-
• #90377
Possibly the best one of the lot
-
• #90378
Oh yisss
-
• #90379
Amaze. Where can I acquire.
-
• #90380
https://thehendersonsshop.co.uk/products/stay-home-club-frequent-crier-iron-on-patch-1
Quick google found this. I love it too
-
• #90381
Anyone got a source/advice for bulk decent water bottles? 250-500, pref clear, minimal branding that can be covered up by sticker (or custom printed down the line, but I've been quoted 3 months plus for that from a big brand)
Can't find anything between <£1 each from corporate branded shops (which I don't want to risk) and >£5 for big brands. Although I don't have a trade account so no idea what you can get from Zyro/Fisher etc.
-
• #90382
https://www.velotec.cc/custom-cycling/accessories/tacx-water-bottles
For some reason that link works on my phone but IE at work is blocking it
-
• #90383
Cheers, that could work....
-
• #90384
If Stans rate their Crest to 39psi with a 2.2" tyre and 36psi with a 2.5", how much can I put in a 1.5" tyre?
-
• #90385
how much can I put in a 1.5" tyre?
Too much.
-
• #90386
How much is that? Got up to about 55 to seat the beads which was a bit nervous, but they're sat at 40 now.
-
• #90387
I can't imagine a 1.5" at anything over 40psi to be particularly useful for anything?
Unless you've suddenly got much fatter
-
• #90388
Well not for general usage but it would be good to know a max I could pump them up to for seating tyres.
-
• #90389
He He He! Hertha BSC!
: D
-
• #90390
probably a bit hipster
probably a bit, yes
-
• #90391
If Stans rate their Crest to 39psi with a 2.2" tyre and 36psi with a 2.5", how much can I put in a 1.5" tyre?
60psi
https://www.engineersedge.com/material_science/hoop-stress.htm
Hoop stress is directly proportional to the product of pressure and cross section diameter. Hoop stress is the main thing trying to break the sides of the rim off the bed.
-
• #90392
This image reminds me of an album cover. Turtles, mannequin heads, something. What is it please?
1 Attachment
-
• #90393
Possibly (taking into account your use of "album cover")
-
• #90394
best guess
1 Attachment
-
• #90395
Problem Solvers TravelAgent pulley thing should let you use V-brakes with normal road levers.
https://www.sjscycles.co.uk/cables/travel-agent-br0411-black-each/
-
• #90396
0898 Beautiful South
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/0898_Beautiful_South -
• #90397
Struggling to find some replacement jockey wheels for Sram Rival 11. Can find a lot of options, but none that I’m 100% confident will work. Any suggestions of what/where to buy online?
-
• #90398
I've always had success with tacx and they seem to do almost everything
https://tacx.com/products/jockey-wheels/ -
• #90399
Say I had a client who owed a sum of money that's gone well overdue.
I've now decided to start charging them interest on the debt.
My understanding is that I charge interest on the gross including the VAT but the VAT position is unaffected (I don't need to pay extra VAT). I also don't pay VAT on debt recovery costs that are claimed.
Say the interest is 50GBP per day. Presumably the interest doesn't count as debt as well? So the interest keeps increasing? I.e. initial debt is 50000. Next debt isn't 50050, so interest would become 51pd? (obvious maths is obvious / way off, just trying to illustrate quickly).
And another question. Presumably companies may try to pay original debt but not pay the interest. Presumably the costs of reclaiming that interest aren't worth the actual achievable sum unless it's in the thousands which would take some while to accrue?
-
• #90400
Say the interest is 50GBP per day. Presumably the interest doesn't count as debt as well? So the interest keeps increasing? I.e. initial debt is 50000. Next debt isn't 50050, so interest would become 51pd?
Not if you're charging statutory interest, as discussed a month ago. It accrues at 1/365th of the annual rate, but doesn't compound. That's advantageous to the lender for periods shorter than a year. Also, you're supposed to re-invoice when you add interest, so presumably (and IANAL, so check with one if you want an expert opinion) the new invoice gets your contractual settlement terms (e.g. 28 days net) and isn't an unpaid debt until that new settlement period expires, but the principle+first batch of interest then becomes the new debt on which you can charge interest.
1 Attachment
also, @Howard