#61
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Most important, there are no wide 700C tires that can begin to compare with the best 650B tires like the Grand Bois Hetre. |
#62
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Knobs are fine for loose stuff. Around here (Northern Virginia) first off, you typically can't do a dirt road ride of any length without spending substantial time on pavement to connect the routes, so you get the best ride from a setup that shines on both dirt and pavement. The Hetre definitely does that. Then, the unpaved roads themselves: here, you have an iron hard baked clay base with a thin layer of small size gravel on top. There's not enough loose for knobs to dig in; if you want to dig into those roads you'd better bring a pickaxe. So aggressive tread gives you nothing on the dirt roads and hurts you big time on the chipseal. |
#63
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#64
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I was looking for insight about 650b, real kinda measurable advantages(as 'measurable as anything else in 'bike'), from those who have a lot of experience on those vs 700c all 'rounder's. I ride lots of bicycles, tires, tubeless, not, big tires, small tires, tourers, all arounders, randos(even build a couple-not 650b tho), cross rigs, MTBs, 29ers, 26ers, full squish, hardtail, single speed, fixies.... race bikes, etc, etc. None are really all that different w/i the 'class'. I think Mike's 650b foray is related to his desire to resurrect the Rene Herse, French rando, 650b 'mystique'. I know he has a great interest in and lots of knowledge of, French bicycle history. Last edited by oldpotatoe; 09-14-2012 at 09:54 AM. |
#65
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I discovered Mike's shop while searching for some kind of rear bag support for my small frame bikes. He sells some really cool "retro" type bike parts. I bought a Nitto bag support that, unlike the Carradice Bagman I have, does not require saddle rail space to bolt it on to (it just slips around your seat stays so can be swapped between bikes really easily, no bolts), and is much smaller so it fits underneath my smallish saddlebag (the Carradice Barley) much better than the enormous Bagman (which is sized for a really large saddlebag; I need to sell it).
I also bought some Michelin big-tire tubes (hard to find at other online vendors) for 700 x 32-37 tires, a Nitto seatpost, and some Berthoud bar cap plugs. Great shop!
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Bedford Ti Sport Tourer |
#66
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- I don't think there is a 650B road bike you could even put on the floor, except maybe the VO Polyvalent, Soma San Marcos and smallest Rawland Nordavinden. I think that's it. Everything else is custom/semi custom/only available direct. For example, I think Kone is the only seller of the Boulder. It's his brand. Kogswell is gone, Rawland is out of 650B frames at the moment, (except the smallest Nordavinden), etc. It's niche, though I'd love to see them on the floor of shops. - As for the 650B road bike not fitting your needs, I think you'll be surprised in how they excell at so many things. Again, I believe a little ride should be very telling. - I think a good number of mtb technology bees polinate the road technology flowers. I don't have a crystal ball, but I won't be surprised when there's more 650B road options Last edited by 559Rando; 09-14-2012 at 12:34 PM. Reason: Clarifying my tone; I hope to not sound argumentative! |
#67
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- a 42mm tire will fit in a 54 cm frame with fenders, now go try that with your 700C - 42mm @ 50 psi turns chipseal into a smooth road I'm not sure how you go about "measuring" that to your satisfaction. But if you're interested, go try one and I think you'll understand. If you want to remain closed-minded, on the other hand, don't bother. Rene Herse Bicycles is definitely the former. Boulder, not so much. Boulder isn't replicating mystique, it's a modern functional solution to a riding situation. |
#68
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Gonna pass on the test ride also, going to stay close minded, and I use 25c tires, even on chip seal. At 95 psi, pretty smooth on my Moots. Last edited by oldpotatoe; 09-14-2012 at 05:39 PM. |
#69
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Tater, given your proximity to Kone, please take a test ride! You may never buy a 650B road frame but you'll see firsthand what the hype is about.
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#70
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Pass
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#71
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No, your obvious unwillingness to even try a test ride makes you closed minded.
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#72
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May not-I'm out. |
#73
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Taking a cue from another board member. A haiku on 650b
a wheel and tire size nothing magical to it works for some not all |
#74
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Let's drop it down a notch or two... oldPotatoe can choose or not to ride a 650b... In the end who cares if Peter rides one? Peter has more miles on different machines than most, so if he chooses not to try something different so be it... that's the beauty of so many choices...
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#75
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I tried the 650B/low-trail thing, and it was OK. Not great, but not bad. In the end, I didn't like the bike enough to want to keep it. I found that I was more at ease with different geometry, and more robust tubing.
As far as 650B wheels, I can take them or leave them. Since I ride a 56-57cm frame, (fat tire) clearance is less of an issue for me than someone who rides a smaller frame. I did a lot of switching back and forth between 650Bx38 and 700Cx32/35 bikes, and found that I preferred the latter.
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GRAVELBIKE.COM - ride everything |
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650b |
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