T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1653.1 | touring or mountain? | ABACUS::GUYER | | Mon Jul 23 1990 12:32 | 8 |
| Hi JT. You said you were looking for a sport touring bike. Aren't the
bikes you listed mountain bikes? I know the Trek 420 is. I don't
think you want to do touring on a mountain bike. If you plan to ride
on the road there are many road bikes with a tripple crank.
This may be above your price range but Buchikas has a Miyata 701. It's
aluminum, has a tripple crank and SLR brakes. It's very light and
rides great, really soaks up those bumps. It's $550.
|
1653.2 | | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | | Mon Jul 23 1990 13:59 | 4 |
| I guess Im looking for a touring bike, but Id like to get triple
crank 18-21 gears, and stay near the 400 dollar range.
So what is available with some "Pro" components? Any low end bikes
that are best buys for this range. INdexed gears are nice.
|
1653.3 | Check the Trek 520 for touring | BAGELS::GOTANTAS | | Mon Jul 23 1990 14:38 | 7 |
| According to the catalog that I have, the Trek 420 is a road bike. It
has a CroMoly frame, triple crank, Suntour components. But it doesn't
have cantilever brakes. If you're planning to do any touring with
panniers, you should check out the 520. It has a CroMoly frame, triple
crank, bar-end index shifters, Shimano components, cantilever brakes
and it comes with a Blackburn rack. I don't know the price, however.
|
1653.4 | Ride some and pick. | ABACUS::GUYER | | Tue Jul 24 1990 10:05 | 22 |
| I guess I better check my specs. Bought my son a trek 430 less than a
month ago, it's a mountain bike. Thought the 420 was too. Maybe they
use the same numbers.
Nashbar usually has good value for the money but you don't get a Brand
name bike. I know they have a decent bike in that price range. Usually
a good component set. Almost anything you buy new will be 18 to 21
speed indexed shifting (mostly 21). Even the lower priced ones work
very well.
The lowest prices I have found have been at Naults in Manchester and S
and W Sports in Concord, NH. They both carry Trek and others. Naults
is not known for their service. Buchika's in Salem NH is a little
higher but will do almost anything to a bike to make you happy and they
guarantee the fit. They don't carry Trek but they carry many other
good bikes. I have noticed that Trek tends to put a higher level of
components on their bike for the money but don't limit yourself. I
don't think there are any significant differences in bikes at any given
price range. Ride a few and pick the one that is most comfortable for
you. That's the real answer.
Earl (sorry for the mistake)
|
1653.5 | Opinions on Cannondale, Trek, Miyata sport/tourers? | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:23 | 73 |
| Well, this isn't EXACTLY the same question since the bikes I'm looking
at are a bit more than $400, but...
I have the urge for an EVERYTHING bike - a road bike that will be quick
and precise for unloaded riding in the 30-100+ mile range (no racing - I
left my aero-body behind 20 years ago). I'd like it to have a nice
feel and be nimble. AT THE SAME TIME, I want to be able to load up a
set of panniers and rack bag, put the handlebar bag on, and maybe even
a set of front panniers and ride loaded with something between the
"credit-card" tour and the full "carry your whole tent, stove, world"
tour.
I've rummaged everything in here with titles on "tour", "trek",
"cannondale", "Miyata"... and it seems that the general feeling is
that aluminum frames are fine for "big" people like me - in the 245 lb
range, but steel forks are preferred.
So, I've looked at 3 bikes here in MPO and could use comments on how
folks feel they compare for ride, equipment, suitability, etc. I have
ridden a Cannondale and the Trek, but cannot find a Miyata in my size
anywhere in town. The Trek and Cannondale ride "differently", but
neither seems "BETTER". And, of course, neither was loaded with any
bags.
I checked a few size measurements on these bikes and don't see a WHOLE
lot of difference between them and my Trek 660. For example, the top
tube on any of these is only about 1 cm longer and the wheelbase is
within an inch. On my Trek, if I put rear panniers on (small ones) I
have to put them far back on the rack to keep my heels from rubbing
them when I pedal (long cranks, long feet!). Is the additional length
in the chainstays?
Anyhow, take a look down here, crank it up, and hit me with your best
shot!
Cannondale Trek Miyata
ST600 1100 721A
Frame Aluminum Aluminum Aluminum
Fork Mang-Moly Chrome-moly Chrome-moly
Crank Mountain-LX SR Edge 500 LX
Derailleurs Deore LX Edge GX 500 LX
Hub/rim/tire Deore LX 36 Sansin 32 500 LX
Mistral M17 Matrix Titan
Michelin Select Matrix CD-3
Price $589 $549 $550
My opinion is that the Trek, although they say it is a "touring" bike
is not. It uses 32 spoke wheels, and has no brazeons for the 4-point
mounting rear rack or drillings for the front panniers, although one
place in town says they have one with the eyelets on the fork.
The Cannondale (I rode an ST400 - same frame different components)
seemed a BIT stiffer (harsher?) on turns... But, it has full mounts,
braze-ons, drillings, and ATB style brakes. It also uses 36-spoke
wheels.
A friend has a Miyata 721. She prefers it over the Cannondale she
tried, but has no empirical reason. She just prefers the way it
handles and says it feels more like a sport bike than a tourer.
So, have at it... I don't really WANT to start a holy war, just after
the best choice for what I'm likely to be doing!
Thanks,
David Perez - not losing much weight, but getting faster!
|
1653.6 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:40 | 10 |
|
I agree with you that the Trek 1100 really isn't an all-out
touring bike. It's built on the same frame as the 1000, which
is intended for entry-level racing. Yeah, it has some braze-ons
and the low gears of a touring bike, but its frame geometry isn't
intended for heavy loads. From the type of load you describe, it
sounds like you might be in for some fishtailing with an 1100.
Sharon (soon to be the owner of one of these beasties... :-)
|
1653.7 | touring - try a light road-racing bike, compare to crit. | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Fri Jul 27 1990 11:15 | 29 |
| > I have the urge for an EVERYTHING bike - a road bike that will be quick
> and precise for unloaded riding in the 30-100+ mile range (no racing - I
> left my aero-body behind 20 years ago). I'd like it to have a nice
> feel and be nimble. AT THE SAME TIME, I want to be able to load up a
> set of panniers and rack bag, put the handlebar bag on, and maybe even
> a set of front panniers and ride loaded with something between the
> "credit-card" tour and the full "carry your whole tent, stove, world"
> tour.
