Same with me, only it was with my Metabike. It goes to show you, how the brain and reflex inputs work and how important it is to take the time to jell with something new. However, you can reacquaint yourself with the awkwardness of a non-MBB recumbent again with a little retraining and ride both.FWIW, after I went Cruzbike, I tried going back to my Bachetta and found I was all over the road because I was used to that upper body input. The Bachetta ended up for sale.
Mark
I'm sure it can be done. I just didn't want to do it. Once I went over to the Cruzbike, it was all over, for me.Same with me, only it was with my Metabike. It goes to show you, how the brain and reflex inputs work and how important it is to take the time to jell with something new. However, you can reacquaint yourself with the awkwardness of a non-MBB recumbent again with a little retraining and ride both.
So, Im assuming that going up steep grades in the dark is going to take some getting use to! Ha!! Question, two of them. My skill of climbing up steeper grades will take some time ? High speed wobble if you try to spin, will get easier? I'm figuring out to stop without the "coach roach" spread, and getting better... biggest issue for me . BUT.... love the way I can push on this bike and how it is so much easier going up the hills.
yes and yes
In the 6 weeks I had the V before my first 24hr race I only did one 100 mile ride with everything else being short 20-30 mile rides. The main reason for this is in order to leave my city/area I have only 4 route options and each includes a steep section of road that is very dangerous due to there being no bike lane or shoulder. I was stuff riding in only one area because I feared my stability when climbing at 4-5 mph. This is really no longer a problem for me but I'll still never quite have the be able to nearly stall the bike and get going again on a climb like I can on a DF bike.
I have rival 22 derailiuer w/ yaw, having some trouble with the chain jumping off big ring, 50/34 Q ring. I have always had this problem with Q rings, removed mine on the Carbon Aero because it was so unreliable.
I have it set at 0 yaw and the cage as close to the biggest tooth as I can. Ideas??
Its falling on to outside when shifting from little ring to big ring. I was wrong, Sram rival front deraileur .
Been there done that too! Now i make sure i have that 2.5mm hex wrench at all times also.From the "never say never" dept...
I installed the SRAM chain spotter on mine and thought it to be a big plus...until the last time I fell. Somehow, I contrived to get the chain past the spotter on the inside (it wasn't a hard fall, but I was pedaling hard when I went down). It took me 10 minutes of cursing before I finally remembered that I had the proper hex key size in my bag (fits my pedal tension too) and got it out of the way enough to get the chain back in place. I was just about to split the chain king-link when I remembered.
I still run the chain spotter...but I make sure I have that little hex-key just in case!
Ok thank Ratz, I can do "Purdy" good at the FD , but yes I need improvement, thanks for the info!!+1 on the video's yaw be different; once you get them figured out they are actually easier; because you can return them to "Default" then install and set; and boom done.
In your case with over shifts you need to turn your "upper limit screw" on the FD ¼ turn. Each quarter turn is 1mm of adjustment. Just do 1mm at a time until it stop over shifting. If you get to the point that it won't shift up you've gone two far. Now here are some tips.
1) You able hosing will compress over the first 3 months; that means you will have to re-adjust the barrel adjuster over time to make up for the lost of housing length.
2) One you get the limit screws dialed in; don't mess with them; use the barrel adjuster the limit screws don't get out of place; the housing is just compressing see item #1
3) If you fiddle too much don't be afraid to just do the full reset on the derailleur it is far faster.
Lastly the fastest way to save money is to get an inexpensive but good bike stand and slowly learn to be your own wrench. It's not only rewarding it's a huge money saver if you have more than 1 bike.
Then from the "i am riding stand point" as you debugg your FD shifting; it's always simple to just every so slightly ease up on your foot pressure when you up shift; that will make the shifts more reliable and you can watch the chain climb up the ring; it over shots; coast, down shift the front; back pedal about ⅛ a rotation and then start pedalling the chain will jump right back to the little ring. With practice you can get yourself out of just about any over shift situation; while you are learning to tune the derailleur this is a vary valuable skill.
Also with sram I recommend adding one of these.
https://www.amazon.com/SRAM-Front-Derailleur-Chain-Spotter/dp/B008JEFQPS
you can find them cheaper if you look around.
then you never have to worry about a drop to the inside. We even run them on our e-tap electric stuff; just to be safe.
Ok thank you, I'm studying and gonna not be defeated by the Q !!!I din't know if this will help with a SRAM front derailleur, but it was a GREAT help on a Shimano triple!
http://www.parktool.com/blog/repair-help/front-derailleur-adjustment#article-section-7
I wasted 3 hours last night trying to adjust it from memory, as according to "Tim the Tool Man", "Real Men do not need instructions!"
The two main mistakes was that the height adjustment was when the outer derailleur plate was directly over the top of the outer ring, not when in it final outer position, AND that after this adjustment, move the derailleur to the lowest position and make certain that there is NO tension on the inner cable!!!
Not doing the second one, had me wondering if I had lost something, as I kept going around in circles!