As an alternative to your special skills as a painter, Have you used the clear Car bra auto protector material on any of your bikes? I installed some on my S40 on the forks to keep the paint looking good with the occasional rubbing of my legs. I did not install quickly enough and the black cross members have the paint rubbed off. Bummer. You don't remember me, I talked to you many years back (2016) when you lived in Eden Prairie and I just got my V20. Yes I did finally learn to ride my V20. Still in love with an inanimate object - cult type behavior I know. Just wanted to say thanks for the offer of help learning to ride my new bike.Day 1 - Praying and Peeling.
Because we are not Plastidipping the entire frame (That would be criminal on this paint job) we are going to have a devil of a time peeling the tape off and not taking the PlastiDip right off or making a ragged edge.
This is where my indecisive taping got me in trouble. I had way too many small pieces of tape and I did too many pieces at the same time.
Hind sight says do them in this order from a painting stand point
Group 1
1. Fork - 5 coats
2. Chainstay - 5 coats
Group 2
1. Frame - 7 coats
2. Seat - 5 coats
Peel tape from Each item immediately after spraying the last coat. Pastidip has a solvent on it; when you spray each new coat it all melts together. When it's wet, it peels really cleanly on the yellow tape.
I had too many dry pieces at the end. So I wound up using a clear coat top layer of Plastidip to remelt the paint so I could peel it.
Due to my sloppy tape job, I had some blemishes on the front fork (The one I peeled first and discovered the problem)
This all cost me about an extra hour and an extra can $17 of top coat. I salvaged everything, and I think it turned out pretty cool looking.
Now, I must leave it alone for at least 24 hours while it dries and hardens. There will be some edge clean-ups to do after it's dry, and then, for some longevity, I'll go over the top with a layer of clear nail polish so there is an impact layer.
The Brake cables worked, but I really don't expect those to hold up; that was a flyer. I'm still trying to figure out how I'll route those without it peeling off.
The good news is that I can take it off faster than I put it on.
I'll clean this all up this week and do a post on the wheels, and then next weekend, we'll start assembling the bike itself.
If you have any Plastidip tips, head over to this thread and share what you know....
I never look back, darling. It distracts from the now, A V20c design journal
Step 1: Get up at 6am and take (5 of 5) for a 7 mile ride up to the Top of the Dam to wear her out. Step 2: Spend the entire day preparing the build space Step 3: Accidentally spend all the rest of the free time tuning up the existing fleet of bikes so everyone can ride again tomorrow.forum.cruzbike.com
Having done this once, now I'm confident I can do the White Frame in about 4 hours without the errors and challenges peeling.
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Bob - What crank length did you decide on for this build. It look like you can order from 150mm and upBoth bikes are getting Rotor Aldhu cranks; as discussed in the engineering thread, these are simply my favorites, and the 1x I'm even more impressed with than the 2x stuff. One of the bikes is getting a Road Axel, and the other is getting a Road Offset. The offset axle with some spacers can be made into a normal offset by countering the 2.5 bias and giving a slightly wider Q factor (152mm vs 147mm) that my legs prefer. The Road Axle is recommended for most builds; if you can't get a wide enough Q-factor with your pedals and spacers, then the Offset Axle can solve that.
155 mm because the bikes on the trainers have matching cranksBob - What crank length did you decide on for this build. It look like you can order from 150mm and up
That is some serious bling!That's the end of the base build, but I have more coming as we work through water bottles, bags, lights, radars, etc. But up to this point, it is enough to build the bikes. The only really slow part was the hydraulic brakes. Throughout the process, I really regretted doing the hydraulic as I had options to do cable pull. Now that they are working, I'm glad I did it, but it was one of those what have I done journeys.
Here are some sneak peeks of some of what's yet to come
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Winters over and so is trade so season so more to come.That is some serious bling!