Well, the quickest handling bikes you'll likely see are those designed
for criterium racing. Try a few, just to get the feel - real stiff
geometry, short wheelbase, handling borders on squirrely.... then
discard the idea of owning one if you wanna tour on it! Then go out and
try something in the category of a long-distance road racing frame,
perhaps they'd call it an 'entry-level' racing frame, as prev. reply
indicated. It should handle a lot more stable than the crit. bike. Now,
imagine that with a set of racks, etc. that the handling will get
somewhat closer to the handling of the crit bike (altho much slower, due
to the weight). The weight of touring gear tends to make the bike wander
just a bit more and be a touch harder to control; good riding technique
will compensate A LOT for this, tho.
Anyway, I've done a number of tours on road-racing bikes (tent, stove,
sleeping bag) and IMHO, it's the WAY TO GO! As for components, esp. for
touring, go for heavy duty wheels; get a lighter set for unloaded riding
if you want. I certainly wouldn't tour with anything but 36-spoke
wheels, but you'll be able to get them on any of the bikes you were
looking at.
ken
|
1653.8 | John Lee Ellis rides a De Rosa | CIMNET::MJOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 291-7856 | Fri Jul 27 1990 15:04 | 3 |
| I'd say that says it all.
MATT
|
1653.9 | | WAV13::DELORIEA | Jerseys @#%@!& Jerseys | Fri Jul 27 1990 15:58 | 4 |
| The Cannondale has better componets and ride better loaded with gear. Too
harsh a ride for ya... Get a set of tubular wheels for it ;-)
Tom_who_loves_to_ride_on_tubulars_but_can_no_longer_afford_it_for_everyday_use
|
1653.10 | Road Racing for Touring? | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Jul 27 1990 22:10 | 21 |
|
I agree with .7 and .8.
I've done my touring the last umpteen years (ok, since 1982)
on bikes that were designed for Road Racing. Not short-course
American racing. All-day-on-the-bike cross-country road racing.
Three of the tours have been light camping (much to the horror of
my friends when they hear I'm subjecting the bike to this!); the
rest have been B&B touring.
I've been pretty happy with these bikes carrying a load. (All
three have been Italian, by the way; just a coincidence.) The
one that does best is the one with the SLX tubing ... and that's
the one I've come in for most grief using on a tour.
The downsides are: (1) no braze-ons for panniers, etc. (but this
is surmountable; (2) vague sense of guilt.
I bet you can find something in this category that suits you.
Good luck!
-john
|
1653.11 | Thanks for the input - keep it coming! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Sat Jul 28 1990 01:25 | 92 |
| AAAAAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!
People, people, you gotta work with me on this... I was HOPING this
would be SIMPLE! Ah, well, if it was easy anybody could do it!
re .6:
> I agree with you that the Trek 1100 really isn't an all-out
> touring bike. It's built on the same frame as the 1000, which
> is intended for entry-level racing. Yeah, it has some braze-ons
> and the low gears of a touring bike, but its frame geometry isn't
> intended for heavy loads. From the type of load you describe, it
> sounds like you might be in for some fishtailing with an 1100.
Does "all-out touring bike" mean a mile long, slow turning, only
comfortable when loaded with 50 pounds of stuff? Kind of the
full-sized station wagon of bikes? If so, I'm after something closer
to a sport sedan... Not a ferrari, but something in between.
re .7:
>Well, the quickest handling bikes you'll likely see are those designed
>for criterium racing. Try a few, just to get the feel - real stiff
>geometry, short wheelbase, handling borders on squirrely.... then
>discard the idea of owning one if you wanna tour on it! Then go out and
>try something in the category of a long-distance road racing frame,
>perhaps they'd call it an 'entry-level' racing frame, as prev. reply
In the spectrum from criterium frames on one end to full-blown heavily
loaded touring frames on the other, where does my Trek 660 fall? I
always regarded it as a sport frame (step below an entry-level racing
frame). The wheelbase doesn't seem exceptionally short to me, nor the
handling squirrelly. And yet, it has no braze-ons or such... Can you
give a couple examples of normally available long-distance road racing
frames (Findable at a Trek or Cannondale dealer) if the 660 isn't one.
>Anyway, I've done a number of tours on road-racing bikes (tent, stove,
>sleeping bag) and IMHO, it's the WAY TO GO! As for components, esp. for
How do you handle the problem of carrying loads? My 660 works with a
rack, but the load is fairly far back. The bike rides OK, but the
fish-tailing mentioned above is a good way to describe the sensation.
And, if I don't keep the panniers all the way back on the rack, my feet
hit the pannier. How do you avoid this problem?
>touring, go for heavy duty wheels; get a lighter set for unloaded riding
>if you want. I certainly wouldn't tour with anything but 36-spoke
>wheels, but you'll be able to get them on any of the bikes you were
>looking at.
Wheels aren't a problem... Even to haul my overlarge carcass around
the block I use large flange Dura-Ace hubs with Mavic MA40 rims laced
4-cross using 14-ga stainless DT spokes mounted with Kevlar belted
tires. I built these last year when I weighed about 285 and they
worked great then, they should carry the load now!
re .9:
> The Cannondale has better componets and ride better loaded with gear. Too
>harsh a ride for ya... Get a set of tubular wheels for it ;-)
Does this mean the Cannondale is a poor choice if I spend most of my
time doing shorter, unloaded rides?
re .10:
> I've done my touring the last umpteen years (ok, since 1982)
> on bikes that were designed for Road Racing. Not short-course
> American racing. All-day-on-the-bike cross-country road racing.
> Three of the tours have been light camping (much to the horror of
> my friends when they hear I'm subjecting the bike to this!); the
> rest have been B&B touring.
Can you give some specification on what makes these frames the kind of
frames they are? tube angles, wheelbase, etc... Where do the three
bikes I've listed fall in comparison to what you use?
> I bet you can find something in this category that suits you.
Again using the spectrum from criterium to heavy-touring, am I correct
that the Trek 1100 is closest to a racing frame, then the Miyata more
of a compromise sport/light-touring, then the Cannondale as a bike that
is happier with a load? If so
The concensus seems to be that a "touring" bike such as the ST600 may
not be the best choice. Rather, something like the Trek 1100 with
suitable wheels, or the Miyata, would be closer to an all-around bike,
fast and comfortable unloaded, while still providing SOME of the
fittings for racks and such for loaded riding?
