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Show us your bike (bicycle)

Started by Doug.b, June 20, 2012, 07:37:05 PM

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petrolburner

My road machine arrived  ;D ;D

One quick shakedown ride tells me we're going to get along just fine :cheers:

Complete Campsite Fraser XTE

2013 Nissan Patrol Y62 ST-L

D4D

Quote from: petrolburner on December 29, 2020, 06:48:10 PM
My road machine arrived  ;D ;D

One quick shakedown ride tells me we're going to get along just fine :cheers:

Very nice, it looks fast
I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

Foo

Quote from: petrolburner on December 29, 2020, 06:48:10 PM
My road machine arrived  ;D ;D

One quick shakedown ride tells me we're going to get along just fine :cheers:

8)

So it's around a 58cm frame?

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

petrolburner

Quote from: Foo on December 29, 2020, 07:38:42 PM
8)

So it's around a 58cm frame?

Foo

61cm frame..... I'm a tad over 190cm
Complete Campsite Fraser XTE

2013 Nissan Patrol Y62 ST-L

Foo

Quote from: petrolburner on December 29, 2020, 07:46:35 PM
61cm frame..... I'm a tad over 190cm

Hard to find frames that big, well done.  8)

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

petrolburner

Is there much of a consensus on running tubeless setup for purely road riding?

The new road machine has the same DT Swiss tubeless rims that I'm running on my Focus CX bike.
I've done a couple thousand km's on the CX bike with 30mm Schwalbe G-ones setup tubeless and they have been awesome, had one un-repairable cut on gravel, otherwise have proven to be reliable on all sorts of crappy roads.

Road machine has tubed 28mm GP 5000's which have plenty of life in them.... but I'm considering whether to setup with tubeless GP5000's once they are up for replacement?

Seems a lot of road riders are reluctant to switch from tubes to tubeless when I do a bit of reading around online.
Complete Campsite Fraser XTE

2013 Nissan Patrol Y62 ST-L

Foo

Quote from: petrolburner on December 30, 2020, 07:14:36 AM
Is there much of a consensus on running tubeless setup for purely road riding?

The new road machine has the same DT Swiss tubeless rims that I'm running on my Focus CX bike.
I've done a couple thousand km's on the CX bike with 30mm Schwalbe G-ones setup tubeless and they have been awesome, had one un-repairable cut on gravel, otherwise have proven to be reliable on all sorts of crappy roads.

Road machine has tubed 28mm GP 5000's which have plenty of life in them.... but I'm considering whether to setup with tubeless GP5000's once they are up for replacement?

Seems a lot of road riders are reluctant to switch from tubes to tubeless when I do a bit of reading around online.

I just don't understand why, you wouldn't just use sealant in your tubes?  ??? Unless your rims are tubeless compatible, then you're up for more $$$$$$$ for new wheels and then there is the extra cost of "tubeless" tyres and then the sealant as well and for what, to achieve the same goal of sealant spraying all over you and the frame, every time you you pick up a slash or something into your tyre, plus it needs to be refreshed every few months! What am I missing here?  ???

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

petrolburner


My  rims are already tubeless compatible and I have plenty of sealant on my shelf as my gravel bike and MTB are already tubeless. (The gravel bike being used as a roadie with g-one speed 30mm tubeless tyres)

So it's just a matter purchasing of a set of valves for the new roadie.

I run heavy duty inners in the kids bikes with green 'goop' and they are no where near as puncture resistant as the proper tubeless setups on my other bikes.

I guess with all the thorns, roadside rubbish and bits of glass around here I was thinking tubeless on the new roadie (just like the gravel bike) might be of benefit.

I'm curious as to why roadies haven't made the switch universally like MTB and Gravel riders?

A tubeless tyre with sealant should be lighter  than running a tube plus sealant.

Anyway seeing as the current tyres have plenty of life I'll see how they go running inners..... but I won't be filling them with slime.
Complete Campsite Fraser XTE

2013 Nissan Patrol Y62 ST-L

Foo

I have all the road wheels that I need for training and racing plus the cost factor of changing over. I train heavy race light and I can match it in speed with others when they are on lighter wheels running the high end clinchers.  ;D I can understand the off roaders riding tubeless but even then, it is a cost factor of buying more wheels and then the same extra cost with goop and tubeless tyres, when I can carry a couple of tubes and patches as well with me, when out in the bush.  ;)

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

D4D

Quote from: petrolburner on December 30, 2020, 07:14:36 AM
Is there much of a consensus on running tubeless setup for purely road riding?

