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#1 |
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So I was quite pleased with the daily fixer's makeover a couple weeks
ago. Quite frankly--it's the most perfectly fun bike I've ever owned. A tough fixed gear with new Nitto Rando bars that I can ride in the drops all day and those lovely 32mm Paselas I got on a whim that just seemed so silly wide when I inflated them, as I assumed they'd be narrower--they turned out to be very interesting tires. Never bothered buying gloves this spring. Don't need them with the fat tires and cotton over old bar tape. I'm faster than I ever was with 23mm tires, just flowing past the crowd, like on a marshmallow track, in my comfy old timey flared drops, grinning wide. Could be some of the local rough pavement. The Paselas just eat it up like molten cheese over pepperoni, without a fight. No skitter, just GO. The rig gave me a surprise this evening when I climbed the hill up from the treatment plant which is usually a fixed gear dismount shoulder huffer, or on the "ute" it's deffo a granny +2, but I just crept up it like I had some magical tire crampons. The damn things alter gravity. Japan wins again. |
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#2 |
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On Mon, 12 May 2008 21:48:41 -0700 (PDT), landotter
<landotter@gmail.com> wrote: >So I was quite pleased with the daily fixer's makeover a couple weeks >ago. Quite frankly--it's the most perfectly fun bike I've ever owned. >A tough fixed gear with new Nitto Rando bars that I can ride in the >drops all day and those lovely 32mm Paselas I got on a whim that just >seemed so silly wide when I inflated them, as I assumed they'd be >narrower--they turned out to be very interesting tires. > >Never bothered buying gloves this spring. Don't need them with the fat >tires and cotton over old bar tape. > >I'm faster than I ever was with 23mm tires, just flowing past the >crowd, like on a marshmallow track, in my comfy old timey flared >drops, grinning wide. Could be some of the local rough pavement. The >Paselas just eat it up like molten cheese over pepperoni, without a >fight. No skitter, just GO. > >The rig gave me a surprise this evening when I climbed the hill up >from the treatment plant which is usually a fixed gear dismount >shoulder huffer, or on the "ute" it's deffo a granny +2, but I just >crept up it like I had some magical tire crampons. > >The damn things alter gravity. Japan wins again. Dear LD, I'm glad that you like your new tires, but something else is probably involved in your impression of greatly improved hill-climbing. Here's a side-by-side speed calculator that lets you change such things as rolling resistance: http://bikecalculator.com/veloMetricNum.html The default RR is 0.0050, roughly what a pair of 23 mm tires produce. Some drop to 0.0030, and others rise higher. The incredibly bad 0.0100 RR is included to give some perspective. 5% grade, speed in km/h for defaults with changes below 100 200 300 RR watts watts watts 0.0100 7.23 13.80 19.50 0.0050 7.85 14.82 20.71 0.0000 8.57 15.96 22.02 (0.72 to 1.31 km/h faster) 10% grade, speed in km/h for defaults with changes below 100 200 300 RR watts watts watts 0.0100 4.00 7.94 11.74 0.0050 4.19 8.30 12.25 0.0000 4.40 8.70 12.81 (0.21 to 0.56 km/h faster) The next calculator uses different defaults (weight and frontal area and so forth) and isn't set up for side-by-side comparisons, but it can be used to check that the figures above are plausible: http://www.recumbents.com/wisil/simul/HPV_Simul.asp 10% grade, speed in km/h for defaults with changes below 100 200 300 RR watts watts watts 0.0100 4.184 8.326 12.388 0.0050 4.382 8.714 12.950 0.0000 4.600 9.138 13.563 (0.218 to 0.613 km/h faster) Even magical tires that reduce the typical ~0.0050 RR for 23 mm tires to no rolling resistance at all would produce only about half a mile per hour speed difference on 5% to 10% grades with 100 to 300 watts. Real tires would produce an even smaller change due to RR improvement, though their new-toy effect can produce much more substantial gains. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#3 |
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carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
> On Mon, 12 May 2008 21:48:41 -0700 (PDT), landotter > <landotter@gmail.com> wrote: > >> So I was quite pleased with the daily fixer's makeover a couple weeks >> ago. Quite frankly--it's the most perfectly fun bike I've ever owned. >> A tough fixed gear with new Nitto Rando bars that I can ride in the >> drops all day and those lovely 32mm Paselas I got on a whim that just >> seemed so silly wide when I inflated them, as I assumed they'd be >> narrower--they turned out to be very interesting tires. >> >> Never bothered buying gloves this spring. Don't need them with the fat >> tires and cotton over old bar tape. >> >> I'm faster than I ever was with 23mm tires, just flowing past the >> crowd, like on a marshmallow track, in my comfy old timey flared >> drops, grinning wide. Could be some of the local rough pavement. The >> Paselas just eat it up like molten cheese over pepperoni, without a >> fight. No skitter, just GO. >> lots of stuff snipped > Real tires would produce an even smaller change due to RR improvement, > though their new-toy effect can produce much more substantial gains. > > Cheers, > > Carl Fogel Carl, all those data assume a smootish road. If the surface gets rough the 'powerplant' looses efficiency fast and shaking all those muscles abosrbs power. It's quite possible to find a surface where you have to hang on for dear life on 120 psi 23's when you could just smoothly power over it with a supple 30-ish tyre -- /Marten info(apestaartje)m-gineering(punt)nl |