Jeez, I think I'm more confused now than I was before!
|
1653.12 | I got one!.. | SALEM::TAYLOR_J | | Sat Jul 28 1990 11:56 | 2 |
| Just to let ya' know, I ender up buying a Specialized crossroads
for 399 at goodales Im pretty happy with it.
|
1653.13 | Fuji Saratoga | MILKWY::CRITCHLOW | | Mon Jul 30 1990 08:38 | 29 |
| > Does "all-out touring bike" mean a mile long, slow turning, only
> comfortable when loaded with 50 pounds of stuff? Kind of the
> full-sized station wagon of bikes? If so, I'm after something closer
> to a sport sedan... Not a ferrari, but something in between.
I own one of the three, maybe four real touring bikes sold
in the last few years. It is a Fuji Saratoga. I love it! I
know most of the macho roadster types out there won't
understand why, but who cares. The bike cost about $550 in
early '89. I got it for about $440.
This bike is "really" made for touring. The frame is fairly
stretched out and likes to go in a straight line. Since I
bought this bike to haul my son (and now a trailer) this is
an important feature. No it is not a ferrari, but I doubt
you will find as bid a difference between bikes as people
will tell you. Clearly there is a bigger difference in
handling between a ferrari and a station wagon :-).
My bike has three water bottle braze-ons, front and rear
rack braze-ons, extra spokes mounted to the chain stay, a
40 spoke rear wheel, triple crank with 13-30 rear cluster,
indexed shifting etc etc. I haven't tried panniers on the
bike but it handled well with my som in a seat.
Just my view......
JC
|
1653.14 | think small, think 20-25% forward... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Mon Jul 30 1990 10:01 | 23 |
| >>Anyway, I've done a number of tours on road-racing bikes (tent, stove,
>>sleeping bag) and IMHO, it's the WAY TO GO! As for components, esp. for
> How do you handle the problem of carrying loads? My 660 works with a
> rack, but the load is fairly far back. The bike rides OK, but the
> fish-tailing mentioned above is a good way to describe the sensation.
> And, if I don't keep the panniers all the way back on the rack, my feet
> hit the pannier. How do you avoid this problem?
My solution was to: get the smallest set of panniers available (those of
you who've toured will recognize this as an important concept), which
also have a slanted front edge so your feet don't collide. If you have
more stuff than will fit in the smallest panniers, leave it at home. If
you absolutely gotta have more, a smallish handlebar bag works OK, esp.
for small junk you might want in a hurry, and mine has a map pocket,
which I've found useful when following route maps. For B&B tours w/sag
like a Vermont Bike Touring trip I took years ago, the HB bag is plenty.
Keeping the weight down and shifting some of it forward are excellent
ways to retain decent handling.
As for what's a currently avail. road-racing bike of the type we been
talking about, ya got me there! I seem to have enough bikes that I never
go around test-riding them in the stores...
ken
|
1653.15 | A road racer (not crit) bike with SLX is the ticket | CIMNET::MJOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 291-7856 | Mon Jul 30 1990 10:03 | 24 |
|
Head Seat
Angle Angle Wheelbase Feel Intended Use
--------------------------------------------------------
Criterium 74-75 74-75 Very Short Stiff 0-100km rides
Squirelly
Road Racing 73.5-75 73-73.5 Fairly Short Light 100km+ rides
Precise
Firm(SL)
Stiff(SLX)
Sport/Touring 73-73.5 73 Average Pliant Casual use
Full Touring 72-73 72-73 Long Heavy 150km+ w/load
Stable
Criterium bikes make bad touring machines because 1) their stiffness
makes for a punishing ride, and 2) their more upright seat tube
transmits all this shock to the rider's back. Road racing bikes,
on the other hand, have a more comfortable ride, with the quick
turning one would expect out of a racer. SLX or similar
tubing (somewhat stiff for normal riding conditions) makes the handling
work better under a load.
|
1653.16 | ST600 Bias | ABACUS::GUYER | | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:01 | 14 |
| I recent bought the ST600. I rode the miyata and liked the ride and
handling unloaded but when pushed it seems a little loose in the back.
I'm about 200lbs. I was concerned that when I loaded it up it would
get much worse. The 721 is not intended for heavy touring, no braze
ons on the front, smaller tires, non-cantilever brakes (although they
are nice). If you put larger tires on it there is no quick release for
the brakes to make them easy to get off.
I don't know if the bike you want exists. Personaly I find the
cannondale responsive for a touring bike. I do a lot of unloaded
riding and like it. It has the longest wheelbase of the bikes you
mentioned (longer chainstays) and should give the most room for your
paniers. If you can get one for that price it's a great deal. I paid
$700 for mine and the factory list is $750.
|
1653.17 | SR1000 | WFOV12::SISE | | Mon Jul 30 1990 11:49 | 13 |
| I happen to have the 1990 Cannondale cat. in my office. The ST1000
looks like it is a nice "touring" bike @28.5 pounds. This includes
a Brooks Team Pro saddle, front racks, rear rack, 3 bottle cages,
Esge fenders, and has cantilever brakes, a triple sealed headset,
Suntour Grease Guard BB, and sealed hubs. Looks as if they thought
it may get ridden in the rain :-).
I think the 28.5lbs is with out water in the bottles! But is still
a light bike. And it has ROUND chain rings unlike the ST600.
My big beef with cannondale is WHY don't they make a touring/tandem
frame set in 24", 23 to 25 is a big jump. 60-61 is ok but 63.5
is TOOO big.
|
1653.18 | Looks like the choices are getting fewer! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Tue Jul 31 1990 01:45 | 89 |
| re .13:
> I own one of the three, maybe four real touring bikes sold
> in the last few years. It is a Fuji Saratoga. I love it! I
Is this an aluminum or steel frame? One of the local stores mentioned
the Fuji Saratoga, but admitted they have NOT had one in a LONG time.
They indicated they could probably get one for me, but had little
interest in talking about it.
re .14:
>My solution was to: get the smallest set of panniers available (those of
>you who've toured will recognize this as an important concept), which
>also have a slanted front edge so your feet don't collide. If you have
Good grief, it looks like it I did something right. I bought a set of
Madden panniers that are small and have just the slanted edge you
mentioned. Not because I knew anything, but because they were on sale
for $25/set!
>If you absolutely gotta have more, a smallish handlebar bag works OK, esp.
