$4000 Bontrager Race?
I smell a scam...
Ride reports and other ramblings from a San Francisco cyclist.
Critical Mass in the US needs to cease, it no longer serves any useful purpose.
If no one is responsible, then everyone is responsible. It is time to protest against Critical Mass, to urge people not to participate. The idea has run its course and is no longer valid. It is no longer cool to be a part of a lawless mob that disrupts the normal way of life, pisses people off, and worst of all perpetrates violence.
Marathon bike-shimmy debugging session tonight. Status: unsuccessful! Things I've tried so far:+++
Saturday 07/19, 6:00am: La Ruta Loca Randonnee, a 200k mixed terrain
route. Meet at the Marina Safeway in San Francisco.
This is a *very* challenging ride, it has ~13-14k feet of climbing, ~
40% of the route is done on fire roads. The updated cue sheet can be
downloaded from http://bike.duque.net/ride-calendar.htm (select La
Ruta Loca Randonnee). If you come please make sure you are truly self
sufficient, we cover some remote areas. Also make sure you pack enough
food and liquids. Front & rear lights are probably a good idea.
Please note this is NOT AN OFFICIAL SFR or RUSA SANCTIONED EVENT, it
is just a harder-than-normal group ride that we'll try to do following
brevet "rules" (13.5 hour time limit, controls, etc.)...
+++
Unfortunately, I won't be joining in due to familial obligations.


What do I mean by this? Both of the lights above are based on LEDs that were state-of-the-art six months to a year ago. I don't know for certain, but I'd guess that both lights are based on Cree 7090 XR-E LEDs. The efficiency of these LEDs, ranked by their bin codes, improves constantly -- caught up in a sort-of arms race with other LED manufacturers (Luxeon and SSC), Cree seems to produce ever-higher bin codes every few months. Since it takes many months (to a year or more) to imagine, develop, prototype, manufacture, and ship a commercial product, what this ultimately means is that the commercial bike-lights you can buy today aren't using the best components available now!
Additionally, the Edelux and E3 are both single-emitter (one LED) lights. While these designs may be brighter than their halogen-incandescent predecessors, many folks are still choosing to run multiple lights on their bikes for increased output. At over US$100 each, these lights aren't cheap, and mounting two is even more costly. Why duplicate things -- I don't see the need for the extra lamp housing, wiring, switch, etc. required by the second light unit? Why not simply make multi-emitter dynohub-powered lights, with two (or more) LEDs in a single casing? This adds only the minimal cost and weight of the extra LEDs, and is the option most DIY projects take.
I've now ridden just over 200 miles in just under two months on my Kogswell 700C P/R bicycle, so I feel qualified to offer up some longer-term impressions of the bike.> Is there a summary anywhere of the differences between the first and
> second batches of P/R's?
The down tube changed from 31.8 x 0.6 x 0.9 to 28.6 x 0.6 x 0.9.
The top tube changed from 28.6 x 0.6 x 0.9 to 28.6 x 0.5 x 0.8.
Finally, I decided to try the same front load on another bicycle entirely. I mounted a spare front rack on my mid-trail (59mm) Nishiki Sport and attached my handlebar bag to the rack (see photo). I expected this bike to ride like crap with this front load, but in a short test ride I was surprised to discover that it wasn't actually all that bad. In fact, it wasn't significantly different than how the Kogswell felt with a front load! AND that bike didn't shimmy. At all! Ultimately, this makes me wonder if my entire low-trail experiment is a failure!?! There's one last thing to try...I have a second fork with more offset (67 mm), intended to produce around 32 mm of trail on this bike. I need to try that and see what the effects are.