T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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74.1 | Try it first | SUPER::CONNELL | | Thu Jun 05 1986 10:10 | 2 |
| I would definitely not spend $2000 on a bike of strange design that
I had never ridden.
|
74.2 | Ever play nine against seven on the piano ? | EUREKA::REG_B | | Thu Jun 05 1986 14:05 | 14 |
|
Sorry to rain on your dream, but I have to believe that different
cadences for captain and stoker will be *HELL* for the lighter member
of the team (assumed to be your lower cadence, less powerful wife).
Just slowly going in and out of synch with each other is going to
be weird, I doubt that you'll ever get used to it.
Anyway, if that's what you think you want, and that's what they
cost, then make damned sure by test riding one *WITH YOUR WIFE* for
long enough, like at least a 150 mile week-end.
Reg
(Whatever your choice, I hope you enjoy it)
|
74.3 | Tandem answers | JAWS::MHARRIS | Mac | Wed Jun 11 1986 14:03 | 6 |
| Why don't you try posting your question about tandem builders to
the USENET bicycle.net newsgroup? You'd be almost certain to discover
respondents with experience or hearsay to share.
Good luck,
Mac.
|
74.4 | It's a *GO!!!* | LSMVAX::MILLER | Gary Miller | Fri Jun 20 1986 10:26 | 11 |
| I want to fill you in on what I've found.
There are few (50+) Counterpoints on the road today. Most are in the Pacific
Northwest. I have seen and ridden the only one in Mass...it is an answer
to our prayers!. Captain and stoker really can ride together using very
different cadences. Not only that, the bike is made of very standard
componentry with just a few non-standard bells and whistles. I spoke with
several owners, heard a few complaints, but mostly they praised the builder,
the product and the concept.
I'm going to order one today!
I'll keep you all posted on progress as we go along.
Thanks to all of you for your advice and comments.
|
74.5 | Did you get it? | PEANO::BLACK | | Mon May 11 1987 13:33 | 6 |
| Garry (Re: .4):
Did you get it yet? Do you like it?
|
74.6 | GOT IT!! | ISBG::MILLER | Marketing, the oldest profession | Thu May 21 1987 17:28 | 15 |
| The semi is up and running. However, this sometimes bravado cyclist
is out of commission for a few weeks. Tried to take a phone pole
out with the Counterpoint. Score 1 for the pole, and -1 for my
fractured shoulder. Counterpoint survived with a minor scratch.
How do we like it? SUPER!!!My wife and I look foirward to riding
together now. We used to take rides, but we couldn't ride together
due to the differences in our strengths, and her (slight) handicaps.
Now we can converse together, she can make p-nut butter sandwiches
for me, and the bike sure attracts a lot of smiles!
I had hoped to ride it in this week. Now I'll have to wait till
mid-June.
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74.7 | | EUREKA::REG_B | My personal name has expired ? | Thu May 21 1987 17:46 | 6 |
|
re .6 Sorry to hear about the shoulder Gary, best wishes with
the healing process.
Reg
|
74.8 | How's the wife? | NOVA::FISHER | | Tue May 26 1987 06:44 | 6 |
| Injury? Telephone pole? Sorry to hear it, I trust the wife is ok?
Make pd&j on while riding? I can't even do that while riding in
a 4wd pickup, that must be some comfortable seat.
ed
|
74.9 | Wife and Pole are Fine | ISBG::MILLER | Marketing, the oldest profession | Tue May 26 1987 09:49 | 22 |
| Shoulder feeling fine now. I return to the medics for an ex-ray
later today. I hope to start PMC training as soon as I can squeeze
a brake lever with the hand.
HOWS THE WIFE?
Betty watched the whole accident from the middle of the road. You
see, she and I decided to stop.
I did.
she got off.
I started to pull my feet from the toe clips.
@#$!@&%*^$ things were too tight.
I did one of those slo-mo crashes.
It only hurts now when people laugh.
Ed, you never saw such comfort ! It truly is a recumbant seat up
there. My wife rides essentially without having to hold the grips at
all. It took her a bit of time to get over the "lack of control"
fears, but, hey, she's never been able to control me so it was a
short adjustment.
I will have the contraption at a "sho-n-go' sometime soon, so y'all
can try it out.
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74.10 | test ride | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Uphill, Into the Wind | Mon Jul 30 1990 16:28 | 59 |
| We test rode a Counterpoint Opus this weekend. We're counting
pennies tonight, and if we find enough, we'll place the order
tommorow.