>for small junk you might want in a hurry, and mine has a map pocket,
>which I've found useful when following route maps. For B&B tours w/sag
I think I'm gettin' it... I got the small handlebar bag - small enough
so I CAN'T put enough junk into it to screw up the steering, but big
enough to hold the odd hanky and other little goodies!
re .15:
> Criterium bikes make bad touring machines because 1) their stiffness
> makes for a punishing ride, and 2) their more upright seat tube
> transmits all this shock to the rider's back. Road racing bikes,
> on the other hand, have a more comfortable ride, with the quick
> turning one would expect out of a racer. SLX or similar
> tubing (somewhat stiff for normal riding conditions) makes the handling
> work better under a load.
Well, it isn't SLX, but my 660 is double-butted True Temper chromo.
What I don't know is the angles. I was bored yesterday, so I took my
tape measure and got myself to some dealers...
Found that the Trek 1100 and Miyata 721 are the same dimension in top
tube, chainstay, and wheelbase as my 660, and they both showed the same
seattube and head angles. I don't know what the angles on the 660 are,
so I don't know if it is the same as the other two. BUT, unfortunately,
the Miyata 721A does not come in a size larger than 60 cm (about
23.5"), so it is out since I would like at least a 62 cm and would be
happy with a 63 cm (about 25").
I rode another 1100 (took the time to have them set the seat and stem
heights better) and liked the way the frame felt. Also, the brakes
were excellent. BUT (and please no flames from 1100 owners) - the rest
of the bike did NOT feel good at all. The shifting was not very
positive and precise - one of the things I like about my Ultegra/Dura
Ace setup is that when I move the shift level there is NO doubt where
its going - the shift is always VERY positive. In comparison, the 1100
just didn't have anywhere close to the same nice feel or action. And
those wheels - does a 32-spoke, 15-ga, 3-cross wheel on a 62cm frame
(which I assume is for a fairly large person) sound like a combination
sport/touring wheel?
re .16:
> I don't know if the bike you want exists. Personaly I find the
> cannondale responsive for a touring bike. I do a lot of unloaded
> riding and like it. It has the longest wheelbase of the bikes you
> mentioned (longer chainstays) and should give the most room for your
> paniers. If you can get one for that price it's a great deal. I paid
> $700 for mine and the factory list is $750.
You're exactly what I have been looking for. In comparison to everything
else I looked at, the ST600 is almost 4" longer - 2.75 of it in the
chainstays. How is it unloaded. I assume I'll do probably 80% or more
of my riding unloaded, so good performance and comfort unloaded are
very important. Of all the choices, if I decide I want something more
suited to touring it sounds like the Cannondale is the way to go. I
even have a local dealer that will get me one for $590, although I have
to give them a $50 downpayment for them to order it. I WISH I could
find one to try out locally!
I have to apologize for confusing things worse, but I have a
question... There is a local custom shop that advertises that they
can/will braze on the eyelets and other desired mounts and stuff for
rear and/or front racks and such. Then a nice IMRON paint job. Is
this a reasonable alternative? I'm leery of letting anyone fiddle
around with heat and brazing and such on my frame... has anyone had
any experience with having this done?
|
1653.19 | new braze-ons | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jul 31 1990 08:53 | 6 |
|
I've had a braze-on replaced, and then the bike repainted (Imron).
Seems fine. But it's a shame to do this to a new bike. The whole
process is disruptive and not cheap.
-john
|
1653.20 | don't do it 'til you know it's a keeper... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Hat floating? It's MUD SEASON! | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:53 | 15 |
| I had a bike that needed some braze-ons etc. so I took it to the shop
and they told me the whole thing would run about 150$ (~~ 6 yrs ago)
incl. the paint job. Coincidentally the owner had just repainted his own
531 DB frame (he had built it and raced it a couple years) and was
selling it for (surprise!) 150$. So I skipped upgrading the old frame
and made it into a track bike. Later I had occasion to have another
frame re-painted and braze-ons applied, and it came out beautiful.
However, I'd already cannabalized the parts to build up the other frame
I got from them, sigh....
Anywhee, I'd suggest NOT munging with a new frame as it can be a
significant part of the cost of another frame. Wait til you ride it for
a while, if you really like it and the paint's getting beat, then fork
over to get it re-painted and brazed.....
ken
|
1653.21 | More on the Saratoga | VOYAGR::CRITCHLOW | | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:39 | 26 |
| The Saratoga is Cromoly Ishiwata triple butted (?).
The bike weighs about 25 pounds. That is about standard or
perhaps a bit above standard for tourers.
It seems to me that the more recent models come with
barcon shifters.
I noticed a little reluctance from dealers in talking about
the saratoga when I bought it in Jan 89. I felt that it was
because touring bikes are not "cool" anymore. They couldn't
be bothered with the old news kinds of bikes. New and
exciting only. Frankly, I found it sort of frustrating...
Seems fitting that the only guy who didn't give me a load
of baloney about touring bikes was the one who got the
sale. I actually hadn't realized that until now.
If you can't find one to ride, then I wouldn't recommend
having the shop order it unless you can have them do it
with no obligation to you. It doesn't seem likely that it
will work out that way. I like the bike, but who says that
you will....
Good Luck,
JC
|
1653.22 | ride offer | ABACUS::GUYER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:20 | 23 |
| Most of my riding is unloaded, like you. My ST600 is a little stiff,
all Cannondales are, but is still comfortable. It's Very stable yet
easy to dodge surprize potholes, etc. No mistake, it's not a racing
bike, but I feel it is an excellent compromise if you need to do some
loaded touring too. It's light for a touring bike, 24 Lbs. For me
that only means it's easier to lift onto the bike rack.
I live in Bedford NH. and work in Nashua I'm more than willing to let
you ride mine. It's a 23" frame but I put a higher stem on it, I'm
6'1".
I had a very difficult locating a 23" frame. Ended up going way up
north for it.
The ST600 has all the braze ons you could want. Three water bottles,
front and rear racks. Personnaly, I would not have baze ons attached
to an aluminum frame like the c-dale by anyone other than the factory.
Re-tempering of the aluminum is too critical.
Give me a call of you want more information or to set up a ride.
Earl
264-4579
|
1653.23 | Hm... maybe a correspondence welding course? | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Wed Aug 01 1990 00:33 | 34 |
| re: last several:
As far as the Fuji Saratoga - I talked to the only local place that
would even talk about the bike and they are seriously disinterested in
getting one unless I want to give them 100% of list UP FRONT! I get
the distinct impression that they are not interested. At least the
Cannondale dealer only wants $50.