Nike, lots of new data showing wider tyres and lower pressures running tubeless have less rolling resistance than the old school 700x23 @ 100PSI. That said I haven't swapped my Roadmachine to tubeless as I can't find any 700x28 tan wall tubeless ready tyres. I think Veloflex just released some but haven't researched them yet.
I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

Foo

Quote from: D4D on December 30, 2020, 12:14:38 PM
Nike, lots of new data showing wider tyres and lower pressures running tubeless have less rolling resistance than the old school 700x23 @ 100PSI. That said I haven't swapped my Roadmachine to tubeless as I can't find any 700x28 tan wall tubeless ready tyres. I think Veloflex just released some but haven't researched them yet.

There are these or you looking for darker tan?



Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

D4D

Quote from: Foo on December 30, 2020, 12:23:23 PM
There are these or you looking for darker tan?

Thanks, yeah I've seen those but they are more or a race tyre, not much puncture protection.

I might try these https://www.bikebug.com/veloflex-corsa-evo-folding-clincher.html



I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

Foo

I had Veloflex on a set of singles for road racing and didn't like them as they felt dead as a door nail. Maybe these are better in the rolling department.  ;)

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

D4D

Quote from: Foo on December 30, 2020, 12:29:08 PM
I had Veloflex on a set of singles for road racing and didn't like them as they felt dead as a door nail. Maybe these are better in the rolling department.  ;)

My Colnago came with Veloflex 700x23, I'm very surprised by them, nice and smooth and roll well, it could also be Ernesto's frame building expertise :)
I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

Foo

Quote from: D4D on December 30, 2020, 12:31:34 PM
My Colnago came with Veloflex 700x23, I'm very surprised by them, nice and smooth and roll well, it could also be Ernesto's frame building expertise :)

Hahaha that frame should be nice. One of my mates has a Team issue Merckx frame by Colnago that sat in storage for 30yrs. Kitted out with Campagnolo Super Record gear. Cost him around $22000 from memory. It had all the correctly stamped numbers for traceability on it also.  8)

Very much like this one with the colouring.



Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

D4D

Very nice, SVB have some ex pro/legend bikes for auction at the moment. I'd hate to think what Eddy's bike is worth.
https://steel-vintage.com/bicycles?hide_price=1
I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

Foo

Yeah, I think that they would be frightening for the personally owned ones. This one my mate got, had never been ridden.

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

Foo

Finished the year off with a 29er ride.  ;D A very sad number of klms though and am aiming for 5000klms.

https://www.strava.com/activities/4541644866



Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

Foo

Started the year the correct way, with a 32klm ride and seeing the first sunrise then a recovery drink, when I got home.  ;D

https://www.strava.com/activities/4546095827



Foo

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So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

D4D

Quote from: Foo on January 01, 2021, 06:56:08 AM
Started the year the correct way, with a 32klm ride and seeing the first sunrise then a recovery drink, when I got home.  ;D

Very keen, although I think you need more protein in your recovery nutrition :)
I owe, I owe, it's off to work I go...

Prado Garage Queen

achjimmy

Here for a good time, not a long time!

Jim

Foo

Quote from: D4D on January 01, 2021, 07:48:14 AM
Very keen, although I think you need more protein in your recovery nutrition :)

I'm working on it, right now.  ;D :cheers:

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

paceman

hi all,

looking for feedback on how everyone stores their bike racks?

i have a ISI 4x4 bike rack and i need to come up with a better storage solution, other than have it laying around the shed...

if anyone has any ideas or photos of their setup, it would be appreciated.

Foo

Hang it at one end of the shed = chain/rope hooks on the end.  ???

Foo
So long as you have tried your best, you should have no regrets.

DrewXT

Bolt a cheapy Hayman Reece hitch to the floor and use it as a bike rack, that's what my neighbour does with his

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2013 Amarok Highline
2015 Customline Adventure Walkup