Hotdog wrote: Well, I've gone and done it now :shock: I ordered a Sofrider V2 today
Hardtailcruzer wrote: It's a wonderful bike; super versatile and quite fast.
You'll be pleased with it!
Let us know how you get along!
Yep. Still 'pending'... :?Mark B wrote: The waiting is the worst part.
Probably Though they might have just been buying Cruzbike jerseys or Freerider handlebars...Quote:
I'm 295, so that means at least 4 others have plunged into the Kool-Aid vat, as well.
Given your other posts it seems you were rightQuote:
My frame is somewhere within 50 miles of me, I can feel it. The force is strong.
BRONCO B0B wrote: I would find myself doing fine for a few hundred yards or so and then it was like I turned the switch to "inebriate" and I'd be all over the path. I found myself in extremely dire straits when a cyclist would be coming the other way and I felt like we were magnets, that bike would be south pole and I would be north, and I just knew I was going to veer over toward it. Especially not fun when the closing speed is about 50mph.
With all these dogs, maybe you should mount a Japanese katana vertically infront of the cruzbike. I'll bet you'll cut right through the dogs. That'll teach people to leach their dogs.yakmurph wrote: Hi, Hotdog-
I hope you're feeling better, by now.
Of all the two-wheeled contraptions I've crashed on, the recumbent was the least worst.
Like you, the bike was a bit scratched; the most damage was a bent front chain ring,
which was easily un-bent.
Unlike you, my recumbent crash was caused by colliding with a loose neighbour's Weimeraner.
Like you, my injuries were confined to road-rash.
(If roads were sold as sandpaper, what grit would macadam be?)
My sister, who rode a very nice diamond-frame road bike, collided with
a loose dog last Spring.
She was thrown over the drops...colliding with the road face-first.
Her face was reconstructed;
Her eye was saved;
She's having more surgery done tomorrow, to repair torn ligaments in her hand.
If only she were riding a recumbent/ if only the dog were leashed.
Ride safe,
-Steve
Mark B wrote:BRONCO B0B wrote: I would find myself doing fine for a few hundred yards or so and then it was like I turned the switch to "inebriate" and I'd be all over the path. I found myself in extremely dire straits when a cyclist would be coming the other way and I felt like we were magnets, that bike would be south pole and I would be north, and I just knew I was going to veer over toward it. Especially not fun when the closing speed is about 50mph.
I had similar experiences on my conversion, especially on downhills in traffic. I would start to get panicky and then wobble. I believe it's perfectly natural and something you will work through with more time in the saddle. Just be careful out there and relax, you'll be fine.
Mark
Ouch!…..I was eating my breakfast yesterday when I read that…suddenly I didn’t want it any longer....Quote: Deeper abrasions on my elbows (down to the bone on the right).
yes, it is pretty harsh reading. But one could use skateboard elbow protection which should protect something like this.Flasharry wrote:Ouch!…..I was eating my breakfast yesterday when I read that…suddenly I didn’t want it any longer....Quote: Deeper abrasions on my elbows (down to the bone on the right).
Get well soon Hotdog.