Silvio Componentry Suggestions for a heavyset hill rider
Subject line says it. About to buy a Silvio 2.0. Trying to decide on how to kit it out.
Some of the feedback in this thread suggests that you all know what I need to know. Here is a little bit about me and how I intend to ride.
Height 6'2" (1.88m) Weight 225 lbs (102 kg). Intended use: multi-day, hundred+ mile-per-day supported and credit card solo tours involving lots of climbing, some of it very steep (12+ degree slopes). Some riding on gravel trails (The Delaware and Raritan Canal trail, for those of you who know it, is about as rough a road as I'll ride: hard packed pea gravel and the occasional cobblestone patch).
Cost is a factor, but not a huge factor. I'm ready to spend some money for quality. But I'm not such an aficionado that I can tell the difference between Dura Ace and Ultegra, so I'll go Ultegra (or even 105) unless users dissuade me. SRAM would also be fine, but I know less about their stuff, and I have been using Shimano for decades.
Here is my thinking so far, in descending order from what I think I know to what I definitely need expert advice to choose.
Disc brakes, mechanical. Haven't decided on brand or rotor size yet. Open to suggestions.
Handlebars: Dying for advice. What I have read on the forum so far leaves me less, rather than more, illuminated.
Shifting: mechanical, not electronic. I *think* I want brifters, but maybe my handlebar selection should dictate choice of shifters and brakes? Help.
Bottom bracket: I have no idea what to buy. Again: help?
Cranks: double or triple? (I'm expecting double, but I have long ridden a triple, so I'm not dogmatic.) Compact? Semi-compact? I currently have a low ratio of 1.21 on my diamond frame, and I frequently drop all the way down to it. On a recumbent, even a climber like the Silvio, I think I'm going to want to go even lower. I'll sacrifice smooth transitions along the cassette for a very low bottom climbing ratio.
Cassette: clueless.
Derailleurs: also clueless.
Hubs: clueless.
Rims and spokes: clueless.
For BB, Hubs, and Rims: bear in mind my weight and the rough roads I sometimes ride. Strong enough not to fail is more important, when I'm 100 miles from a bike shop, than an anorexically skinny ride. I do want skinny, but not *too* skinny.
If you were my guide as we walked down the bicycle hardware superstore aisles, knowing now what you know about the Silvio I dream of riding, what would you be tossing into my cart ?
Thanking you all in advance,
David