My wife isn't athletic, and was unable to find a diamond frame
bike whose seat didn't hurt her crotch. We tried all the standard
tricks (but not the sling seat) with almost no success (she went
from unacceptable pain after 2 miles to unacceptable pain after 5
miles.) I wanted to get a recumbent which I could ride to work on
and she could ride on the weekends (recumbents are much more
adjustable to different people than diamond frames). This would
take some of the strain off my wrists (I don't have carpal tunnell
syndrome yet, and want to keep it that way), and give her a
comfortable bike to ride. That still leaves the problem of my
riding twice as fast (literally, 17 mph vs. 8 mph).
So we tried the Counterpoint Opus. It's wonderful Cynthia wants to
buy one immediately. The front seat is really comfortable (Cynthia
took her hands completely off the handlebars, on a diamond frame
bike she was hesitant to reach the thumb shifters), and she feels
more secure with me steering the tandem than with her steering a
single. It's a bit slower than my touring bike, but with a strong
stoker I'm sure it would be faster. We could make a U-turn in two
lanes, and we may be able to make that a bit tighter, but I don't
expect to be able to do it in one lane. The different cadences
worked well. We only felt out of sync rarely, and most of the time
that was because I was in too high a gear and we were pushing too
hard.
It adjusts easily for very different sized stokers, and with an
option, you can put a child stoker on very easily. I'm told that
kids as young as two have stoked it. (Of course, they coasted a
lot, but because there's a freewheel between the stoker and the
captain, that's not a problem.)
It's expensive because there are a lot of parts and it's hand
made. I think there are 150 of them by now. They list at $3200,
and we'll want to add all the usual extras (water bottles & cages,
a computer, racks for paniers, a large "handlebar" bag hanging
from the back of the stokers seat, which the captain can reach,
an adaptor for my car's roof rack ...) It comes with good
components, so I don't expect to upgrade them, but we'll probably
want a smaller granny chainring.
The rear rack is a standard blackburn rack, and there's room for a
front rack under the stoker. The front rack can hold full size
paniers or front panniers. The "handlebar" bag isn't attached to
the handlebars, and is almost double the size of the large
cannondale handlebar bag. They sell an adapter so the bike will
fit on a Yakima roof rack.
Almost all the components are standard --The front wheel is a 20"
BMX wheel, the rear wheel is a 26" mountain bike wheel, the
deraillers are standard, the three chains are made up from 4
standard chains. The Cantilever brakes are cleverly rigged to get
a little more power. Hydraulic brakes are an option, but I don't
think we'll want to spend for them.
--David (drooling over a new bike)
|
74.11 | Mass. Counterpointer's Club | CSG001::MILLER | Ubi dubium, ibi libertas | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:38 | 20 |
| > We test rode a Counterpoint Opus this weekend. We're counting
> pennies tonight, and if we find enough, we'll place the order
> tommorow.
Just in case anyone in the new England area wants to try the
Counterpoint, I thought I'd let you know where and how we are.
"Dopey", as my grandson has named the Opus, is doing well in Wellfleet,
Massachusetts.
We keep it parked there because most of our riding is on weekends
now, and weekends mean Wellfleet.
It's become a member of the family, now, and we have almost gotten
used to the stares, double takes, and the "AWWWRRIGGGHHHHTTTTT"s
we get from passersby.
I just bought an automobile trailer kit to carry our bikes to and
fro, (hoisting them up atop the brand new Toyota was getting a little
scarey) so Dopey will be spending weekdays with us in Bolton, Ma.
If anyone is interested in seeing, and test riding the Counterpoint,
send me mail and we'll arrange it.
=-=-=-=-g=-=-=-=-
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74.12 | Beautiful bike, ours just arrived | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Uphill, Into the Wind | Thu Sep 06 1990 12:56 | 23 |
| The bike arrived this week, and if we can get home before dark
we'll take it out for a spin tonight. It's beautiful. The paint
color is wonderful (so much so that my wife told me that we're
going to have them paint the water bottle cages and rear rack to
match, rather than using a stock color.) There are lots of details
that are all done well.
The wheels are probably the truest I've seen. Everywhere a chain
gets near metal there's a piece of plastic (teflon) to protect the
metal. There's a clear plastic pad where the boom would touch the
frame when it's folded. They got almost all the details just
right.
There still aren't many around, ours is serial number 141, and
they cost about the same as a more conventional high end tandem.
Ours came to just over $4000, including the mount for a car roof
rack, Phil Woods hubs, an Arai drum brake, and a few other
options.
We're really looking forward to some riding this weekend, and
possibly a week long trip to see the fall foliage.
--David
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74.13 | 9/24/90 G. Larson calendar page | KOOZEE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Mon Sep 24 1990 13:36 | 5 |
| I wonder how many tandem owner will save (frame?) today's page of
the Gary Larson calendar? [Gad, that man is *sick* (and I love it!)]
I bet an Opus II would have been a single WHUMP. (I can just see
that cartoon, the stroker emerging with no captain, stroker's eyes the
size of dinner plates!) - Chris
|