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#4 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 08:25:31 +0200, M-gineering
<ikmotgeenspam@m-gineering.nl> wrote: >carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >> On Mon, 12 May 2008 21:48:41 -0700 (PDT), landotter >> <landotter@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> So I was quite pleased with the daily fixer's makeover a couple weeks >>> ago. Quite frankly--it's the most perfectly fun bike I've ever owned. >>> A tough fixed gear with new Nitto Rando bars that I can ride in the >>> drops all day and those lovely 32mm Paselas I got on a whim that just >>> seemed so silly wide when I inflated them, as I assumed they'd be >>> narrower--they turned out to be very interesting tires. >>> >>> Never bothered buying gloves this spring. Don't need them with the fat >>> tires and cotton over old bar tape. >>> >>> I'm faster than I ever was with 23mm tires, just flowing past the >>> crowd, like on a marshmallow track, in my comfy old timey flared >>> drops, grinning wide. Could be some of the local rough pavement. The >>> Paselas just eat it up like molten cheese over pepperoni, without a >>> fight. No skitter, just GO. >>> > >lots of stuff snipped > > >> Real tires would produce an even smaller change due to RR improvement, >> though their new-toy effect can produce much more substantial gains. >> >> Cheers, >> >> Carl Fogel > > >Carl, all those data assume a smootish road. If the surface gets rough >the 'powerplant' looses efficiency fast and shaking all those muscles >abosrbs power. It's quite possible to find a surface where you have to >hang on for dear life on 120 psi 23's when you could just smoothly power >over it with a supple 30-ish tyre Dear Marten, Could be . . . But I didn't get that impression from the two paragraphs about the hill: "The rig gave me a surprise this evening when I climbed the hill up from the treatment plant which is usually a fixed gear dismount shoulder huffer, or on the 'ute' it's deffo a granny +2, but I just crept up it like I had some magical tire crampons." "The damn things alter gravity. Japan wins again." It's a "granny +2" hill on the "ute" and a "dismount shoulder huffer" on the fixed gear, but replacing 23 mm tires with 38 mm tires turns the hill into a "magical" climb for the fixed gear and seems to "alter gravity"? If that's the case, I look forward to some interesting details about the hill. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#5 |
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On May 13, 5:48*am, landotter <landot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So I was quite pleased with the daily fixer's makeover a couple weeks > ago. Quite frankly--it's the most perfectly fun bike I've ever owned. > A tough fixed gear with new Nitto Rando bars that I can ride in the > drops all day and those lovely 32mm Paselas I got on a whim that just > seemed so silly wide when I inflated them, as I assumed they'd be > narrower--they turned out to be very interesting tires. > > Never bothered buying gloves this spring. Don't need them with the fat > tires and cotton over old bar tape. > > I'm faster than I ever was with 23mm tires, just flowing past the > crowd, like on a marshmallow track, in my comfy old timey flared > drops, grinning wide. Could be some of the local rough pavement. The > Paselas just eat it up like molten cheese over pepperoni, without a > fight. No skitter, just GO. > > The rig gave me a surprise this evening when I climbed the hill up > from the treatment plant which is usually a fixed gear dismount > shoulder huffer, or on the "ute" it's deffo a granny +2, but I just > crept up it like I had some magical tire crampons. > > The damn things alter gravity. Japan wins again. Geez, if the Swedes are lashing out poetic hyperbole, I'd better start looking over my shoulder. And the guy who writes the Pasela advertising is disconsolately looking for a new job... I love your report; it's what cycling should be about: discovery. magical moments, getting your eyelids pinned back with surprise. I imagine the imagination-less fogelites are already joylessly preparing to snow you with a gazillion negative numbers "proving" you didn't really enjoy your new bike and tires. Don't let them drain your glee in cycling. Andre Jute http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/...%20CYCLING.html |
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#6 |
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On May 13, 12:43 am, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote:
[technical nonsense snip, there's a time and a place!] SPIDEY BIKE! > Real tires would produce an even smaller change due to RR improvement, > though their new-toy effect can produce much more substantial gains. Compared to the old rubber, they're far rounder, don't have a kevlar belt, +2mm wider, so with some low speed balance issues I have due to a funky blood vessel in the noggin, it's a definite feel thing. Feels much more velcro-y now vs. tippy at stupid low speed now, especially considering that I'm doing this obscene hill out of the saddle. Forgot to mention that I got a new Pace Park Tools logo hat that really goes nice with my summer jersey. http://www.glorycycles.com/pasppatocap.html Maybe the stripes are helping? |
