T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1688.1 | Ibis LD drop stem | WMOIS::N_FLYE | | Mon Aug 06 1990 21:39 | 19 |
|
One of my bikes is a Wicked Fat Chance. I ordered it without the
cantilver braze-ons for 26" wheels. I installed Moots mounts and use
700C knobbies. I also installed Wilderness Trail drop bars. My
biggest headache was finding a stem that would put the drops at the
right height. Since I was using a mountain bike frame which was
smaller than my usual road bike size the stem had to be very tall or
have a steep rise. I settled on the Ibis LD drop stem. The stem
is simply a single bent piece of tubing with a clamp for the bars.
Mine has 6" of rise and 3" of reach. They look a little funny but
function just fine.
This bike is best suited for open dirt roads and very rough tar but
on occasion has gone on something technical. Just had to be careful
bashing the wheels. This bike is much faster than fat tire, flat bar
bikes until we get to something technical.
Norm
|
1688.2 | | WMOIS::N_FLYE | | Mon Aug 06 1990 21:55 | 15 |
|
Forgot you wanted to know about brake levers and such. I installed
Ultegra levers which work fine with the cantilevers brakes. For
shifting I ordered a Wilderness trail SIS conversion kit. This kit
allows you to install the non push push shimano thumb shifters (old
style) inboard of the brake levers. I can now brake with both levers
and down shift both derailleurs all at the same time. Very handy when
riding down a trail and encountering a stream bed or when when
approaching a red light at high speed.
Everything else on the bike is typical MTB componentery except for
the clipless pedals.
Norm
|
1688.3 | Great! Thank you. | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | The bun is the lowest form of wheat | Tue Aug 07 1990 09:12 | 6 |
| Thanks for info! The stem & shifter info will be particularly helpful.
As I mentioned, my principal motivation is to have a Heavy Duty road
bike for weather/rough-routes to which I'd rather not expose my 'good
bike'. (Though I DID take it down a trail this past weekend & must
confess I can start to understand what people see in off-roading).
Thanks again.
|
1688.4 | Now THAT'S a Hybrid! | CIMNET::MJOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 291-7856 | Tue Aug 07 1990 10:05 | 5 |
| Norm, your bike sounds like just what I'm looking for for post-season
trail bashing. Obviously, I couldn't go into a shop and buy one
like yours, but do you know of anybody who makes something close?
MATT
|
1688.5 | Bianchi sounds similar, but $$$$ is high | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | The bun is the lowest form of wheat | Tue Aug 07 1990 10:39 | 7 |
| One of the mountain bike magazines had a review of a Bianchi (I forget
the model) that sounded very much like this, but it was up in the
$900.00 range. I've been going back and forth as to whether I want to
stick with the 26" wheels or go to 700C. I've pretty much decided to
stick with the 26", that way I can throw narrower road tires on it for
3 season use, and try putting studs in the knobbies for the winter.
Besides, I don't want to go out and replace the rims right now.
|
1688.6 | Get the tires first! | NANOOK::BRALEY | Ed Braley DTN 263-6085 | Wed Aug 08 1990 00:02 | 29 |
|
I built a mountain bike from the frame up specifically for road
riding. After considering my options, I decided to use standard
mountain bike components with the exception of the tires. I'm using
Specialized FAT BOY slicks that are 26 x 1.25 and are rated to
100lbs. They are really fast! I consider this bike to be my "city"
bike. It's exceptional for zipping around town. With the Q.R. seat
binder, flat bars and Q.R. wheels I can easily dissassemble it and
put it in the trunk of the car - with my luggage. It has advantages.
The mountain pedals accomodate sneakers and the gel seat lets me
ride in walking shorts (for a while anyway). Some days I just don't
want to look like a road racer and walk around in cleats :-)
For your handlebar stem, you might look around for one of the
older aluminum Sakae mountain stems. The one I put on my bike has
80mm of reach - short compared to what I see on most machines today,
and I think it would be about right for a pair of dropped bars.
It has an upward bend, about 45 degrees I'd say. They're cheap too,
I think I gave $15.
On a long ride you might want the dropped bars, but for short
rides (>10 miles as you mentioned) the uprights should be fine.
Besides, they handle great in traffic. I rode 22 miles in the hills
of upstate NY last weekend and the position was fine. If I were
to go touring on this bike I'd want drops, however.
I'd try the tires first. Don't forget to buy new tubes too.
Ed.
|
1688.7 | The idea is definitely coming together. | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | The bun is the lowest form of wheat | Wed Aug 08 1990 09:28 | 15 |
| Yes, I do consider the tires a priority. I'm also thinking of
replacing the chainrings with a higher range set (I've seen 32-42-52
sets advertised), since I never use that current twenty-something
granny gear. Question: will this necessitate changing my chain as
well?
This morning I noticed an ad for Scott Bars for mountain bikes - I
think they were called MT4, or MB4, or some such. They looked like
some of those new-fangled road bars, and are touted as offering 4
different hand positions. These seem like an attractive alternative,
since they would not require me to change brake levers, shift levers,
or stem. Any opinions on these? Also, after riding home from work last
night in the rain I decided that fenders might me a nice addition too
8^{}
jb
|
1688.8 | Scott MT4, Thumbs Up! | CSSE32::SMITH | Reality, just a visible imagination? | Wed Aug 08 1990 11:29 | 8 |
| I have a set of the Scott MT4 bars and I like them. They give the
standard ATB position as well as a more areo dynamic position for
faster downhills, a more forward position in climbing and just some
nice extra positions for longer rides.
