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Frames
If you were building a mileage-based setup, which frame would you go for?
Surly Steamroller Bareknuckle Remember, this isn't about short sprints or velodrome riding, this is about putting in 50-150 milers on a bike designed exclusively around being a 48x15 roadworthy pig. |
I own a steamroller and I really think I could ride it as far as I needed to without any pain or problems. I never rode a bk so I can't comment on that frame but I only my Surly. Most comfortable bike i've ever ridden i'll never sell it.
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Yeah, I traded a black BK I had earlier this year because it wasn't the right size for me. I am trying to come up with a good "travel" bike that I can put miles on and still have fun. I have the Handsome Devil which is tits, but I want something that is A. designed for fixed-gear (trackdrops) and B. Not such an aggressive geometry that I can't carry around 30 lbs. in my bags.
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The Bareknuckle is the opposite of what you want, but I'd choose it every time over the Steamroller.
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Originally Posted by TheRealFaux
(Post 14163971)
The Bareknuckle is the opposite of what you want, but I'd choose it every time over the Steamroller.
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Any bike that fits you well should be fine, I was trying to figure the same thing last year and my options were the Steamroller and the All-City Big Block.
I went for the Big Block based on the geometry, Surly's head tube seemed a tad short for my liking. |
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I don't always post in your thread, but when I do I ask irrelevant questions.
Do those chain tensioners actually do anything on your devil? |
I'm assuming they help tension the chain.
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http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v1...g-me-clean.png
I've never seen them run on a bike with forward facing dropouts. I suppose my question should have been, do you feel they were a worthwhile purchase for your bike and would you recommend them to others? |
I'd go with the Steamroller because it's essentially the same geometry, cost & quality are similar & is name brand.
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Originally Posted by Spoonrobot
(Post 14164711)
I've never seen them run on a bike with forward facing dropouts. I suppose my question should have been, do you feel they were a worthwhile purchase for your bike and would you recommend them to others?
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I know. But he's running what look like some type of MKS-style Chain Tensioner (similar to this). It can be seen in this picture:
http://www.pedalroom.com/p/handsome-...vil-4457_2.jpg I've just never seen anyone use those with that style dropout and was curious if he found an advantage to doing so. |
Originally Posted by fuji86
(Post 14164803)
I'd go with the Steamroller because it's essentially the same geometry, cost & quality are similar & is name brand.
steep vs relaxed $700 vs $420 dedacciai COM 12.5 cromo vs "surly" 4130 cromo italian made vs taiwainese made EAI carries a higher prestige than Surly, not sure what you're on about. |
Originally Posted by Spoonrobot
(Post 14164879)
I know. But he's running what look like some type of MKS-style Chain Tensioner (similar to this). It can be seen in this picture:
http://www.pedalroom.com/p/handsome-...vil-4457_2.jpg I've just never seen anyone use those with that style dropout and was curious if he found an advantage to doing so. |
doesnt that tensioner fit between the frame and the axel and a lip pulls on the back of the dropout to tension the chain? Could still work just fine.
Pulled a wheel a few time on my Surly cross-check after some hasty flat changes so i can see how it may help. |
Originally Posted by TheRealFaux
(Post 14164883)
What?
Steep vs relaxed $700 vs $420 dedacciai COM 12.5 cromo vs "surly" 4130 cromo handmade vs not handmade EAI carries a higher prestige than Surly, not sure what you're on about. |
By prestige I meant better reputation, not ride quality(?). I was just pointing out how you said Surly was a household name (implying good quality). EAI actually makes higher quality products than compared to Surly. An Eddy Merckx or Serotta could be ridden thousands of miles and it damn sure will be more prestigious than someone's new Kilo TT.
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Originally Posted by fuji86
(Post 14164803)
I'd go with the Steamroller because it's essentially the same geometry, cost & quality are similar & is name brand.
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Originally Posted by fuji86
(Post 14164803)
I'd go with the Steamroller because it's essentially the same geometry, cost & quality are similar & is name brand.
So do materials. And finish. Unless you mean to tell me I should ditch my TET and keep my Kilo TT since they have essentially the same geometry, are both steel and Mercier is actually a more well-known brand. |
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I just did a quick google search. Either way cost is not "similar"
http://i3.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/...ose_enough.png |
Originally Posted by Santaria
(Post 14163934)
Remember, this isn't about short sprints or velodrome riding, this is about putting in 50-150 milers on a bike designed exclusively around being a 48x15 roadworthy pig.
Why not something more road oriented? You won't need a high BB, real short cranks, fast whippy handling, cramped cockpit, but could appreciate a road geometry even if its "race" oriented road. I havent compared the geometry charts but thats the first thing in my mind. |
Originally Posted by Scrodzilla
(Post 14165043)
This is just silly. They are two entirely different frames and you've never ridden either one.
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BTW, my bad on the cost, the Surly is a bargain in comparison. I posted that too hastily without proofreading. I stand though, that for value quality and intangibles, the Surly is still what I'd purchase of the two and then I'd put better components on the Surly and come up with a total sum of parts ride that would be preferrable to sinking all my money into a frame that has no suspension. I mean fatter 700c tires are going to offset any perception that one frame rides better than the other. I'd rather ride a touring/road geared bike that distance over a SS/FG track bike and "thenomad" comes out and suggests that in his post.
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