#106
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Wikipedia claims Grant named his company after RMW, but RMW named themselves after Tolkien. The word Rivendell was made up by Tolkien. I have this tendency to create an association in my head between Rivendell and Arundel. But Arundel is a real place in the UK. Arundel Bicycle is American though. |
#107
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YEah it seems like even though it was named after the back packing company, or in companionship with it, it still has an LOR theme.
They are great looking bikes. Gotta love fancy lugs like that. |
#108
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did you see the link I posted right before your reply? Grant explains where the name came from.. both RMW and Tolkien are cited..
__________________
Be the Reason Others Succeed |
#109
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Yah you posted that fast enough I never saw it.
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#110
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Maine too. Pronounced "a-RUN-dl" FWIW
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#111
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It fit 38s with a fender...so 42mm without. Thats cool, but it wasnt a category creator like it seems you are suggesting. CX bikes and touring bikes existed, and many bikes in both categories could fit a wide tire like that. Heck, when the Surly CrossCheck was released in '99, it fit 45mm tires. That is possibly the most common bike in the 'wide tire non-racing do-it-all' category this century. As for Jan Heine buying a Riv so he could have a wide tire road bike...I have read that he rode it with 28mm tires. Not sure what model he bought or any other details, but riding it on a brevet with 28mm tires and having a large section of that be gravel seems like a decision mistake or a design limitation. |
#112
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I already have a dad bike, but I'd really like to try one of the newer Rivs with the really long chainstays.
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#113
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I think the main difference was that most of the bikes fitting those larger tires sold new at the time were not using caliper brakes, which I believe 90% of the Rivs did.. My Homer is a 650b based on the size it is and when it was made (wish it was 700 TBH, but early, smaller Homers had 650b).. while it wasn't a category creator when compared to older road bikes, I'm not convinced there was much sold at the time it came out that could fit that large of a tire that wasn't an MTB.. most cross bikes of the era might fit a 38 since UCI regulated a 33mm as the max tire size for competition.. also, it was fairly hard to find tires that wide at the time (esp "road" tires), unless you didn't mind steel bead garbage tires.. that's the other spot that Riv and Jan gained some traction, contracting Panasonic to produce some larger, more supple tires for the US market..
just because they weren't the first doesn't mean they weren't a bit revolutionary for the time.. Quote:
__________________
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#114
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Rivendell Road Standard
Full fender coverage Panaracer Gravelking slick 28mm tires Mid-reach brakes threaded fork - threaded quill adaptor - modern stem - modern handlebar This is my "rain" bike. Sometimes I question my judgment with using a steel frame in the rain but...it rides so smooth, have enough clearance to accommodate wider tires and fenders, I simply ignore my inner grumps and take it out to ride during incremental weather and every time I am out riding it, it reminds me of its fine qualities and the joy it gives. Sorry for the low quality pics. IMG_20170611_083643151_1280x720 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr Resizer_166610375833125 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr Resizer_166610375807223 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr Resizer_166610375658411 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr Resizer_16661037560927 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr Resizer_166610375752519 by Wei San Hui, on Flickr
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🏻* Last edited by weisan; 09-19-2024 at 01:01 PM. |
#115
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__________________
Jeremy Clarksons bike-riding cousin |
#116
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🏻* Last edited by weisan; 09-19-2024 at 01:35 PM. |
#117
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Of course Grant got poster #1/850. BTW, I sold my remaining stocks of those lugs to Carl at https://metal-guru.com/. I think he's still got ~50 sets left. |
#118
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I am hesitant to say long reach caliper brakes are an inherent improvement over mini-v or V or canti brakes though. But yeah, the brakes were different from what was on CX and touring bikes at the time, definitely. As for quality wide road tires being a struggle to source...yes I agree that those guys did help push wide quality 700c road tires forward and did help popularize them. I absolutely acknowledge that Riv helped develop a branch of cycling that many benefit from now due to some bleed-over. But the post I responded to made it seem, to me at least, that a bike in the mid-00s was category changing and revolutionary. That's why I disagreed. ETA - and in the early 2000s, multiple tire brands besides Panaracer sold quality 35-42mm tires. Maxxis, Ritchey, IRC are a few that I know of for sure because I had tires from them that were 38-42mm between '00 and '04. Selection now is obviously way better though. Last edited by mstateglfr; 09-19-2024 at 02:26 PM. |
#119
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As I was pedalling easy today in this beautiful fall weather on a mix of perfect tarmac, gravel roads, and new chipseal, enjoying the late-summer colors of upstate New York, I got to thinking that the notion that racing dominates the cycling market is itself an anachronism. It was much more true 20, 30 years ago when there were periods where your choices of bikes were largely race bikes (road, mountain, and cyclocross), touring or commuter bikes, or entry level hybrids and mountain bikes. There weren't many 'nice' bikes that weren't heavily race inspired except for custom builds.
Today I don't see that as a problem. In our local active cycling community, I doubt more than 1 in 30 enthusiast level riders has done a race in the last 5 years. The majority of bikes people ride are gravel and/or all-road in style, or long travel mountain bikes. Most of those riders are cyclists for the enjoyment of it, not to go fast. They may ride carbon/electronic/disc bikes because unless you are precious about it, those bikes are more capable and more fun than a heavy steel bike with friction shifting and mediocre brakes. But racing is all but dead in this country. |
#120
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fair enough.. guess I didn't see any of those in a road (not cross or off-road) version.. at least in a lighter, kevlar bead tire..
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