstrail / 2013 Trek Crossrip Elite
Shorts on the way to work!
First time this year!
I've been able to wear shorts on the way home a few times but today was the first morning commute outside of the 30's and shorts on the way in felt fantastic!
First time this year!
I've been able to wear shorts on the way home a few times but today was the first morning commute outside of the 30's and shorts on the way in felt fantastic!
#723
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2017
Posts: 2,114
Likes: 239
From: Mid Atlantic / USA
Bikes: 2017 Specialized Crosstrail / 2013 Trek Crossrip Elite
It's like people just don't think.
A reflector? That's it?
I take all the stock reflectors off my bikes because they are a useless waste of space. In addition to lights I add reflective tape in various places that is 10 times more reflective than the plastic reflectors that come on bikes.
But I like getting there alive. It's how I roll. Call me crazy.
#724
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 119
Likes: 6
From: North of LA, CA
Bikes: FX3 Frankenbike, Emonda SL5
There is 'living dangerously' and then there is 'I want to be used as an example by all future life insurance salesmen'.
It's like people just don't think.
A reflector? That's it?
I take all the stock reflectors off my bikes because they are a useless waste of space. In addition to lights I add reflective tape in various places that is 10 times more reflective than the plastic reflectors that come on bikes.
But I like getting there alive. It's how I roll. Call me crazy.
It's like people just don't think.
A reflector? That's it?
I take all the stock reflectors off my bikes because they are a useless waste of space. In addition to lights I add reflective tape in various places that is 10 times more reflective than the plastic reflectors that come on bikes.
But I like getting there alive. It's how I roll. Call me crazy.
#725
I don't even know what the temperature was. I wore cutoff shorts and a thin hoodie and was a little sweaty by the time I got to work. I'll take it. Early last week it was still below freezing in the morning and I was dressing in layers.
The big piles of plowed snow at the local convention center parking lot are finally melted as of last Friday and the grass in my backyard is growing. I guess that's spring. Last Friday morning had the first bug fly into my mouth, and all the farm animals are back out in the pastures for me to talk to during the farmland half of my commute. I didn't realize how much I'd missed them over the winter. Oh yeah, and pollen.
The big piles of plowed snow at the local convention center parking lot are finally melted as of last Friday and the grass in my backyard is growing. I guess that's spring. Last Friday morning had the first bug fly into my mouth, and all the farm animals are back out in the pastures for me to talk to during the farmland half of my commute. I didn't realize how much I'd missed them over the winter. Oh yeah, and pollen.



