3bs
whereabouts unknown
lmao. as a tinkerer on all things, who is in perpetuity taking stuff apart and putting back together, uncooperative parts are so common i often suspect when stuff goes together perfectly that something must be wrong.
i consider these to be what are commonly called "first world" problems, as opposed to third world problems like food and water. so i embrace them as phsical crossword puzzles and tests of patience.
there are a lot of small engineering changes that i would do on the v. some would add to production cost, some not. derailleur hanger is one. there are at least two systemic issues with its present form. Robert hit on one other issue that i think is far more prevalent than anyone would suspect, and that is front end alignment. there are so many parts that can be set individually out of alignment that you have a three dimensional issue. this goes all the way up to the handlebars. think about how many places you have a dimensional adjustment: in/out ; rotate left/right. move left/right; rotate up/down. the front end of the bike deserves an alignment jig. the simplest change here i think would be if the boom assembly were key slotted, that would reduce two rotation points and force the bottom bracket clamps to stay square with the boom, and the handlebars and the stays. the sequence of assembly would have to change slightly, but not a lot. mostly in the final tightening.
i have wondered if this is my problem as i have some tracking error above 33 mph going downhill. i just can't seem to get comfortable, and the bike seems to wander some, mostly to the left. not quite death wobble, but a little pull and wander. the rims are Reynolds assaults with schwable ones (700x28). the rims are true, the tire is seated slightly out of round near the valve stem for about 4 inches. i am going to put my other wheelset on this weekend and see if it carries over, but i have this suspicion that my front end is out of alignment, and that i just don't notice it until i am coasting at speed.
i consider these to be what are commonly called "first world" problems, as opposed to third world problems like food and water. so i embrace them as phsical crossword puzzles and tests of patience.
there are a lot of small engineering changes that i would do on the v. some would add to production cost, some not. derailleur hanger is one. there are at least two systemic issues with its present form. Robert hit on one other issue that i think is far more prevalent than anyone would suspect, and that is front end alignment. there are so many parts that can be set individually out of alignment that you have a three dimensional issue. this goes all the way up to the handlebars. think about how many places you have a dimensional adjustment: in/out ; rotate left/right. move left/right; rotate up/down. the front end of the bike deserves an alignment jig. the simplest change here i think would be if the boom assembly were key slotted, that would reduce two rotation points and force the bottom bracket clamps to stay square with the boom, and the handlebars and the stays. the sequence of assembly would have to change slightly, but not a lot. mostly in the final tightening.
i have wondered if this is my problem as i have some tracking error above 33 mph going downhill. i just can't seem to get comfortable, and the bike seems to wander some, mostly to the left. not quite death wobble, but a little pull and wander. the rims are Reynolds assaults with schwable ones (700x28). the rims are true, the tire is seated slightly out of round near the valve stem for about 4 inches. i am going to put my other wheelset on this weekend and see if it carries over, but i have this suspicion that my front end is out of alignment, and that i just don't notice it until i am coasting at speed.