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• #112502
Not into discs at all, despite their advantages. Do not like. Don't like squeals, sensitivity to contamination, hydraulic hassles or constant cable adjustment (although hybrid is a great compromise on that score), pad rub at the drop of a hat, otherwise unnecessary and asymmetric frameset reinforcement, front wheel dish and minimum 24h, fugly rotors and hydro levers.
That's a longer list of cons than consumable rims, limited wet braking and possibly inferior modulation, although those are admittedly bigger cons. I like the purity, but not an absolutist since I'm down with Di2.
And yeah, not interested in QRs, but allen head or anti theft skewers are a lovely way to secure a wheel (even though I do feel it's a bit light-on).
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• #112503
It's an Armour. More here: https://www.lfgss.com/conversations/315918/
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• #112504
I dont want to spend a lot making 2 stickers you see, but it will have to be the way
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• #112505
pad rub at the drop of a spoke.
Sounds like you've just ridden shit or badly set up discs, hydraulics are pretty much fit and forget. If you're just doing roady/fixie shit then a good rim brake is plenty good enough, just not as good.
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• #112506
grumpy middle aged man alert.
mmm so i want a smartwatch but i dont want a smartwatch..... my trusty Suunto T3C from many a year back is eating batteries and has plenty of battle scars - generally i put on the HR belt once a year for a few months but have basically used it as a digital watch and it (used to) last years on a battery
i want to replace
but i dont want a fitness watch that i have to charge every night or get bothered with notifications from everyone every second.
but actually i'd like to track runs and rides, but just time/speed and maybe HR - i'm assuming wrist HR would do? or perhaps i should stick with/get a newer chest HR.
digital or analogue face , dont mind
does anything like this even exist?
ta.
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• #112507
Withings?
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• #112508
One of the running Garmins will do that. Itβs the venu's etc that are smart watches, the forerunners are fairly dumb.
Forerunner 45 or similar -
• #112509
The GPS tech thread is a good place to get fuller info on this, but on the charging point, I upgraded a decent but old Suunto for a Forerunner 945 over Christmas and couldn't / still can't believe the battery life (and is far from the best of the bunch on that score) - it easily goes well over a week without charging, that's even with a few tracked runs and rides during the week. And the quality and features of it are quite amazing... recommended getting up-to-date (and yep the watch records HR the whole time you're wearing it).
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• #112510
Get a Garmin something. My Fenix 5x is coming up for 4 years old and needs charging less than once a week. If you don't want notifications you can switch those off.
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• #112511
I just bought a second-hand Garmin Vivoactive 3 for Β£68 from CEX. Yes, I gave it a good wash.
Battery lasts about a week tracking wrist HR 24 hours a day.
A lot less if you use GPS though, which is optional for explicitly tracked activities. As others have said you can turn off notifications, in fact most default to off.
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• #112512
Coros Pace 2 is great, and you can (I have) turned off all phone related notifications etc. so it's just a GPS fitness watch, which does HR full time, and with my 2 daily commutes and the odd Parkrun it'll last a full week on a charge. Also got the option of setting the screen to look like a simple analogue watch or an all-singing all-dancing screen of a million different digital stats - there's lots of styles to choose from in the app. Recommended!
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• #112513
Amazfit bip, great battery life, change the clock face to whatever you want more or less
https://www.amazfit.com/en/bip
Pair with the notify and fitness app for optimum usability
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mc.amazfit1&hl=en_GB&gl=US
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• #112514
I got a Vivoactive 3 in 2019 and the feeble battery is pretty much my only complaint (that and the accuracy of distance when swimming lengths is a bit suspect, occasionally). Iβd get a s/h Fenix if I were looking to get another Garmin, tho.
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• #112515
I could send you some spare paper. I only used one sheet for my project. It's about 20 years old, I don't know whether it has a shelf life
Edit: I've had a look at it and it seems in excellent condition. It's been dry stored. Send me a SAE and it's yours.
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• #112516
Fascinating! I've never heard of sliding dropouts. Where did you get them? I don't think they're in the Ceeway catalogue!
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• #112517
What ceeway stock
What ceeway show on their websiteThese two things are only very vaguely related.
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• #112518
Paper? What do you mean?
You have some decals ?Thanks
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• #112520
Blank printer paper. You grab an image or scan it or draw it. Print it on the paper. Soak it in water, then it slides off. It's so thin that it looks like paint. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTKFxzJvH1U
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• #112521
How illegal is it to play amplified music in a public park in London? Let's assume this is before 11pm.
Could you get some decks out and smash out some tunes at a reasonable volume without getting arrested?
I assume this is unlikely to be permitted π
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• #112522
The rule would be in the park by-laws, on the web site of the relevant council. Or if it's a Royal Park, on their site.
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• #112523
You're not allowed to do it in my borough if it annoys anyone unless you pay the council a fee.
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• #112524
It will be borough by borough but I think most will require permission for that.
On the other hand, if you stay out of the royal parks there probably isn't going to be anyone to enforce it.
Obviously you should also consider whether you want everybody in the park to think you're a bellend.
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• #112525
Iβd have thought this would be the quickest way to meet as many of your local law enforcement as can be assembled on a weekend but maybe hire a bouncy castle and put up some balloons and pretend itβs a kidβs birthday party?
It's fine, people have got away with Ti and even aluminium skewers. Modern hub axles are stiffer than old skinny steel ones, carbon forks are usually stiffer in lateral flexion than old lightweight steel ones, the QR clamping force holding the whole edifice together is more than adequate.
The only people who actually need QR wheels are pros with following cars, and they have abandoned them since the manufacturers forced disc brakes on them for commercial reasons. The only people who are not better off with disc brakes are pros with following cars...