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Today I rode a fixed gear for the first time. 84 gear inches is pretty tall. :lol:
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Today I cleaned my fixed gear bike.
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Originally Posted by TimothyH
(Post 20145726)
Today I cleaned my fixed gear bike.
And I came close to third in a Mario Kart 64 tournament at the LBS. |
Originally Posted by Carcosa
(Post 20145768)
And I came close to third in a Mario Kart 64 tournament at the LBS. |
i rode every single day in 2017.
and so far 4 times this year.... |
This is awesome
Originally Posted by Flatulentfox
(Post 20145704)
https://youtu.be/uyrlEE9AV58
This just popped up in my youtube feed for some reason. I thought some of you guys might get a kick out of it. |
Today I took my fat bike out in the snow. It was coming down pretty well and we had about 5-6" already of fresh snow. It was tough going for sure but it was fun. Rode down to the local sledding hill to see what was going on. Lots of kids out there. Decided to take my fattie down a few times after some questions from the kids out there. They wanted to see me do it so why the hell not? Lowered the pressure and rolled it. Did it twice and then headed home, and......I flatted. On the front. Really? Stopped in the neighborhood and a guy let me use his pump while he was shoveling the driveway. Made it about another half a mile or so and it was done. Walked it the last mile or so in the snow. Wasn't carrying a spare tube with me, and it wouldn't have mattered anyway. At 16°F there was no way I was gonna be changing it with Reynaud's Syndrome.
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Today I looked at my fixed gear bike and wanted to ride it. It really is an addiction!
Dave |
This video popped up on my feed today - fascinating. I own a very stiff aluminum bike and a very flexy steel bike. I don't think there's any real difference in watt transfer between stiff frames and flexible frames. What I do believe is stiff frames feel better to sprint on, and anything that makes me want to ride harder is "faster."
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Originally Posted by TenSpeedV2
(Post 20150496)
Today I took my fat bike out in the snow. It was coming down pretty well and we had about 5-6" already of fresh snow. It was tough going for sure but it was fun. Rode down to the local sledding hill to see what was going on. Lots of kids out there. Decided to take my fattie down a few times after some questions from the kids out there. They wanted to see me do it so why the hell not? Lowered the pressure and rolled it. Did it twice and then headed home, and......I flatted. On the front. Really? Stopped in the neighborhood and a guy let me use his pump while he was shoveling the driveway. Made it about another half a mile or so and it was done. Walked it the last mile or so in the snow. Wasn't carrying a spare tube with me, and it wouldn't have mattered anyway. At 16°F there was no way I was gonna be changing it with Reynaud's Syndrome.
Today I couldn't find a good free VPN to stream CX Worlds and only got about 20 minutes in before my data cap hit. :cry: |
Originally Posted by Carcosa
(Post 20151145)
I'd be bummed to flat on a fat bike (not to mention in 16 degrees). Seem's like it should be the one bike where this isn't an issue.
Today I couldn't find a good free VPN to stream CX Worlds and only got about 20 minutes in before my data cap hit. :cry: |
Originally Posted by 50voltphantom
(Post 20152095)
Tunnel Bear is worth the cost. Worked flawless.
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Originally Posted by Carcosa
(Post 20152211)
That's what I used and loved it. Couldn't bring myself to pay though.
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Originally Posted by Flatulentfox
(Post 20145704)
https://youtu.be/uyrlEE9AV58
This just popped up in my youtube feed for some reason. I thought some of you guys might get a kick out of it. |
Originally Posted by Flatulentfox
(Post 20145704)
This just popped up in my youtube feed for some reason. I thought some of you guys might get a kick out of it.
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Today I (yesterday I) replaced the bearings in my rear hub will Phil Wood sealed bearings and they are buttery smooth! I also chopped down my steerer tube to clean up the cockpit.
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Originally Posted by TimothyH
(Post 20141246)
Be careful increasing mileage like that. It is bad to do so on the bike but especially running
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Originally Posted by rumrunn6
(Post 20154385)
related: that's how I got interested in cycling. was walking at lunch for years to lose weight. then I cranked it up a notch to running at lunch. then I made the mistake of trying to run faster. that's when I got introduced to Achilles Tendinitis. researched that cycling would be good while I recovered ... never looked back, even started bike commuting (but I did keep running in my cross training)
Dave |
Originally Posted by bonsai171
(Post 20154787)
Was thinking about picking up running as a cross train too, do you find it helps maintain core stability?
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Originally Posted by bonsai171
(Post 20154787)
Was thinking about picking up running as a cross train too, do you find it helps maintain core stability?
Dave
Originally Posted by rumrunn6
(Post 20154942)
I don't think so, but if you have good core stability it will help your running. running is actually very stressful for the back, as per my doctor
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Originally Posted by UltraManDan
(Post 20155568)
Poor posture leads to back issues. The act of running (assuming you are biomechanically efficient and not overstriding) is a lot less stressful than Doctors presume. Run correctly, run efficiently and you'll run longer and farther with less chance of injury.
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Vaguely regret buying another Steamroller instead of a new Langster. Is that weird?
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Originally Posted by 50voltphantom
(Post 20155699)
Vaguely regret buying another Steamroller instead of a new Langster. Is that weird?
The steamroller is a staple of SS/FG; a classic and a workhorse icon. The langster, not so much. While the newest rendition is better, the version before that was terrible with big s basing it off of a city bike/ hybrid. The steel langster was not bad though; too bad big S did away with it. |
Late last night I rode 31 miles on my fixed gear. Mix of MUP and quiet roads. Very dark. It was fun. Riding is one of the best ways I know to relieve the day's stress.
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