#151
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I showed the article to my wife, and I also showed her Rivendell's bikes on their website. She said she thought he was trying too hard to be different. She also said the Roadeo model looked the best of all their bikes, but the cable routing was ugly and made the bike look outdated.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#152
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#153
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The current issue finally came in the mail and I read the article. It's a good story, within the New Yorker tradition of profiling eccentrics, though I do think she took the comments about the Bridgestone MB-1 a wee bit too much at face value. I wonder how the fact checking went on those quotes.
The only thing Grant needs to watch out for is that the New Yorker has a real knack for profiling people at the maximum of their influence and prestige - after the New Yorker profile, always the inevitable decline. |
#154
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#155
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Too my eyes the more serious aesthetic problem with these bikes is the very tall Technomic stems used to get the drop from the saddle to the bars to zero inches or even negative 1 inch. I think this is a generic problem with tall frames and horizontal top tubes. There are work arounds that, in my opinion, create better looking frames: gently sloping top tubes, perhaps without lugs, more head tube extension, a little less standover clearance. Other than that, I think the Roadeo is a particularly beautiful bicycle.
The visual weight of the cables for barcons can be offset by using lighter colored housing. You can also, of course, run the cables under the handlebar tape. Just be aware that in larger frames, you will need an extra long shift cable for the rear derailleur, and quite possibly a rear shift cable for the front dearilleur. |
#156
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Its ridiculous, and not just visually. Its going to flex like crazy. That frame is too small for the rider with that saddle height. You could get away with horizontal top tube with a seat tube and head tube about 4cm longer and longer with that same saddle height. Or, a sloping top tube and possibly a dirt drop type stem (thought the latter will flex just as much but visually better). But no. Its just Grant being contrarian.
Last edited by marciero; 09-25-2024 at 07:42 AM. |
#157
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Last edited by lorenbike; 09-25-2024 at 07:54 AM. |
#158
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Last edited by Xrslug; 09-25-2024 at 09:46 AM. |
#160
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Agree.
Disagree. It's French fit and it's fine to prefer that aesthetic. I'd ride that bike with a threadless fork and stem. |
#161
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I'm thinking French fit would be like half to two thirds that amount of seatpost showing.
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#162
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Write up Road EO
Modern, featherweight, super-short wheelbase carbon road bikes are too twitchy. When you watch even pros ride them, you can see them tilt too much with every pedal stroke, and yes, they can be tamed, but they respond too much to body English, wind, and rough surfaces. On fast descents, they’re simply unsafe.
Safety A steel frame and fork is safer on your first ride and maintains its safety much longer than carbon does. Failures are rare, grow to total failure slowly, and are on the surface where you can see them. Failures in carbon bikes often originate between the layers, where they're undetectable until the tube snaps. And in response to trauma, steel bends and dents. It doesn't snap, as carbon does. Steel is the safest frame material, no question about it. |
#163
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Okay. I'm still not seeing why you think the bike doesn't fit based on the seatpost.
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#164
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#165
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That bike does look rediculous and the frame should be larger. In the old days, frames were fit larger and there was very little seatpost exposed. Sloping top tubes improve stand over height. |
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