As far as add-on braze-ons - I definitely won't buy anything new that
I'm going to have to modify. If I do anything, I'll have my 660 (which
I've put about 2500 miles on) modified. But, as more information comes
in I"m leaning more and more toward keeping the 660 as it is and either
selling it or having 2 bikes, and looking further afield for a
Cannondale to try. I spoke to a shop within a couple hour drive that
has a 23" that I can try.
re -.1:
>I live in Bedford NH. and work in Nashua I'm more than willing to let
>you ride mine. It's a 23" frame but I put a higher stem on it, I'm
>6'1".
I appreciate the offer, but being in Minneapolis, it would make for a
fairly long day! Fortunately, as I said above, I found one in the
direction I'll be heading this weekend, so I'll give it a try.
>The ST600 has all the braze ons you could want. Three water bottles,
>front and rear racks. Personnaly, I would not have baze ons attached
>to an aluminum frame like the c-dale by anyone other than the factory.
>Re-tempering of the aluminum is too critical.
Yeah, common sense is starting to prevail - I think I'll just order
something with the right fittings and not have someone fiddling around!
|
1653.24 | One happy camper - metric century to come! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Mon Aug 13 1990 03:20 | 54 |
| FANFARE PLEASE...
After much deliberation, testing, research, advice from folks in here,
wandering, and just plain guessing...
There is now parked in the garage, a brand new, shiny, sparkling,
bright red
Cannondale ST600
OK, silliness aside, after 5 days and about 100 miles, I have concluded
that this is far and away the best thing I've ever ridden.
I don't want to start a holy war, and I love my Trek 660, but this
Cannondale is incredible. It is more comfortable, faster, and an
absolute joy to ride. It feels like it has very nearly the quickness
of my 660, but is much more stable and smooth. The frame feels rock
steady but still very quick - not a station wagon at all. The
cantilever brakes stop this thing absolutely even with soaking wet
rims, and the SLR brakes were always VERY controllable. The Deore
derailleurs make shifting very quick and precise, and the shifting
under load (hyperglide?) is extremely easy. The 21-speed close-ratio
shifting with half-step + granny chainrings makes finding just the
right gear a joy. The Michelin Select tires seem sturdy and roll very
easily. Even the saddle is quite comfortable, although I haven't the
foggiest idea what "VETTASKIN" is.
It may appear a little harsh to a lighter rider, but with my 240 lb
carcass on the saddle (I think I'm the equivalent of a normal rider
plus loaded panniers) it feels just great.
Anyhow, once I rode one of these there was NO comparison with either
the Miyata 721A or the Trek 1100.
I only made one change, and that was to put a set of the Spenco grips
on the bars.
HOWEVER, on the downside: the Mistral M17 rims SUCK - BIG TIME!!!!!!!
The dealer hand-trued the rear before I took delivery. In 100 miles
over 4 days, I've had to retrue it 4 times. I mean OUT-OF-TRUE a LOT.
Tomorrow I'll give Now Sports a shot at fixing it, but I think I'll
wind up having to talk to Cannondale. This is exactly the same problem
I used to have on the Trek until I installed a set of Mavic MA-40 rims.
I built the wheels myself, trued them once at about 200 miles, and
haven't had to retrue in the last 1200. If I have to I'll put Mavics
on the Cannondale too, but somebody is gonna listen to some screaming
first! I would think it was just a bad rim, but even the FRONT one has
had to be trued 3 times! I would figure I'm just too heavy for the
Mistral rims, but considering that a lighter rider could carry enough
additional gear to equal my weight this doesn't fit. Suggestions?
Do any of you other Cannondale owners know if Rhode Gear Flick Stands
come in a size for the Cannondale. I haven't seen one and I'd like to
put one on.
|
1653.25 | Spokes not rims | JUMBLY::MACFADYEN | Just like you, but different | Mon Aug 13 1990 10:09 | 22 |
| About your wheel problems, I'd blame the spokes before blaming the
rims, and I'd guess that they weren't stressed when the wheel was
built. Since you sound prepared to tackle wheels, I'd recommend that
you do the following:
1. Standing with the wheel vertical on the ground between your legs,
take an old screwdriver and jam the handle down all the spoke
crossings. Don't use *all* your weight, but lean hard enough that the
spokes look quite bent and go really tight.
This process takes up the initial give in the spokes and stretches them
slightly, so after you do this they'll be noticeably slacker.
2. Retighten and true the spokes. Aim for a fairly high spoke tension,
so that turning the spoke nipple becomes difficult.
Don't bother doing this yourself if you're not confident! However if
you do, I bet your wheels will settle down.
Rod
|
1653.26 | good choice | ABACUS::GUYER | | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:57 | 7 |
| Congratulations. Glad to see you bought the ST600. I love mine.
Guess I've been lucky but I haven't had any wheel problems as yet,
(about 600 miles). I did notice recently there is no fine adjustment
for the rear brake. I'm planning on trying my own add on to solve that
problem. Does someone make one? It seems like an easy thing to fix.
Earl
|
1653.27 | questions | BALMER::MUDGETT | He's reading notes again, Mom! | Mon Aug 13 1990 16:43 | 17 |
| Hi PEREZ,
I've got a couple piercing questions,
PIERCING QUESTION #1: I can believe that the CANNONDALE has less
flex than the TREK 660, that should be because the Cdale is
aluminum and big tube vs cromoly/little tube however I have
a TREK 1100 and it doesn't appear to have any flex in it. Did
you not like the 1100 for that reason or was it some other reason?
PIERCING QUESTION #2: Is the best way to buy a new set of wheels
to get them made by hand? I've bought a couple sets from cashbaaaa
and specialized and had to have them tightened and trued, in the
future I think I'll get them handmade by a local craftsman type.
It looks like the machine -made wheels get finished.
Fred Mudgett
|
1653.28 | hand-builts can be good or bad... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | IronFish Tamer. | Mon Aug 13 1990 17:10 | 25 |
| >PIERCING QUESTION #2: Is the best way to buy a new set of wheels
>to get them made by hand? I've bought a couple sets from cashbaaaa
Hmmm. How's a Piercing, Resounding "maybe?" go over?
