#31
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I love my All City Mr Pink. I sold it and then bought it back because I missed it so much
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#32
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Crust
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Crust Malocchio, Turbo Creo |
#33
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Quote:
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#34
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All City!
Stripped down the grouppo on my All City Mr Pink to rebuild another frame but likely I will build it up again this time with full fenders etc. for a great foul weather bike! It’s an extremely versatile rig…
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#35
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Is the Milwaukee road frame still a thing? It's advertised online, but the text still refers to it being built at Waterford, which makes me suspicious. That was my go-to recommendation for this sort of thing.
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#36
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My understanding is that they stocked up on a large quantity of Waterford built bikes before Waterford shut down, so they should have stock for a few years, depending on sizing.
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Instagram - DannAdore Bicycles |
#37
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I found a Seven Redsky in Vermont that does not fit me. I'll provide a link in the Barn Finds thread in classified.
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No signature |
#38
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No, no idea how people got on to the scent of disc brakes in this thread.
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I think people need to be specific and mention whether they're talking about 57mm rim brakes or "normal" rim brakes like these Campags. |
#39
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Yup. I squeezed a 32mm Graveling on my '24 Road Logic. The limitation was my RED 22 calipers.
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#40
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Jamis Endura
A few years ago I was researching a long distance bike with rack mounts and clearance for at least 32 mm tires. Jamis Endura was the only bike that had both on this side of custom. The frame could fit 34 mm tires. On the picture It has Conti GT5000 32 mm tires. I upgraded the brakes from Tektro to VeloOrange and the braking now is on par with my other rim brake bike with Dura Ace calipers. jamis.jpg
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#41
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My Kirk will take 32 mm tires if I run eeBrakes. 32s would probably work with Campy brakes as well, but the fit seems just a bit too tight for my comfort.
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#42
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When someone says "On my bike I've found that eeBrakes clear an Xmm wide tire" do they typically mean the direct mount model, or the "regular" single bolt model? IOW, does one have to go direct mount to get the wide clearance with them, or is regular good enough?
TIA |
#43
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That said, I suspect lots more people are using standard mount eeBrakes than direct mount. |
#44
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My Davidson steel Signature Touring bike (which is more properly a light touring bike) will fit 700C x 32 under fenders with Tektro bolt on-double pivot sidepulls, or traditional Campagnolo Nuovo Record medium reach (60mm) sidepulls. Without fenders you can fit 35mm tires.
There seem to be a fair number of these bikes available used from time to time, for very reasonable prices. Workmanship is superb: the low prices reflect the fact that a great number of these bikes were made, and not the quality of the workmanship. These bikes were mostly (perhaps only?) made in custom sizes, so you need to be careful to get the seller to accurately measure the frame. |
#45
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Mark, we appear to own similar bikes, and I have had the exact same experience. For a recent week-long gravel tour in NY was able to fit 35's under fenders -see pic below- with some judicious clearance work on the fenders (and splitting the rear one). 38's will fit if you're willing to deflate or remove a brake pad to mount.
With 38's on Virginia gravel: IMG_6041 by Doc Mertes, on Flickr Last edited by rccardr; 09-25-2024 at 09:10 AM. |
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