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Originally Posted by absntr
Low flanges are still well in production. Marcus at Yojimbo's usually has a set ordered in with the regular mix of high flange track hubs.
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Originally Posted by weed eater
judah, that looks like a fun ride. i can't tell from the map: do you take El Camino through San Mateo or is there some kind of path running parallel to the road?
edit: ps what's the one-way mileage? the interface is kind of screwy and doesnt show it... Total mileage came out to be ~34 miles, after which I rode the train down to San Jose and did another ~6 miles in to work. |
Originally Posted by Judah
Zoom in on the map to see the exact roads we took. We were only on El Camino for a short while through Milbrae. Through San Mateo we were on California/San Mateo, then crossed the tracks by Bay Meadows horse track and took Old County Road for a long while until Redwood City, where we switched over to Middlefield Road, which has a bike path and wasn't too bad that early in the morning.
Total mileage came out to be ~34 miles, after which I rode the train down to San Jose and did another ~6 miles in to work. |
yeah the cranks feel pretty solid. I'm a little concerned about not campy cranks on a campy bb because of the weird taper issue but it's worked thus far (about a week). I was thinking blaze orange nonmachined deep-v's to liven it up a little?
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Originally Posted by Judah
I'm trying to convice your brother to do the ride with me next week. It's surprisingly easy, and a *lot* of fun: http://velo.metanovus.com/index.php?...%60D%60OeX~P|Q
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BTW you have to see my bike the next time i'm up there. I'm getting some money finally that I can put into some nice parts instead of my brother's recycled stuff.
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silver...
http://img121.imageshack.us/img121/5295/silver8aa.jpg or black? http://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4898/black8md.jpg sorry for the so-so quality of the pictures, but you all get the idea. this is for a black cross-check. |
Silver I think. Though the black looks swell too. A tough choice - are the rims going to be silver? If the accents/components will be silver, then I say a silver seatpost.
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Silver. Black is too overused.
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Originally Posted by ink1373
silver...
http://img121.imageshack.us/img121/5295/silver8aa.jpg or black? http://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4898/black8md.jpg sorry for the so-so quality of the pictures, but you all get the idea. this is for a black cross-check. |
Mama Pakhomov in Belarus declined my rather substantial offer for this SS. She shuttles between the dacha and her gardens on it. I swear it weighed like 30 lbs. Aист, by the way, means stork, the national bird of Belarus.
http://www.speakeasy.org/~jrowedc/IMG_08381024768.JPG |
Originally Posted by jrowedc
Mama Pakhomov in Belarus declined my rather substantial offer for this SS. She shuttles between the dacha and her gardens on it. I swear it weighed like 30 lbs. A???, by the way, means stork, the national bird of Belarus.
http://www.speakeasy.org/~jrowedc/IMG_08381024768.JPG |
Originally Posted by ImOnCrank
Ok so here's the new steed. However, be forwarned, the vast majority of these pictures were taken at night, after a few PBRs outside a bar so they are of dubious quality. Pogliaghi frame from sometime in the 80s pretty newly powdercoated super dark gray. Parts: campy headset/bb, nitto bars (soon to be wrapped in orange), thompson seatpost, mks pedals/cages, galli cranks (does anyone know anything about these? I've never heard of them) Selle NitroX seat, Sugino 48t chainring, Unknown 17t cog, Mavic CXP22's/Iro hubs (not a big fan of this wheel set up, I break a lot of stuff).
Taken from http://www.classicrendezvous.com/Ita...tomBiBook.html Sante Pogliaghi Via C. Cesariano II, Milano 20154, Italia In the central section of Milan you will find the small frame-building shop of Sante Pogliaghi located near the Arco della Pace, a neo-classic arch similar in design to the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. Within walking distance is another Milanese landmark, the Castello Sforzesco. Many works of art are displayed in the castle, the most renowned being Michelangelo's Pieta. Amid all this history is a small unobtrusive shop whose address is Via C. Cesariano 11, but whose entrance faces Vaile Bryon indicated by the "Pogliaghi" painted above the door. Sante Pogliaghi has probably been building bicycle frames longer than any other master builder. He is 62 years old and he started building when he was 11! He worked with his Uncle Brambilla, a famous frame builder of the 1920s. When his uncle died in 1947, Sante Pogliaghi continued building frames but now they appear with the Pogliaghi label. Pogliaghi builds primarily road and track racing frames. His specialty, however, is the competition tandem. The lugs on the Pogliaghi tandem are hand made by Pogliaghi himself. Since Columbus builds custom large-diameter tandem tubes for Pogliaghi, he is unable to use standard lugs since no one makes tandem lugs that meet his exacting specifications. Consequently ,he makes them himself. Pogliaghi has built a few touring frames and touring tandems, but these are not his specialty. He is much more familiar with the technical requirements for racing than he is for touring. Today, Pogliaghi frames are famous throughout the world. Just a few years ago, this little shop built l00 to 120 frames per year. Now it produces about 800 to 900 frames in the same period. There are six builders, including Pogliaghi, and each builder works on a frame from start to finish. The frames are all hand-brazed without the use of jigs. To help keep the frame from moving, the joints are pinned. Pogliaghi does have a frame jig which he employs when he is building a lot