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#7 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 07:08:35 -0700 (PDT), landotter
<landotter@gmail.com> wrote: >On May 13, 12:43 am, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: > >[technical nonsense snip, there's a time and a place!] > >SPIDEY BIKE! > >> Real tires would produce an even smaller change due to RR improvement, >> though their new-toy effect can produce much more substantial gains. > >Compared to the old rubber, they're far rounder, don't have a kevlar >belt, +2mm wider, so with some low speed balance issues I have due to >a funky blood vessel in the noggin, it's a definite feel thing. Feels >much more velcro-y now vs. tippy at stupid low speed now, especially >considering that I'm doing this obscene hill out of the saddle. > >Forgot to mention that I got a new Pace Park Tools logo hat that >really goes nice with my summer jersey. > >http://www.glorycycles.com/pasppatocap.html > >Maybe the stripes are helping? Dear LD, So it's a matter of your special low-speed balance problem, not rolling resistance? That is, your old narrow tires were so "tippy" and the new wider tires are "far rounder" and "+2mm wider" without kevlar belts, so you can ride up the hill without losing your balance? Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#8 |
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On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote:
> For a good long while I used to think it was a > woman's prison [...] I'd > always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some > double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, > as they probably don't allow for straight pins. Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much thought. -- Mike RJS |
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#9 |
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On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: > > > For a good long while I used to think it was a > > woman's prison [...] I'd > > always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some > > double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, > > as they probably don't allow for straight pins. > > Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much > thought. Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! |
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#10 |
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On May 13, 8:48*pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: > > > For a good long while I used to think it was a > > woman's prison [...] I'd > > always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some > > double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, > > as they probably don't allow for straight pins. > > Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much > thought. > > -- > Mike RJS Oh, I don't know, this Landotter guy is very productively weird. When I was a teenager and a young man, it was the done thing if you arrived in a strange country town in South Africa where I grew up, to present yourself at the lounge in the nurse's hostel standing beside the local hospital. If you were presentable and sober you would be made welcome, and you might find a date for the evening, especially if there were two or more young men in your party. And the only price was that the Matron would insist on quizzing you, and making a little speech about how she was responsible for these girls and if you returned her charges after midnight, she sure as hell would call your mother (whose name she had discovered from you) and drop you in hot water. Many a tongue-tied young man married the nurse he met in some strange town where his family had sent him on business. Now, if we'd only thought of presenting ourselves at the woman's prison {with corsages on double- sided tape, heh-heh) we could have skipped the speeches and gotten straight down to business... Ah, what innocent days! Andre Jute Still a country boy at heart |
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#11 |
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On 5/13/2008 1:12 PM landotter wrote:
> On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: >> >>> For a good long while I used to think it was a >>> woman's prison [...] I'd >>> always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some >>> double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, >>> as they probably don't allow for straight pins. >>> >> Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much >> thought. > > Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a > bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! > Okay, point taken. And one is probably marginally more likely to get you laid than the other. But at what cost, my friend? At what cost? -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" |
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#12 |
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On May 13, 8:12 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel
