Mwhwsmith
Member
Hi ... my V20 frameset arrives tomorrow and I thought I should introduce myself as I am sure I will come to rely on your advice in the coming months.
Firstly, a little background: I have never ridden a recumbent bicycle before and my prior cycling experience has been limited to an entry level Trek MTB with a trailer or tagalong attached for the kids. A couple of months ago a colleague suggested a group of us do a charity cycle ride from London to Paris this summer - which seemed like fun so I signed up. I then discovered the organizers don't allow MTBs on the trip so I will need a new bike - clearly my current bike is not up to the job.
I also started to reflect on whether I am up to the task. I am an aging (40yr old) but enthusiastic skier - for which you can read injury and accident prone. I have suffered a broken ankle, broken knee, torn ligaments, loose ligaments, broken thumb, ACL reconstruction (although not a good job) and I used to suffer from asthma. I have never ridden further than ~25km and on my current MTB, after about 30mins in the saddle, I get pain in my hands/wrists/lower back etc. While I'm not particularly out-of-shape in appearance, I am certainly not well maintained, and I started to doubt I would make it to the English Channel - let alone Paris.
I then remembered a friend of mine from 20+ years ago who was very enthusiastic about the benefits of recumbent bicycles - so much so that he built his own out of square section aluminium, solid/milled ally brackets and a plastic garden chair. It wasn't pretty but he loved it and my inner nerd has always quite liked the idea of this type of engineering and so there has always been a bit of me that quite wanted one. I started my online research and was drawn to the cruzbike because of the elegance of the design.
So I scratched the itch and bought a Vendetta (frameset). If I'm honest, I should probably have bought a Silvio - but they were out of stock at the time - so I bought a Vendetta. To paraphrase someone on this forum: whoever finds themselves wanting a heavier slower bike a few months later - so what have I got to lose?!?
So now I find myself with a daunting list of challenges ... a few 'firsts' if you like:
- I need to build my bicycle - I haven't done that before but it sounds fun
- I need to learn how to ride it - I have now read a few posts suggesting this can take some time to do
- I need to then cycle it ~10x further than I have every ridden before in aid of charity and under the scrutiny of colleagues
- I then need to keep riding it thereafter
That's enough for one post ... I need to start researching wheels and group-set and will post an update on first impressions of the frame set when it arrives and my likely spec for the rest of the build.
Very excited,
Mike