Hand-built wheels vary all over the map in quality. I got a set of HB's
on my Eisentraut, guy was very proud of them. Pride's one thing, but
these are terrible wheels. They need frequent attention, but I don't
feel like re-building them right now, as that's a project for when I
have more spare wheels around! The BEST wheel you're ever likely to see
WILL be a hand-made one, but builders aren't all created equal. As far
as commercial wheels go, most of them will at least have final truing,
etc. done by hand, but I suspect ordering from a big M.O. place they
have a small army of people building their "stock" wheel combos and
their maestro comes out to bat when you order a real fancy or unusual
combination of things. Also, in some cases, you may be able to specify
if you are a heavier rider or want the wheels built "extra-tight" and
you'll probably get something closer to what you want.
I once had the mis-fortune to deal with wheels from an (in)famous frame
builder in Winnipeg. They had gone a bit out-of true, but the wheels
were laced SO tight that I broke several spokes trying to LOOSEN them!
Fortunately, this guy's rep. spread around our area and we didn't ever
see too many more of his frames or wheels....
ken
|
1653.29 | Cannondale and I will chat tomorrow morning | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Tue Aug 14 1990 00:04 | 116 |
| re .25:
> About your wheel problems, I'd blame the spokes before blaming the
> rims, and I'd guess that they weren't stressed when the wheel was
> built. Since you sound prepared to tackle wheels, I'd recommend that
> you do the following:
>
> 1. Standing with the wheel vertical on the ground between your legs,
> take an old screwdriver and jam the handle down all the spoke
> crossings. Don't use *all* your weight, but lean hard enough that the
> spokes look quite bent and go really tight.
This was EXACTLY the second thing I did (the first night I just
retrued)... It helped reduce the amount of warpage.
> Don't bother doing this yourself if you're not confident! However if
> you do, I bet your wheels will settle down.
Too late - THE SAGA CONTINUES (sorry guys, its long-winded but I'm
still a trifle peeved)!!!!!!! Last night I psent a little time on the
truing stand and carefully stressed the wheel from each side after each
round of truing. Was somewhat better. Finally got it to the point
where it was "OK".
Tonight I went out for my after-work ride. Put on the shorts and
shirt, shoes and all... then took the bike off the rack... AND SAT IT
ON THE REAR RIM... TOTAL BLOWOUT! Tire blown off the rim. I took the
tube out (complete with 4 inch rip), and started looking at the rim.
About a fourth of the spokes were THROUGH THE NIPPLES AND STICKING
THROUGH THE RIM TAPE! All the freewheel side were significantly too
long. And, the rim had assumed the shape of a strung bow! I mean
we're talking about at least a 2" warp. After speaking loudly and
eloquently about parentage, sexual preference, bodily functions, and
other such profundities, with appropriate gestures and histrionics, I
got in the car and headed for Now Sports where I'd bought the bike.
After some soft but emphatic discussion the wheel builder (not the
mechanic, this guy JUST builds SOME wheels) decided he would replace
the rim and argue with Cannondale later (he admitted there was
something SIGNIFICANTLY wrong with the rim. I requested that since he
was rebuilding anyway, please build the wheel 4-cross. No sweat, we
all parted friends.
An hour later I got a phone call from him. He had called his boss (the
overall service manager) to see if they had the longer spokes at
another store, and was told - have me bring in THE WHOLE BIKE so they
could look at it, and then they'd talk to Cannondale, and the bike
could sit there while they went through the steps, and HOPEFULLY they
COULD GET IT FIXED THIS WEEK!!!!!
So, I called the boss directly and - as it turns out they WON'T need
the whole bike, the new wheel will be ready at 5:00 tomorrow, and it
WILL be laced 4-cross. We'll see how it turns out.
re .26:
> Congratulations. Glad to see you bought the ST600. I love mine.
> Guess I've been lucky but I haven't had any wheel problems as yet,
Thanks. I agree with the folks at the store that the wheel problem is
a fluke. Something is wrong with this rim. Either they screwed up
building it, it was warped, or something. I can't imagine that it is
typical of all Mistral rims.
> (about 600 miles). I did notice recently there is no fine adjustment
> for the rear brake. I'm planning on trying my own add on to solve that
> problem. Does someone make one? It seems like an easy thing to fix.
Mine has a fine adjustment screw for the rear brake. What it doesn't
have is a cam for releasing the brake. On the back you pull the cable
that straddles the cantilevers out of one side to release the brake.
I'd like to get a quick release cam, but it isn't a big problem. Does
yours not have the screw adjustment?
re .27:
Now, Fred, be NICE!
>PIERCING QUESTION #1: I can believe that the CANNONDALE has less
>flex than the TREK 660, that should be because the Cdale is
>aluminum and big tube vs cromoly/little tube however I have
>a TREK 1100 and it doesn't appear to have any flex in it. Did
>you not like the 1100 for that reason or was it some other reason?
It was NOT the frame on the Trek. The bike rode fine as far as the
frame went, and the brakes were excellent. What I DIDN'T like was the
shifting. It was soft and mushy and didn't smack into gears with the
kind of authority I'm used to with my Ultegra/600EX/Dura-Ace
components. To top it off, they used 32-spoke wheels laced 3-cross
which I feel are too light for my weight. But, the frame felt fine and
smooth, and if I wasn't after something with lots of mounts and
fittings and such...
>PIERCING QUESTION #2: Is the best way to buy a new set of wheels
>to get them made by hand? I've bought a couple sets from cashbaaaa
>and specialized and had to have them tightened and trued, in the
>future I think I'll get them handmade by a local craftsman type.
>It looks like the machine -made wheels get finished.
Like the previous replies said, I don't think there's anything magical
about hand-made versus machine-made/hand-finished wheels. Properly
done, machine-built wheels are consistent and can be every bit as good
as a hand-made. Either can work just fine. Personally, I think the
best way to handle your own needs is to learn to build your own. That
way you can set the wheel up the way you want - spoke gauge, tightness,
cross, etc. And you learn to "feel the wheel" which makes it easier to
adjust and true when you have a problem. Its also cheaper - last year
they wanted $30 and 2 weeks to build my wheels. I bought the truing
stand for $29, dishing tool for $7, and went to the library for a book
on wheel building. It took me an evening while watching tv to build my
first wheel (about 3 hours) - trued it, adjusted again about 200 miles
later, and haven't had to true either of them in over 1000 miles.
