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  #76  
Old Yesterday, 05:32 PM
El Chaba El Chaba is offline
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Low gearing is nothing new at all. There was an entire sub-industry within the cycling industry in France dedicated to that very category. It existed pretty much until the demise of most of the French cycling industry in the late 80s. See also Specialites TA Pro 5 vis, Huret Duopar, Simplex GT…
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  #77  
Old Yesterday, 06:10 PM
XXtwindad XXtwindad is offline
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A*Train. Geared 32/36.

Don’t “sexy shame” me!
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  #78  
Old Yesterday, 06:48 PM
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Bob Ross Bob Ross is offline
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Originally Posted by XXtwindad View Post
A*Train. Geared 32/36.

Don’t “sexy shame” me!
Thread Drift: What brand frame is that? "A-Train"? "A1Rain"?
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  #79  
Old Yesterday, 06:50 PM
XXtwindad XXtwindad is offline
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Originally Posted by Bob Ross View Post
Thread Drift: What brand frame is that? "A-Train"? "A1Rain"?
A*Train stainless.
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  #80  
Old Yesterday, 06:59 PM
NHAero NHAero is online now
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In 1975 I showed up to ride the Mt Washington Hillclimb in NH on the aluminum fixed gear bike I'd built in '74 at MIT. I'd calculated my likely watts over the 7.6 mile, 4,725 foot elevation climb, and estimated I could ride the route in about 75 minutes. That led me to a 1:1 gear ratio. I had a 20T fixed cog on the rear so I made a 20T front cog for the 50.4 BCD TA Cyclotouriste crankset on the bike.

The bike was of course very unusual looking so many folks came to take a look, and most laughed at the gearing (I didn't feel at all shamed, I mean, the whole bike was mega-weird at the time and people were really interested). Meanwhile, I walked around and looked at other people's gearing. The person closest to what I was running was 3 time Olympian John Allis, who'd won the race in '73 and '74, amongst his other palmares. That made me think my math was reasonable!

The organizers wouldn't let me enter a fixed gear (despite telling me I could do so when I inquired ahead of time) so I left 1/2 hour before the race began and rode alone, finishing without standing up in 1:13:30. That time that year would have been top ten.

You may be able to ride heroic gearing but biomechanics will rule and we all have optimum ranges of cadence and power so ride what gearing works for you.
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  #81  
Old Yesterday, 07:28 PM
El Chaba El Chaba is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NHAero View Post
In 1975 I showed up to ride the Mt Washington Hillclimb in NH on the aluminum fixed gear bike I'd built in '74 at MIT. I'd calculated my likely watts over the 7.6 mile, 4,725 foot elevation climb, and estimated I could ride the route in about 75 minutes. That led me to a 1:1 gear ratio. I had a 20T fixed cog on the rear so I made a 20T front cog for the 50.4 BCD TA Cyclotouriste crankset on the bike.

The bike was of course very unusual looking so many folks came to take a look, and most laughed at the gearing (I didn't feel at all shamed, I mean, the whole bike was mega-weird at the time and people were really interested). Meanwhile, I walked around and looked at other people's gearing. The person closest to what I was running was 3 time Olympian John Allis, who'd won the race in '73 and '74, amongst his other palmares. That made me think my math was reasonable!

The organizers wouldn't let me enter a fixed gear (despite telling me I could do so when I inquired ahead of time) so I left 1/2 hour before the race began and rode alone, finishing without standing up in 1:13:30. That time that year would have been top ten.

You may be able to ride heroic gearing but biomechanics will rule and we all have optimum ranges of cadence and power so ride what gearing works for you.
GREAT story…..
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  #82  
Old Yesterday, 07:33 PM
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charliedid charliedid is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by XXtwindad View Post
A*Train. Geared 32/36.

Don’t “sexy shame” me!
What's up with all the spacers?
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  #83  
Old Yesterday, 07:34 PM
nmrt nmrt is offline
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Have we moved on from low gear shaming...
to spacer shaming?

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Originally Posted by charliedid View Post
What's up with all the spacers?
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  #84  
Old Yesterday, 07:37 PM
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charliedid charliedid is offline
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Originally Posted by nmrt View Post
Have we moved on from low gear shaming...
to spacer shaming?
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  #85  
Old Yesterday, 08:33 PM
5oakterrace 5oakterrace is offline
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Wonderful account

Quote:
Originally Posted by NHAero View Post
In 1975 I showed up to ride the Mt Washington Hillclimb in NH on the aluminum fixed gear bike I'd built in '74 at MIT. I'd calculated my likely watts over the 7.6 mile, 4,725 foot elevation climb, and estimated I could ride the route in about 75 minutes. That led me to a 1:1 gear ratio. I had a 20T fixed cog on the rear so I made a 20T front cog for the 50.4 BCD TA Cyclotouriste crankset on the bike.

