Abbott Smith
Guru
Yeah. I'm looking at eBay. There are a couple options right now in the $30-40 starting bid range.To save money, you could purchase just the right-side for now and matching left later.
Yeah. I'm looking at eBay. There are a couple options right now in the $30-40 starting bid range.To save money, you could purchase just the right-side for now and matching left later.
BTW. This gear calculator is very cool. Hunted it down and set up my bike in it. Very straight forward and useful. Thanks for sharing.26T.
But it's on a 20" wheel. It's morally equivalent to a 36T on a 700c wheel. You can see my gearing here. (I've got a 48/38/22 matched to a 11-32 on my 26" Sofrider. The gearing is a little bit broader than my Cruzgami Mantis).
I do agree with Robert.The setup with a double and a super wide converted cassette is the way to go. Sorry all, but triples and the performance Cruzbikes are not a good match no matter how you slice it, and pretty much the same range can be accomplished today on the drive wheel end.
Heh - I had that experience Saturday. The speedo was telling me 15-17 and I thought it was screwed up or had the wrong wheel size or something. Turned it off to see what the GPS said and it agreed with the speedo - I was pleasantly surprisedSeveral times on my rides this week, I've felt like I was slogging along on the flats at about 12 mph; but when I looked down at the Garmin, to my surprise, it read 15 or even 16 mph.
if you really loved your bike , bike budget and knees you would move house abbot. that is fair . sorry could not resist.Ugly hills I've got in abundance. The nasty piece of work on the south side of my house maxs out at just under 19% grade and has an S curve in the middle of it.
My goal is not to climb walls on my bike. If I need to walk a steep grade, I don't have a problem with that. My goal is to be able to handle the occasional steep segment without popping my heart rate into an unsustainable level. What I've found in my very limited riding experience on the Vendetta is that blowing up on a hill causes the subsequent riding to be very unstable. My ability to maintain my center of gravity while past the threshold is almost impossible because my lungs are heaving and my muscles are all quivering.
It boils down to being able to handle up to 16-18% grades. Right now I'm maxing out between 13-14% with my low end at ~30 gear inches. There are just too many local hills with segments in that 13-18% range. Adding 8 gear inches to my low end will enable me tackle most of them and work on my fitness. The Vendetta/Cruzbike geometry climbs so much better than a RWD recumbent and I can climb these hills on my RWDs with that same low end.
My speedo's just a smidge more modest...
That would be a good thing...cuz, if I'm out riding in my little red Speedo, I need to be put down!Rick riding in a Speedo in Mississippi would get you arrested, if not shot on sight!
castlerobber the red q ring looks really cool along with your other red accents. Even the red velcro strap adds in!
Btw that's a great looking bottle mount on the seat behind your head--would you tell us the manufacturer?
It was raining when I picked my new-to-me Silvio 1.5 up from the LBS yesterday, so I was determined to get at least a short ride in this afternoon after work. I hadn't been on the road more than 10 minutes when dark clouds started moving in from the north. I turned for home and started trying to put on some speed; but between my inexperience with DoubleTap shifters and the already-iffy shifting (my fault, poorly matched components), I managed to throw the chain off the big ring just as the downpour started. Fortunately, a man working in his yard across the road saw that I was having trouble and invited me in to wait out the rain with him and his family. (It's a small town, his wife's aunt goes to church with my husband, or some such.)
Half an hour after I got home from that failed attempt, the sun had come out and the storm clouds were gone, so I headed out again. The Silvio handled just as well as I remembered from the test ride in January. I rode 7 miles at an average of 12.9 mph. Not exactly blazing speed, but within 0.2 mph of my road bike speed on the same course last week. I stayed in the small ring the whole time; if I had been confident enough to shift into the big ring for the flats and downhills, I believe I could have easily surpassed my road bike time.
I still have some fine-tuning to do. I've worked out an exchange of my undersized outer chainring for a more suitable one. The reach to the pedals is a bit short, and the reach to the brifters is a bit long, but those are easily remedied. I also need to find a small bag that will fit under the seat for phone, keys, spare tube, etc. The Fastback Norback frame bag looks like it might work, but suggestions are always welcome.
Once I get things like I want them, I'll post pictures.
Good day to you Castlerobber.
I would like to have your attention to the following products from Roswheel. The bags are waterproof and very usable for recumbents as its possible to mount them on almost every tube on the bike This is what they look like : roswheel bicycle mobile phone touch screen bag frame tube bag
I bought one myself and they are big enough to have an I phone , keys and small stuff in there. Its possible to use them as mobile bike map reader bag to. The straps are good and they tighten well.
Friendly regards Martinius.