And, if these Mistrals don't provide the SAME kind of reliability, I'll
pick up another set of Mavic MA-40s and lace them up!
|
1653.30 | | TECRUS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Tue Aug 14 1990 00:52 | 12 |
| re: .1653
>Do any of you other Cannondale owners know if Rhode Gear Flick Stands
>come in a size for the Cannondale. I haven't seen one and I'd like to
>put one on.
I have a flick stand for my Cannondale SR600. It is made for big tubes
and it works great. I have not seen it in any catalogs, I bought mine
at a local bike store. A Rhode Gear dealer should be able to order one
for you.
/Jim Pappas
|
1653.31 | New C-Dale in the Stable | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Chromed Cannondale | Sat Aug 18 1990 22:23 | 14 |
| Re. Cannondale ST600
GOOD Choice!
Re. Wheels
Yep - Build another set of MA40's - those puppies just
aren't going to last.
Re. Flick Stand
Had one on my pre fat C-Dale but haven't found one for
the 3.0 yet....shouldn't be long before they catch on though.
|
1653.32 | ST-1000 | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sat Aug 18 1990 22:29 | 8 |
|
By the way, I rode with a friend today who just got back from
a shake-down tour around the Outer Banks with his new ST-1000.
He has nothing but praise for it. Rock steady, great breaks,
good for loaded touring (camping).
-john
|
1653.33 | | TECRUS::JIM | Jim Pappas | Sat Aug 18 1990 22:41 | 15 |
| regarding wheels,
I am a somewhat large person at 6'7" and about 240+ pounds. When I
bought my Cannondale SR600 from Gamache's in Fitchburg, George Gamache
said he wanted to upgrade me from 32 to 36 spoke wheels. I decided to
get Mavic MA-40 rims at the same time. The bike ended up coming in
with 36 spoke wheels (they must do this automatically with the larger
frames) but I already decided I wanted the Mavics so George had the
wheels built up anyway. He charged me an extra $50 to get the Mavics.
The wheels have been flawless.
/Jim Pappas
|
1653.34 | But, still no flickstand! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Mon Aug 20 1990 01:17 | 30 |
| Well, I probably shouldn't turn this into a Cannondale note, but...
This weekend (between drenching downpours and flash floods) I had a
chance to try the ST600 loaded. Absolutely, WONDERFUL. I hung the
panniers on the back with fruit and snacks, sweatshirts in case the
temp dropped, rain gear in case it poured, bike locks and cables, and
other assorted crap. I added my rack bag with camera, lenses, film,
and (also) assorted junk, and went out for a few dozen miles of rolling
hills with a group of other sedate folks.
I ran the gamut (for me) from climbing short, sharp hills in the 28-30
to running down a mile+ hill at 48-50 mph in the 50-13 gear. At all
times, especially at high speeds, the bike was VERY solid and stable.
I wouldn't have ever let it get close to 40 mph if it hadn't been.
And, even in a downpour, the brakes are astonishing compared to the
600EX sidepulls I'm used to. These cantilevers hauled me down from 45
to 0 in nothing flat (no, it wasn't raining at the time - clear and
dry) for the STOP sign that was RIGHT AT THE BOTTOM OF THE STINKING
HILL! Even soaking wet I had MORE than enough braking to lock up a
wheel if I wanted.
It also gave me a chance to try the new wheel they built me. So far,
so good. They rebuilt with 14 ga spokes, 4-cross, on a new Mistral M17
rim. So far, after the inital retruing at 15 miles, I am happy to say
the wheel has been dead on for the last 100 or so. Time will tell.
The only problem I've had so far is the chip I took out of the paint
on the downtube when the pump came off the top tube on a bump. I now
have a velcro strap to hold things together, but I'm still THOROUGHLY
ANNOYED at the chip!
|
1653.35 | The meaning of "this bike is in Cherry condition" | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Chromed Cannondale | Mon Aug 20 1990 15:01 | 13 |
| >> The only problem I've had so far is the chip I took out of the paint
>> on the downtube when the pump came off the top tube on a bump. I now
>> have a velcro strap to hold things together, but I'm still THOROUGHLY
>> ANNOYED at the chip!
If it makes you feel any better, the chip would have turned
into a *rust* spot in the rain if you had purchased a steel
framed machine. Just look at it as if your bike just lost
it's virginity and now you won't be afraid to use it. That
could be male/female not ment to be degrading to either, I
know I'm gonna catch it but I just couldn't resist :)
_Jerry
|
1653.36 | Sheesh, more "riding" double entendre! | NCDEL::PEREZ | Just one of the 4 samurai! | Tue Aug 21 1990 15:47 | 8 |
| > If it makes you feel any better, the chip would have turned
> into a *rust* spot in the rain if you had purchased a steel
> framed machine.
Good point... I'll still feel better once I get some touch-up paint
and fix it though!
D
|
1653.37 | touring bike for senior citizen | GOLF::OSBORN | Sally's VAXNotes Vanity Plate | Fri Dec 13 1991 16:27 | 63 |
| It's time to consider getting a new bicycle. Not for me, but my
father's third bike.
Remember the note about how to verify a bike-aholic, one who
schedules life around TOSRV? Well, that's Dad. He's biked 19 of
those rides in twenty years. Dad is now 67 years old and a
Christmas tree farmer, so he spends very little time "exercising"
and a lot of time "working". He preps about 200 miles solo in
March and April, then a warmup trip of 60 to 80 miles, then the
210 of TOSRV. He then hangs the bike up for the summer, having
earned bragging rights for another year. As for the other
bike-aholic criteria, Dad wouldn't understand the questions OR
the answers.
Dad's first bike is the 1939 Roadmaster, black, racing tires,
single speed, coaster brakes, upright handles. The bike was
Grandpa's answer to "Can I have a driver's license?" He biked
his first 11 TOSRVs on that Roadmaster, until he got a hole in
the front tire. Dad was having trouble finding a new tire with
the right bead, etc, about the same time as my sister wanted to
upgrade her bike. So ...
Dad's second bike is the 1977 Schwinn Varsity, yellow, ten speed,
caliper brakes, upright handles. Dad accepted the hand-me-down
bike graciously, but still complains that it's heavier than the
Roadmaster. He's ridden the last eight TOSRVs with it.