The bike was of course very unusual looking so many folks came to take a look, and most laughed at the gearing (I didn't feel at all shamed, I mean, the whole bike was mega-weird at the time and people were really interested). Meanwhile, I walked around and looked at other people's gearing. The person closest to what I was running was 3 time Olympian John Allis, who'd won the race in '73 and '74, amongst his other palmares. That made me think my math was reasonable!

The organizers wouldn't let me enter a fixed gear (despite telling me I could do so when I inquired ahead of time) so I left 1/2 hour before the race began and rode alone, finishing without standing up in 1:13:30. That time that year would have been top ten.

You may be able to ride heroic gearing but biomechanics will rule and we all have optimum ranges of cadence and power so ride what gearing works for you.

Wonderful story. My sense at Washington is that there is deep mutual respect among the riders. Everyone knows you are at your limit and no one cares what your gears are.
This whole discussion is fascinating to me as it speaks to the way in which we are so conscious of what others think. Frankly, it may at least partially explain why folks tend to jump onto the latest trends in bikes, despite what I think is there prohibitive cost. But if you have the funds, spend as you like, I guess. And it does not simply apply to cycling, Throw in fashion, cars, clothing, you name it - we seem to be so concerned with the impression we perceive we make. Very little peace in that, in my view. But we are all affected to some extent. No one is an island
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  #86  
Old Yesterday, 08:42 PM
Spdntrxi Spdntrxi is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nmrt View Post
Have we moved on from low gear shaming...
to spacer shaming?
I have a 10mm spacer... the horror. and 5mm chimney
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  #87  
Old Yesterday, 08:44 PM
Fat Cat Fat Cat is offline
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I was shamed for my triples. Beginning at post70 and continuing sporadically

https://www.bikeforums.net/general-c...ra-best-3.html

For what I am, where I am, and what I do that triple setup keeps me out of trouble and gets where I want to go. A 28 cog would be nice tho and I'm working on it. All without a hideous pie plate. Not at all like the 42/52, 13-18 dicktated in the late70's.
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  #88  
Old Yesterday, 08:50 PM
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Baron Blubba Baron Blubba is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NHAero View Post
In 1975 I showed up to ride the Mt Washington Hillclimb in NH on the aluminum fixed gear bike I'd built in '74 at MIT. I'd calculated my likely watts over the 7.6 mile, 4,725 foot elevation climb, and estimated I could ride the route in about 75 minutes. That led me to a 1:1 gear ratio. I had a 20T fixed cog on the rear so I made a 20T front cog for the 50.4 BCD TA Cyclotouriste crankset on the bike.

The bike was of course very unusual looking so many folks came to take a look, and most laughed at the gearing (I didn't feel at all shamed, I mean, the whole bike was mega-weird at the time and people were really interested). Meanwhile, I walked around and looked at other people's gearing. The person closest to what I was running was 3 time Olympian John Allis, who'd won the race in '73 and '74, amongst his other palmares. That made me think my math was reasonable!

The organizers wouldn't let me enter a fixed gear (despite telling me I could do so when I inquired ahead of time) so I left 1/2 hour before the race began and rode alone, finishing without standing up in 1:13:30. That time that year would have been top ten.

You may be able to ride heroic gearing but biomechanics will rule and we all have optimum ranges of cadence and power so ride what gearing works for you.
Marc, please write a book.
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  #89  
Old Yesterday, 08:54 PM
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Baron Blubba Baron Blubba is offline
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Originally Posted by jamesdak View Post
Funny thing is my fastest avg pace up the one 5 mile long 8% grade climb on several occasions have been with the PDG Paramount and it's 42T small chain ring. More a result of how I mash uphill than it is the result of any true power out of my legs. LOL!
My fastest times on all the local hills and favorite courses will never be set on my Bridgestone 550 with a 42x26 low gear. However, that bike is consistently fast for me, because there's really no choice but to go at a reasonably brisk pace while going uphill with those ratios. And since I won't shame myself by using the 26, and because I love a good palindrome, I end up using 42x24, which is even faster.
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  #90  
Old Today, 10:01 AM
tommyrod74 tommyrod74 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fat Cat View Post
I was shamed for my triples. Beginning at post70 and continuing sporadically

https://www.bikeforums.net/general-c...ra-best-3.html

For what I am, where I am, and what I do that triple setup keeps me out of trouble and gets where I want to go. A 28 cog would be nice tho and I'm working on it. All without a hideous pie plate. Not at all like the 42/52, 13-18 dicktated in the late70's.
To be totally fair, most people hate triples for aesthetic reasons as well as the difficulties in getting the front derailleur dialed. Not so much a "toughen up" thing.
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