Mwhwsmith
Member
I'm almost 6 months into my Vendetta owning experience - and have been quite pleasantly surprised that the learning / performance curve has not really started to level off yet. As I was enjoying a quick pootle around my local country lanes, I was reflect on:
a) I am still growing in confidence riding with one hand - whereas previously taking one had off the handle bars required careful choice of a straight level road, and a deep intake of breathe and some planning, now I find I can ride one handed for short periods with little or no conscious thought.
b) Average speed continues to rise - I have a local circuit that I regularly ride and my average speed has risen from 22kph on my first attempt on the V20, through 24kph (the fastest on my MTB), to 26kph when I did my London-Paris ride (which was the prompt to by the bike), to now regular 32kph.
c) Distance are getting longer - I sometimes wonder if would still be riding if I had bought a regular bike. There is a huge psychological boost from always seeing the scenery and never having my head drop and so that I watch the gutter under the front wheel. Also, when it does hurt, I find the knowing that it would be hurting more and earlier on something less efficient is a huge boost.
d) I now find myself in the Top 10 of quite a few local Strava segments - I have no right to be there based on either general level of fitness, age or experience. "My name is Mike and I'm a Stravaddict" - there we go, I've said it!
I do however, have a question - of either technique or of equipment. I'm still learning to climb efficiently and am making progress developing technique to use my upper body. However, on moderate inclines (+5%) in wet conditions I find I get slippage of the front wheel - just occasionally - and usually when I go for / need that extra push. So how do I avoid this? I'm assuming one answer is to ride my smoothly, but I do this most of the time, and the times I need to extra push is when I need to push more. I find slippage occur both when I'm pulling myself out of the seat and when fully reclined.
I was wondering if changing tyres would make a big difference and/or if I should consider running a wider front tyre in the winter - when it will be wetter. For reference, I'm currently running a 24c (Vittoria Diamante Pro) tyre. I tend to run it at ~120psi.
Or perhaps I just need to get fitter and stronger so I can rider smoother for longer.
Many thanks
Mike
a) I am still growing in confidence riding with one hand - whereas previously taking one had off the handle bars required careful choice of a straight level road, and a deep intake of breathe and some planning, now I find I can ride one handed for short periods with little or no conscious thought.
b) Average speed continues to rise - I have a local circuit that I regularly ride and my average speed has risen from 22kph on my first attempt on the V20, through 24kph (the fastest on my MTB), to 26kph when I did my London-Paris ride (which was the prompt to by the bike), to now regular 32kph.
c) Distance are getting longer - I sometimes wonder if would still be riding if I had bought a regular bike. There is a huge psychological boost from always seeing the scenery and never having my head drop and so that I watch the gutter under the front wheel. Also, when it does hurt, I find the knowing that it would be hurting more and earlier on something less efficient is a huge boost.
d) I now find myself in the Top 10 of quite a few local Strava segments - I have no right to be there based on either general level of fitness, age or experience. "My name is Mike and I'm a Stravaddict" - there we go, I've said it!
I do however, have a question - of either technique or of equipment. I'm still learning to climb efficiently and am making progress developing technique to use my upper body. However, on moderate inclines (+5%) in wet conditions I find I get slippage of the front wheel - just occasionally - and usually when I go for / need that extra push. So how do I avoid this? I'm assuming one answer is to ride my smoothly, but I do this most of the time, and the times I need to extra push is when I need to push more. I find slippage occur both when I'm pulling myself out of the seat and when fully reclined.
I was wondering if changing tyres would make a big difference and/or if I should consider running a wider front tyre in the winter - when it will be wetter. For reference, I'm currently running a 24c (Vittoria Diamante Pro) tyre. I tend to run it at ~120psi.
Or perhaps I just need to get fitter and stronger so I can rider smoother for longer.
Many thanks
Mike