I'm considering a new bike for Dad, because I want us both to
move faster, perhaps up to 14-15 mph. Yeah, I realize that I
could speed up with practice, so I'm scheduling more cycling time
for me, but I can only change Dad's equipment, not the man
himself! He'll still pedal in white sneakers, walking shorts,
boxer shorts underwear, tank-top undershirt, and a loose
long-sleeved cotton plaid shirt. I'm hoping that he might
increase his cranking to 45 rpm to keep up with me, but I'm
fearing that I'll be slowed down to his speed. Since I live in
Massachusetts and he lives in Ohio, the actual TOSRV is our only
cycling together. Just imagine, my spending Mother's Day with
Dad!
My siblings have agreed to pitch in for a Christmas bike. I was
aiming for the $400 - 500 range, something similar to my Fuji.
Dad does change flat tires, but takes his bike to the shop for
its spring cleaning, so I wanted to buy him a bike sold and
serviced by his trusted local shop in Canton, Ohio. My plan is
to take Dad to the shop and to buy the bike together when I'm
visiting for the holidays. So I called his shop, Dell's Bicycle
Store ... the owner recommended a Univega. I'm underwhelmed!
Dell recommended a cross bike, 21" frame, 27" wheels, aluminum
rims, upright handles, cantilever brakes from the outside like a
mountain bike, clutch shifting on the right/rear derailleur,
$250 for a 12-speed or $300 for an 18-speed. I think he said
that this might be a Univega Action, Activa Country, or Activa
200. Other brands he carries in that store are Giant (who makes
Schwinn, right?) and Ross.
Am I right to be underwhelmed by the choices? Can someone
recommend another store in or near Canton? (He lives in Zoar,
near Bolivar, I77, Dover, New Philly, etc.) What would you do
next?
Sally
|
1653.38 | go for drops | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Fri Dec 13 1991 17:13 | 25 |
|
First off, Sally, thanks for the great story! Your dad certainly
deserves whatever kind of bike suits him!
A few brief comments only, for now. You are probably right to be
underwhelmed. My biggest recommendation is to *forget* MTB-style
straight bars. Get drops or (yes) those "moustache" bars. TOSRV
isn't a ride around the block, after all. You need something more
comfortable than MTB handlebars.
As to the moustache bars, this leads me to say, "Look at the
Bridgestone XO-2" (which I haven't done, but you ought to check
it out).
And consider weight - remember, your Dad complained about the
Varsity's being too heavy (which it is). So you might think of
opting for something like a low- or mid-end Trek. Or maybe a Bianchi.
BTW, Schwinn doesn't make or own Giant - it's another company.
What other shops-and-brands are available in the area? The shop
you describe sounds like a fairly low-end shop, judging from the brands
you mention.
Good luck!
-john
|
1653.39 | | CSCOA1::HOOD_R | | Fri Dec 13 1991 17:42 | 11 |
|
Sally,
From your note it's not clear exactly what type of bike
you want. If your dad only rides on the road, then (I have
to agree with John) go for a light road bike. Before I
bought my Cannondale, I pondered a Trek (800/1000/1200???)
and a Schwinn 354. Both are light, aluminum road bikes at around
$400.
doug
|
1653.40 | Index shifting | NEMAIL::DELORIEA | I've got better things to do. | Mon Dec 16 1991 09:48 | 27 |
| Sally,
Here is a list of things to be sure you get on his next bike;
1) Wheels that are strong. Size 700c or 27".Whats the difference? 700c
tires tend to be aimed at higher pressure low drag riding, they are making
them in fatter sizes for cross use. If you're looking for high quality
fast tires 700c has more of a selection. The 27" tires are easier to find in
every bike store from K-Mart on up. They won't be able to handle the high
psi like a the ones found at good bike stores though.
Make sure the rims are strong. A hard-anodized box section rim with spoke
eyelets tend to be the strongest/lightest rim available, it's also the most
money.
2) Index Shifting. Index shifting is here to stay. The old friction shifting is
not easiest shifting to work with. Most new bikes come with index shifting,
but you want to be sure.
3) FIT. Make sure you get a bike that fits. It is very easy to buy a bike that
to big or small when the store drops the price. Handle bar style is up to
the rider. Im sure your father will like the MT-bike style bars and levers.
While this isn't the best position, some people like the stablility of a
wide mt-bike handle bar. I knoe my wife rides faster on a mt-bike style
bar than she did on a drop handle bar. She was more comfortable.
Tom
|
1653.41 | CONSIDER 2ND HAND? | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Mon Dec 16 1991 09:53 | 4 |
| Second hand "showroom" condition TREK 1000 for sale in this note
for $400.00...
Chip
|
1653.42 | bare rims | DANGER::JBELL | Zeno was almost here | Mon Dec 16 1991 10:07 | 15 |
| > Make sure the rims are strong. A hard-anodized box section rim with spoke
> eyelets tend to be the strongest/lightest rim available, it's also the most
> money.
A NON-anodized box section rim (with eyelets) is stronger. The
anodizing is a surface effect only, but tends to initiate cracks
around spoke holes.
The price of anodized rims is higher because people think they are stronger.
Anodizing is produces a hard surface, but not as hard as
road grit. The anodizing on the side of the rim will wear
off after using the brakes a bit.
-Jeff Bell
|
1653.43 | | ALLVAX::JROTH | I know he moves along the piers | Mon Dec 16 1991 17:46 | 32 |
| <<< Note 1653.42 by DANGER::JBELL "Zeno was almost here" >>>
-< bare rims >-
> Make sure the rims are strong. A hard-anodized box section rim with spoke
> eyelets tend to be the strongest/lightest rim available, it's also the most
> money.
!A NON-anodized box section rim (with eyelets) is stronger. The
!anodizing is a surface effect only, but tends to initiate cracks
!around spoke holes.
I've heard this too.
However, I ride year round and pretty much trash my rims as a result from
the elements. What has happened more than once now is the spoke nipples
freeze up so I can't retrue the wheel and then I see spoke breakage
at the nipple. It's true that the anodizing wears off from braking,
and in fact I would worry a little about the rim thinning out on the sides.
I actually think the anodizing is of some benefit in my case because
a pair of Super Champion "Gentlemen" rims I once had got really corroded
looking overall after a couple of winters. The Mavic rims MA 40 rims
I've been using since can be washed off and don't get that way. But there's
still that problem around the eyelets and I more or less consider rims
expendable after a few years "abuse".
!The price of anodized rims is higher because people think they are stronger.
They probably get what the market will bear. The anodized rims look
nice and "hi tech" too - always a factor with this stuff.
- Jim
|