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Originally Posted by BarracksSi
(Post 8910353)
The "What road bike do you have?" thread over in the Road forum is somewhere beyond 400 pages, and it doesn't load any more slowly than this one.
What makes it load more or less slowly depends on the size and quality of the images and the servers on which they reside. A 500 kB image on a slow server is going to take longer than one that's 60 kB from a fast site. |
Furthermore, the load time is strictly related to the current page. The overall number of pages in the thread is irrelevant.
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The truth is that the mods wanted one more sticky, bringing the total up to 7. Which is lucky.
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I had never stickied anything before, gimme a break.
Really it did seem slower. |
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I updated my commuter rig, so I'm going to post a new pic.
I recently put on a new rigid fork (swapped out the old low-end suspension fork) and power grips for the pedals. This new setup has increased my average mph by 2! |
Originally Posted by benbammens
(Post 8886875)
I'm afraid that one won't mount on my seatpost. |
Sure it will; you just need a seat sandwich.
http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/saddles/brooks-b66.html |
Originally Posted by randomgear
(Post 8926845)
Sure it will; you just need a seat sandwich.
http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/saddles/brooks-b66.html |
Originally Posted by Caleab
(Post 8905979)
I've been looking at one of these to use as a commuter. I recently picked up a Trek 2.1 and thought I would just use a backpack. Xnay on that. I love my 2.1, but it's not a commuter. I like my Trek 5.3FX and all, but I just found I really like the road bike style.
Bearsong, beautiful ride! |
Originally Posted by Bearsong
(Post 8930191)
Thank you. I highly recommend the speciale cx as a commuter. I am very happy with it. I like being able to go play after work on some trails near my house before I come home. It handles great on the road, is extremely comfortable, quick and handles my 220 pounds plus a back pack of 10 pounds no problem. I will look onto racks and panniers down the road, but for right now it doesn't need a thing.
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Originally Posted by lbear
(Post 8930801)
How much do you think the Masi weighs?
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A Pair of Commuters
http://www.ecovelo.info/images/forbikeforums.jpg
A custom Surly LHT and a Civia Loring; both are fine commuters and cargo haulers. |
Here is my new rig. 1981 Fuji Sports 12. This time 2 weeks ago was in the trash pile in front of my neighbor's house. Now with new wheels, tires, tubes, hoods, handlebar tape, and rebuilt derailleurs, it carries my 210lb ass 85 miles a week.
Oh, hi everyone. First post. Nice to meet you. :) http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/9409/tf5.jpg |
Those civias are so pretty.
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EcoVelo-
What a beautiful couple! |
Originally Posted by jetpants
(Post 8932374)
Here is my new rig. 1981 Fuji Sports 12. This time 2 weeks ago was in the trash pile in front of my neighbor's house. Now with new wheels, tires, tubes, hoods, handlebar tape, and rebuilt derailleurs, it carries my 210lb ass 85 miles a week.
Oh, hi everyone. First post. Nice to meet you. :) http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/9409/tf5.jpg |
1 Attachment(s)
So, the old Fuji Ace I had been riding for about a year was called back by its original owners. I loved the ride it gave, and had been looking around for a while for something to replace it when the inevitable "Hey - do you still have that bike we loaned you?" call came. The owner of the LBS/bike adoption center had built this up for himself, and it was sitting out front of his store one day. It followed me home. '06 Jamis Nova frame with 105s and a Surly LHT front fork. I dubbed him Kermes. The pedals are about 20 years old, but will be replaced by some free Ultegras one of my students isn't using anymore. This is my first time on STIs or, for that matter, a bike that actually fits. It's dandy.
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Jetpants, nice f'in work!
Samherst, that's a sexy bike. |
Originally Posted by ecoveloinfo
(Post 8931728)
http://www.ecovelo.info/images/forbikeforums.jpg
A custom Surly LHT and a Civia Loring; both are fine commuters and cargo haulers. |
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Originally Posted by ecoveloinfo
(Post 8935274)
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Civia Hyland
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Thanks for the info! Classy, gorgeous bikes!! :thumb:
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Here's my commuter. I find it to be more aesthetically appealing than my road bike. I've converted the old threaded front end to threadless, added a disc fork, and built a set of wheels with Mavic A719 rims and Alfine hubs (IGH and dynohub). I've since added a minimalist dynamo taillight from B&M - should get another picture with the new taillight and my panniers on.
https://wfs.gc.cuny.edu/LChelminski/bikes/commuter.jpg The lighting in the photo is sort of atrocious since I was playing with opening and closing my blinds. |
Nice build. What type of disc brakes did you go with?
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lukasz: How do you convert from threaded to threadless?
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The disc brakes are Avid BB7. They took a day or two to bed (with me purposely slamming on them at red lights in Manhattan traffic). One morning before I knew they were 'ready' I pressed them hard and as my bike came to an almost complete stop one of my feet almost slipped off the pedal and I very nearly went over the bars very slowly. Good brakes!
Originally Posted by mosquito
(Post 8937424)
lukasz: How do you convert from threaded to threadless?
I've heard that 1" threadless is not the safest but considering how hefty this disc fork is I am not worried in the slightest. Maybe with a 1" carbon steerer or something you'd have reason to worry. |
Never heard of Civia. Went to their web site. Stunningly gorgeous stuff.
My 17 year old daughter keeps noticing me looking at these pictures and saying "bike porn". |
Originally Posted by noglider
(Post 8937817)
Never heard of Civia. Went to their web site. Stunningly gorgeous stuff.
My 17 year old daughter keeps noticing me looking at these pictures and saying "bike porn". |
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