<j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: > On 5/13/2008 1:12 PM landotter wrote: > > > > > On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: > > >>> For a good long while I used to think it was a > >>> woman's prison [...] I'd > >>> always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some > >>> double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, > >>> as they probably don't allow for straight pins. > > >> Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much > >> thought. > > > Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a > > bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! > > Okay, point taken. And one is probably marginally more likely to get you > laid than the other. But at what cost, my friend? At what cost? There's no turning back now, only visions of roadside midgets ringing me up the hills with cowbells! Velvet curtains...wheee! That said, I pulled a small group a good six miles today (I'd invited them as I'd passed) and as I slowed down for my mellow cruise past the cow farm, they were still there--never heard a freewheel behind me so I thought I dropped them. I invited them to pass, as I'd had my fun and waited for them to speak...and it wasn't backwards. All good! Mmmm, pie. |
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#13 |
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On 5/13/2008 6:49 PM landotter wrote:
> On May 13, 8:12 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel > <j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: >> On 5/13/2008 1:12 PM landotter wrote: >> >> >> >>> On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: >>>>> For a good long while I used to think it was a >>>>> woman's prison [...] I'd >>>>> always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some >>>>> double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, >>>>> as they probably don't allow for straight pins. >>>> Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much >>>> thought. >>> Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a >>> bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! >> Okay, point taken. And one is probably marginally more likely to get you >> laid than the other. But at what cost, my friend? At what cost? > > There's no turning back now, only visions of roadside midgets ringing > me up the hills with cowbells! Velvet curtains...wheee! And is that Dean Stockwell drafting behind you? -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" |
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#14 |
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On May 13, 9:01 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel
<j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: > On 5/13/2008 6:49 PM landotter wrote: > > > > > On May 13, 8:12 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel > > <j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: > >> On 5/13/2008 1:12 PM landotter wrote: > > >>> On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote: > >>>> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: > >>>>> For a good long while I used to think it was a > >>>>> woman's prison [...] I'd > >>>>> always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some > >>>>> double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, > >>>>> as they probably don't allow for straight pins. > >>>> Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much > >>>> thought. > >>> Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a > >>> bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! > >> Okay, point taken. And one is probably marginally more likely to get you > >> laid than the other. But at what cost, my friend? At what cost? > > > There's no turning back now, only visions of roadside midgets ringing > > me up the hills with cowbells! Velvet curtains...wheee! > > And is that Dean Stockwell drafting behind you? > My choice of spirit guide is personal. You want a Gabor sister on a Cervelo smoking a cigar--knock yourself out! |
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#15 |
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On 5/13/2008 7:15 PM landotter wrote:
> On May 13, 9:01 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel > <j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: >> On 5/13/2008 6:49 PM landotter wrote: >> >> >> >>> On May 13, 8:12 pm, Mike Rocket J Squirrel >>> <j.michael.elli...@GOLLYgmail.com> wrote: >>>> On 5/13/2008 1:12 PM landotter wrote: >>>>> On May 13, 2:48 pm, Mike Elliott <j.michael.elli...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>> On 5/13/2008 10:13 AM landotter wrote: >>>>>>> For a good long while I used to think it was a >>>>>>> woman's prison [...] I'd >>>>>>> always slow down and think about bringing me a corsage and maybe some >>>>>>> double sided tape for next time so I could fetch me a wife on the sly, >>>>>>> as they probably don't allow for straight pins. >>>>>> Wow. You know, I'm pretty sure I would not have given that quite as much >>>>>> thought. >>>>> Long solo rides without the bad influence of club dudes lets me go a >>>>> bit Lynchian upstairs. Beats counting grams! >>>> Okay, point taken. And one is probably marginally more likely to get you >>>> laid than the other. But at what cost, my friend? At what cost? >>> There's no turning back now, only visions of roadside midgets ringing >>> me up the hills with cowbells! Velvet curtains...wheee! >> And is that Dean Stockwell drafting behind you? >> > My choice of spirit guide is personal. You want a Gabor sister on a > Cervelo smoking a cigar--knock yourself out! Ah, sorry to intrude. Quite right, quite right, it is a personal matter. Milo Kunis on a unicycle in the conservatory with aplomb. -- Mike "Rocket J Squirrel" |
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