Thank you for writing this up! I have a V20c frame that I need to build. For my build, I am considering using as large a rim and tire as I can. On my V20, I have had several impact flats. And, I have had grip issues on climbs. Light Bicycle has a massive selection of rims. I am considering their WG44, if it's possible. Cruzbike suggested I get into the forum to ask the experience of others.Day 2 - The Wheel keeps on turning.......... (Five Days later; when did life get so busy).......
Ok, when we get to the brakes, I'm going to have many unkind words for the bike industry. But today wheels,
Boy, have we come a long way on wheels.....
When we last did this:
1. Skinny tires be fast if you ask the industry, but gosh, over on the recumbent forums, we had a lot of doubters.
2. Tubeless was entranced in MTB but on the road at high pressure, would it work
3. A few road tubeless wheels existed.
4. Any of us who play with it at all pay the prices in sore thumbs, latex in the face, and all over the garage and marginal success
5. Continental wanted nothing to do with tubeless
6. Aero wheels would save us all
7. The banning of front disc wheels in Kona meant we couldn't get rear discs for our vendetta without going broke.
But darn it, we didn't give up, and we got all that on the road...
Fast forward, and thankfully, everyone catching up with us on much of this is better, but at what price?
Ok, what price is simple:
1. We have to switch to disc brakes..... grumble, grumble, but yeah, they are better, and we go fast, so I'll concede that one.
2. We have to switch to through-axle because everyone has. I'm going to miss my Quick Release levels (what's going to protect my frame now when I crash), but after working with the through axles for a week, I'm starting to get the hang of it.
3. Tubeless is still a messy affair with the sealant, but at least the tires now mount and hold air on the first try and not the 10th try.
What did we gain:
1. Useable Tubeless - and Continental came to play, finally causing everyone to compete (looking at you, Vittoria) - check
2. Better braking - check
3. New wider tires for great rolling resistance (we told you) - check
4. Wider wheels that allow for wider tires that still can follow the rule of 105 for aero (Rims need to be 5% wider than the mounted tire). - Check
5. Tires that look like they will stay on the rims if you get a flat. (Trust me it's way way better than it was before). - Check
6. A bill for new wheel :sigh:
So per the technical specs thread, I present to you our wheel for this project the Reynolds Black Label Export. View attachment 15835
•Rim Depth: 60mm
•Rim Width: 21mm
•Hubs: Reynolds/Ringle SBX Road DB, 4° engagement, 6 pawl phased
•Front Axle: 12 x 100 Thru Axle
•Rear Axle: 12 x 142 Thru Axle
•Spokes: Sapim CX-Ray
•Nipples: INT Alloy
•Hole Count: 24/24
•Size: 622c
•Weight: 1540g(Set)
Like most wheels, these ship assume you will be using 10/11 speed compatible gearing or that you will stay in the Shimano HyperGlide family of cassettes. In this case, we are going to be using the included XDR Sram Free hub (Wheel ships with HyperGlide plus your choice of one other)
So we grab the free hub and tug; The end cap which is press fit will break free, and both parts can be removed
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Before we install the new free hub, we are going to grease up the engagement teeth inside the hub body. We don't want to overdo it as too much grease could cause the prowls to not engage when pedaling (unlikely on a brand-new wheel). This is a very important step because these free hubs are very loud; the grease will make them much more silent and with as much coasting as we do on a V20c behind the roadie we don't need to be any more annoying. Interestingly note both included hubs only had 3 actual pawl levers with 2 teeth each, meaning the spec is a bit of a lie since the pawl is the lever.
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Next, it's very important to install the free hub upside down bringing the wheel down from above; other wise you'll be crawling around looking for your wayward pawls and spring.
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If you have problems getting the hub installed; yank the axle out completely and then just put the free hub on it. After that, you can reinstall the assembly into the wheel. Either method will work depending on the wheel.
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Give the free hub a good shove down and sping it in the coasting direction until it drops completely in place. Once seated you can reinstall the drive side endcaps. XDR driver end caps are not the same size so be sure to use the ones that came with the new free body. No photos of this one but I can assure yo there are installed.
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