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• #26502
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh9I5-OvqyY
JI using one touring Morocco. Sounds like it could be a useful addition anyway, especially for the longer, rougher stuff.
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• #26503
Was cold. Ended up turning around after only 5km of climbing because visibility got so bad and there was horizontal snow........... Which was not forecast........
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• #26504
I have an 80mm blacked out redshift stem. It takes a lot of the jarring out of bumps and unexpected potholes, good for my poor wrists. It’a light enough and if you cover up the branding it’s barely noticeable. Strong recommend
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• #26505
coming back to this "mr wooden", it gives me the exact energy of like.....velo orange
just something uncanny about it, functionally fine, but it's like it's an alien in a humans body - dunno - simulacrum of the bike you want, just feels... off
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• #26506
The sloping top tube immediately ruins it. Has no place on a bike like that.
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• #26507
“We have Crust at home”
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• #26508
It's the fork bend and the 1 1/8 unthreaded ht for me. Still kinda want one though.
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• #26509
Thankfully the Crust Floria Man has dropped stays so I won’t burn my credit card down buying one.
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• #26511
Why do modern Brooks Wankers have their saddles pointing up their arses? LOOK AT ME I RIDE A LEATHER SADDLE.
The OGs in my cycling club with 30 year old Brooks saddles never had them at stupid angles. I blame Instagram.
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• #26512
I've oft wondered that. I have a C15 and it's not pointing up. Surely you'd just slide down the back?
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• #26513
Stop kink shaming.
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• #26514
Jan does it.
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• #26515
The advice from Brooks used to be to have the nose and rear level due to the hammock design I think. Otherwise, it does seem a bit pointless/uncomfortable.
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• #26516
Brooks definitely (used to?) recommend that the back section of the saddle is flat, which leaves the front at an upward angle.
I blame Instagram.
I blame Grant Peterson and The iBob mailing list in the 90s.
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• #26517
Brooks saddles can all get in the sea, so whichever angle gets them there faster...
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• #26518
the woody could take a fancier color. nothing against nato olive/ military green, but...
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• #26519
That whole bike is clearly a Jan Heine fever dream. The build is contrived
It's the opposite of that, you're just mass-producing junk that is outdated before it even leaves the factory. There's millions of old 4130 MTB frames out there, you don't need to waste a bunch of new tubes and energy on a brand new £700 frameset when you can find the same thing in any shed in the country. If you care about throw-away culture then how can you possibly justify spending £700 on this thing, when you could spend £20 in a bike coop for the same thing and donate the remaining £680 for them to spend on recycling other stuff?
What's next? Maybe I could go and spend £1500 on a brand new CRT TV to combat throw-away culture? Or we could start building new diesel cars to combat throwaway culture?
I can understand bikes like this being made in small quantities for specific customers but this is definitely not combating throw-away culture, it's just consumerism in a different hat
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• #26520
Nailed it
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• #26521
i think you could count the number of people outside of rural france with a 650b rim brake wheelset kicking about waiting for a new frame on one hand
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• #26522
But Jan would've built in Kasei, because lateral planing or other mystik qualitys of certain steele
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• #26523
Yep.
If they were enticing people away from their cars then sure, great, but it's going to be bike nerds buying n+1 for this kind of thing.
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• #26524
A lot of fair points but I wouldn't say it's outdated. I built a bike with specs similar to that Mr Wodden on purpose because I wanted something that is really simple but functional. I used an old frame from somebodies shed for it but even with a lot of used parts on there I can't honestly say that I did it to go against the throw-away culture but rather because I wanted something crust-like.
The bottom line is if this frame set came out 2 years ago I most probably would have bought one because it ticks a lot of the boxes of what I was after.
I own a few really cool bikes (in my humble opinion) and even though a big chunk of parts and frames of them are used I mainly own them because I wanted them not necessarily needed them. So I always try to not fool myself. What I am doing is consumerism. Doesn't matter that my poor man's Raleigh Crust frame is 30 years old. -
• #26525
Shoulda gone 26"
First ride on a Redhift yesterday, used their recommended setting. Could hardly feel it working unless I stood to climb, then like a slightly squishy tyre. So a waste of time?...until I got home after 100km on bad roads ....no sore hands. Which is just what I was hoping for. So on the basis of one ride - seems useful