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Originally Posted by Steely Dan
(Post 12988599)
i don't know how you SS/FG guys do it. i live in flat-as-a-pancake chicago, but i find that i still NEED gears because i ride directly along chicago's windy-ass lakeshore. on a moderate day i find that my comfortable cruising GIR is 82, but when i have one of those days with a 30 knot headwind on the way into work and then a 30 knot tailwind on the way home, an 82 GIR is woefully inappropriate for both of those conditions. i need to drop down into the 60s (or even 50s) to battle the stiffest headwinds for 15 miles, and then i'll be over 100 on the way home to take advantage of the tailwind pushing me along.
being locked into one GIR all the time would make my rides less fun for me. that's why i got an IGH for my winter commuter, SS-like simplicity, but still allows me to battle the wind on the worst days. more power to all of you that can do it. I've gotten accustomed to not having a choice of gears. When it's windy, I push harder and go slower. When it's steep, I stand up. Sometimes I just stand up to give myself a different cadence and a break from pushing hard. It was odd at first, and I ran a lower gear early on. I started with a 42/18, then a 44/18, now the 44/17. |
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
(Post 12988599)
i don't know how you SS/FG guys do it. i live in flat-as-a-pancake chicago, but i find that i still NEED gears because i ride directly along chicago's windy-ass lakeshore. on a moderate day i find that my comfortable cruising GIR is 82, but when i have one of those days with a 30 knot headwind on the way into work and then a 30 knot tailwind on the way home, an 82 GIR is woefully inappropriate for both of those conditions. i need to drop down into the 60s (or even 50s) to battle the stiffest headwinds for 15 miles, and then i'll be over 100 on the way home to take advantage of the tailwind pushing me along.
being locked into one GIR all the time would make my rides less fun for me. that's why i got an IGH for my winter commuter, SS-like simplicity, but still allows me to battle the wind on the worst days. more power to all of you that can do it. Cheers! |
^ it's not that i'm riding into 30 knot winds everyday, it's just that it can be that obnoxious along the lakefront some days, and i like having a bike that can not only let me drop down a bit to save my knees going into a strong headwind, but also one that allows me to shift up so i can really take advantage of a strong tailwind. to keep ahead of a 30 knot tailwind with a 70 gear inch bike would mean you're spinning at like 150rpm. being able to shift up to 125 gear inches and effortlessly fly across the lakefront at 30+ mph being shoved forward by an unrelentingly strong tailwind is pure joy. we don't have downhills in chicago (sooooo flat), stupidly strong tailwinds are all i ever get for going super-fast, and i really like having a bike that can take advantage of them when they roll around.
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^ I hear you. That is also something that I really miss about geared bike and it is the reason why I have mine setup as an SS and not an SSFG. During my commute, I pedal about 90-95% of the time and I will be spinning like crazy if I have a tailwind or going downhill on a SSFG. Those moment I trully wish I had my geared bike.
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Although people can and do ride SS in all kinds of environments it may not be the best tool for the job... it is really dependent on how fit you are and after commuting about 10,000 km on a fixed gear I was even fitter.
Prefer fixed over ss for that little bit of extra efficiency and I rarely ever coast on any bike. My fleet is ixed and has everything from 1 speed ss and fg bikes to 3 speeds to 9 speed... cannot see why I would ever need one of those newfangled 10 speeds. My primary commuters are now a 3 speed with a dual drive (6 speed) and a 24 speed XC mountain bike... my health does not allow me to rock the Ss/ fg bikes as much as I used to and I need some variable gears. |
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