#46
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so, i'm biased, i have a firefly, but for something a bit different:
https://www.instagram.com/kualiscycles/?hl=en kualis does some neat stuff. |
#47
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How does that one ride next to the steel fork one?
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#48
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The steel fork is a nicer riding fork than the enve; the enve is lighter and has greater clearance and the lesser rake changes the front end handling - the geometry of this one is closer to the race bike that I bought from you than the rando frame (actually when I compare the geometry of it to both other frames it is as if Tom took what I liked about both frames and then personallized the fit after my session at the barn to create this bike).
The short answer is that I was able to express what I wanted, and then Tom built that bike, as a result of the experiences I had from riding the two bikes I bought from you - and I thank you for that!! |
#49
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Yours looks great! |
#50
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I'd get a Seven personally.
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#51
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I am with you to a point on this. But I say drive the camry, get the killer bike. $3k car, $5k bike.
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#52
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I visited Jim Kish's shop because he lives nearby and he let me ride his 27.5 hardtail. I have never had the Jones for ti but if my Cielo MTB bites the dust I will call him if I can. The road bikes he had laying around were pretty sick too.
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#53
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Dang, that bike is perfect - perfect geo, perfect clearances, perfect build...
__________________
Io non posso vivere senza la mia strada e la mia bici -- DP |
#54
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There really is no such thing as a best bike. Even two identical sized riders will need something slightly different.
ANY custom builder will build a bike that is better than you can ride it. Assuming that you tell them exactly what you want. Personally, I would choose Independent Fabrication, but I am biased because I sell them and they work so well with me and for my customers.
__________________
Forgive me for posting dumb stuff. Chris Little Rock, AR |
#55
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NAHBS would disagree.
Sent from my Moto G (5) Plus using Tapatalk |
#56
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Ti as a material is just great for bike frame applications imo. I've had the following titanium frames: 2 by Dean (El Vado and El Diente), Merckx AX (built by Litespeed), Serotta IT (carbon and ti), Hampsten Strada Bianca (built by Max) and Gran Paradiso (built by Eriksen), and a Spectrum Super with butted ti tubing. They have all been great bikes. Fit has varied and that is what has separated them into bikes I still have (Serotta IT and the two Hampstens) and bikes I have sold (all the rest).
PS. The two Hampstens were custom built for me... |
#57
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There are so many great builders today...for ti, the number drops and most are big bucks. I've got a Serotta Legend from the 90s and it still rides great! What it doesn't have is room for bigger tires and disc brakes...but I still rider it every week...and I'm still alive! I have a Stigmata for when bigger tires are required but disc brakes and big tubeless tires are more weight...just because someone else says it's great doesn't mean it's what you want...there are benefits and downsides to everything.
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#58
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#59
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It was not the best riding titanium bike I’ve owned but the sharpest looking!
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#60
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If you're looking to hang in a pack, that -- to me -- implies raciness and not the current fashion of wider tires and/or disc brakes. If it were me, and I wanted to try out Ti, I'd go for a production frame from '07-'10, the high point of mass Ti production frames. I have a LeMond from that era and it still rides great: agile, sharp, responsive, etc. Build it up with a sweet set of modern wheels and some 5800 and go to town.
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