I'd recommend them!
...Ed
|
1688.9 | Hidden charges? | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | IRAQnophobia | Wed Aug 08 1990 17:25 | 4 |
| re [-1] Thanks - one thing, I noticed an ad that listed them for
thirty-someodd dollars, and then listed Scott MT4 connector or bridge
or something for an additional charge - are they sold "as you see
them", or is the connector extra? Thanks.
|
1688.10 | | WMOIS::N_FLYE | | Wed Aug 08 1990 21:08 | 19 |
|
RE.4
Matt,
I spent a year trying to find a "hybrid" bike to suit my needs.
I just didn't find anything. Some of the bikes I looked at were
Bianchi Equinox, Offroad Climber, Zenn, Specialized Cross something or
other and some very expensive "customs". NOTHING. I finally decided
to build my own. I paid a hefty price but the bike doubles as a
touring bike if I put road tires on it. Actually the last time I went
touring I left the knobbies on it. I took a few "short cuts" on dirt
roads and had a blast.
The frame may be a racing offroad frame but it is not overly
squirrely when fully loaded. On the other hand when the panniers are
off it is not a slug. Some day soon I may buy a real touring bike.
Norm
|
1688.11 | Came with bridge | CSSE32::SMITH | Reality, just a visible imagination? | Thu Aug 09 1990 15:06 | 3 |
| re .9
Mine included the bridge.
|
1688.12 | How about gearing? | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | IRAQnophobia | Fri Aug 10 1990 09:19 | 9 |
| Thenkls for all the info - With respect to changing gearing, mind
currently has 28-38-48 chain rings. I noticed someplace advertising
34-46-54 gears, which sound like they'd be just what I'd like. I NEVER
use the granny gear as it is, and this set would give me a low that's
just a bit lower than my currrent middle, which would be nice, a
middle slightly lower than my current high, which would be decent for
commuting in traffic, and a high which, considering the 26" wheels,
would probably be just about the same as the high on my road bike. Is
there any potential problem in this that I should be aware of? thanks.
|
1688.13 | Why not change the rear cluster? | BSS::ANSON | | Mon Aug 13 1990 13:08 | 4 |
| Why not change the rear to a 12-24 cluster. The weight and cost
would be less with 28-38-48 chainrings.
Dick
|
1688.14 | freewheel & derailleur | MATE::PJOHNSON | | Mon Aug 13 1990 14:48 | 6 |
| I'm planning on doing the Mt. Washington race this September and I
need a freewheel (minimum 14-32 tooth) and derailluer that can handle
the freewheel. I'm not looking for anything too fancy, just a used
set-up that will be reliable for this event.
Phil
|
1688.15 | Won't improve top end though. | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | I chase the winds of a prism ship | Mon Aug 20 1990 12:16 | 4 |
| [re .13] I think that I have a 12-xxx or 13-xxx cluster now, so that really
wouldn't help pick up my top end, would it? I can see how it would give
me a closer ratio, but then wouldn't I have to match the derailleur to
it?
|
1688.16 | Bar swap anyone? | CRBOSS::BEFUMO | I chase the winds of a prism ship | Mon Aug 20 1990 12:28 | 11 |
| Just a thought . . . anyone out there have a hankerin' for that upright
riding position? Before I go out and buy a set of drop bars, I'd be
interested in hearing from anyone who might be interested in swapping
their drop bars & brake levers for my straight bars & brake levers.
The bars are black, with a slight bend in them, and the brake levers
are also black. I'd include the grips, of course. If you're building
yourself a mountain-hybrid out of a road bike, rather than road-hybrid
out of a mountain bike like I am, maybe we can work something out.
Joe
|
1688.17 | Crisscross conversion to Touring? | DEMON::NORMAN | | Mon Mar 09 1992 10:39 | 18 |
| I purchased a Schwinn 21 speed Crisscross Hybrid in August of 91.
Bike handles alright and shifting is nice and smooth but I really
miss the speed of the open road and the more comfortable position
of drop handlebars.
Would like a reality check on converting it to a 100% road bike.
Speaking of options: Should I / Can I successfully convert the
Crisscross to a 100% road bike? Shops that
will do (a good job on) the conversion?) I
intend to do a lot of bike touring / camping
this year.
(30 to 120 miles weekend)
: Should I try and sell / trade back to a touring
bike?
Scot
|
1688.18 | time consuming, but not difficult | OXNARD::KLEE | Ken Lee | Mon Mar 09 1992 15:30 | 13 |
| Switching to dropped handlebars should be pretty easy. You'll probably
need a new stem (road bars that fit mountain bike stems are rare), new
shifters, and new brake levers. Note that this is a labor intensive
job (adjusting cables, wrapping handlebar tape, etc.) so you'll
probably save yourself alot of money by doing it yourself. No bearings
are involved, so no particular skill is needed.
You may also want to switch to road tires. I'm not sure what kind of
rims this bike has, but most road tires should fit. Only the narrowest
(which you probably don't want anyway) won't fit.
Ken
|