of frames of the same dimensions, but he generally likes to work without a jig. He feels that since he has built frames for 50 years, he can build accurately without a jig. He also feels that when a jig is holding the tubes, the frame will have heat-induced stresses that can result in distortion after cooling. Contrary to normal practice, he builds a frame by joining the seat tube to the bottom bracket and then the seat tube to the top tube. When he finishes this, he attaches the down tube to the bottom bracket and finishes the main triangle by attaching the head tube. For the individual framesets, Pogliaghi brazes with what he terms "the natural gas, the cooking one." He also uses propane gas, but only for the larger-diameter tubed tandems. He prefers natural gas because it has 10 percent carbonics. "And so the tube, when heated, loses 10 percent carbonics, but by using the natural gas you only lose 5 percent." Pogliaghi uses a Swiss product called Castolin to braze his frames. It is, according to Pogliaghi, a type of bronze rod. But it actually has a silver content of about 40 percent. Pogliaghi has tried using brazing materials with higher silver content but finds that they are too liquid to efficiently complement his building techniques. He is satisfied with the results achieved by using Castolin since Castolin has high fluidity, a low brazing temperature, and good brazing resistance. Pogliaghi does not design a frame to meet specific angles. He is more concerned with the length of the top tube in proportion to the seat tube. As a general rule of thumb, Pogliaghi will build a bicycle with a top tube only 2 CM larger or smaller than the seat tube. Otherwise, the bicycle will be ill proportioned and will not ride correctly. For example, if you order a 58 CM. Pogliaghi, the top tube from the center of the head lug to the center of the seat lug, can vary from 56 to 60 CM depending on your individual needs. However, this rule only applies to the medium-size frames. The small and the large frames will not follow this rule. For example, the smallest top tube Pogliaghi will put on a 47 CM. frame is 49 CM. Pogliaghi does not use cast lugs or cast bottom brackets on his frames. He thinks that they create a frame that is too rigid and, as a result, prone to tube breakage at the joints. He does, however, use a cast fork crown, because he feels that the fork must be stiff in order to provide good handling. He generally builds with Columbus tubing, but he will build with Ishiwata or Reynolds tubes, depending on what the customer wants. All Sante Pogliaghi's frames are sent out for painting and chroming. Sante Pogliaghi, however, cautions about chroming. He believes the chroming should not be done in a sulfuric acid base, otherwise it will eat away at the tube and eventually crack it. A word of advice from Pogliaghi if you must have your frame chromed: "Oil the inside of the frame after it has been chromed" to prevent rust. In Italy, and especially in Milan, Pogliaghi is called the master tailor of the bicycle." He has custom-fitted frames for many world-class -riders like Sercu, Merckx, Fagin, as well as Italian champions like Baghetto, Nunzi, and Rossi. If you would like Pogliaghi to build a frame, you had better give him your order soon as he plans to retire by 1980. The process is somewhat difficult since Pogliaghi only speaks Italian. We recommend that you order a frame through one of the many bicycle stores throughout the United States that deal directly with Pogliaghi. Because of his ability to custom-design a frame to an individual rider's physique and racing specialty, there is a long waiting list for a Pogliaghi custom frame. Recognizing that not everyone will necessarily be interested in a Pogliaghi frame, Signore Pogliaghi recommends other Italian builders in Milan whom he believes are superb craftsmen: Cinelli and De Rosa. S/F< CEYA! |
why a classic saddle on a tech looking post?
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Silver post, although I like the idea of coordinating with the stem...
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Ceya, thanks for the transcription. I love that sort of old world spooky voodoo stuff.
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Thanks Ceya, i was wondering about some backstory. See you monday again?
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Originally Posted by jim-bob
I really like that thing.
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Originally Posted by absntr
Silver I think. Though the black looks swell too. A tough choice - are the rims going to be silver? If the accents/components will be silver, then I say a silver seatpost.
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My bike as seen with a Richard Serra piece at the Modern.
http://img248.imageshack.us/img248/4...texbike2xn.jpg http://img248.imageshack.us/img248/1694/vortex10te.jpg Plus one to see the top of the piece. It's definitely killer work on his part. |
Wow! Those are some hot photos. Yikes! Nice bike too...I've always been a fan of those IROs...they're stealth looking.
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Too much jaw flappin and not enough pic showin!!! :D
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Originally Posted by Mercier666
IRO's are funny looking. Big ol' beefcake bikes, haha!
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Originally Posted by Mercier666
IRO's are funny looking. Big ol' beefcake bikes, haha!
THIS is a beefcake bike: http://fixedgeargallery.com/2004/f/benton.htm I've seen that one around - biggest track bike I've ever seen. huge. This is also a beefcake bike: http://fixedgeargallery.com/2005/jul...ieThompson.htm |
Originally Posted by absntr
Nothing funny looking about IRO's.
THIS is a beefcake bike: http://fixedgeargallery.com/2004/f/benton.htm I've seen that one around - biggest track bike I've ever seen. huge. This is also a beefcake bike: http://fixedgeargallery.com/2005/jul...ieThompson.htm http://www.fixedgeargallery.com/2005...ohnDufford.htm |
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