What is the best Eroica 5 speed freewheel?
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My modern road bike is currently set up 34/36, just a fuzz lower than 1:1, but, I'm fairly light though so I think I'd be pretty good with that. And worst case scenario, I get hurt a bit, but I like getting hurt on the bike!
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I don't think most people can appreciate the beauty in this freewheel.
2.5 miles that averages %6? What's your front ring? . . . I'm doing the Heroic with 28/28 gearing, I am determined to not walk, I may walk, but I can assure you that I will have disabled all the alarm bells in the engine room before I get on the bike that morning
2.5 miles that averages %6? What's your front ring? . . . I'm doing the Heroic with 28/28 gearing, I am determined to not walk, I may walk, but I can assure you that I will have disabled all the alarm bells in the engine room before I get on the bike that morning
The most brutal climb I have ridden to date is in Plumas county California, 4 miles that averages %10.3. I believe this is the best bike legal ass kicking piece of asphalt in the country, but if someone knows of a better one do tell!!!! https://www.strava.com/segments/12232546
** If anyone has a GPX of Cypress I would love to try it on my smart trainer, I could even back off the tension to simulate the spin fron the gravel LOL
Last edited by daviddavieboy; 02-10-20 at 03:23 AM.
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Thanks for the tip, i do usually have ~120psi, I can always air back up for the hard roads when taking pictures at the top. Is Cypress the hardest climb?
** If anyone has a GPX of Cypress I would love to try it on my smart trainer, I could even back off the tension to simulate the spin fron the gravel LOL
** If anyone has a GPX of Cypress I would love to try it on my smart trainer, I could even back off the tension to simulate the spin fron the gravel LOL
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If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
Last edited by gugie; 02-10-20 at 12:31 PM.
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Looks like my link didn't stick: https://ridewithgps.com/routes/26820654?beta=false You can pinch off a GPX file from it.
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If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
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I just remembered, the Eroica California site has the GPX files all ready to download.
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If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
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daviddavieboy
that is a neat feature of your trainer. Have you downloaded familiar climbs and found the sensations/effort/suffering to be comparable? Can you paperboy a bit to recover or do you get off and walk on an adjacent treadmill🤔
First question is serious.
that is a neat feature of your trainer. Have you downloaded familiar climbs and found the sensations/effort/suffering to be comparable? Can you paperboy a bit to recover or do you get off and walk on an adjacent treadmill🤔
First question is serious.
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daviddavieboy
that is a neat feature of your trainer. Have you downloaded familiar climbs and found the sensations/effort/suffering to be comparable? Can you paperboy a bit to recover or do you get off and walk on an adjacent treadmill🤔
First question is serious.
that is a neat feature of your trainer. Have you downloaded familiar climbs and found the sensations/effort/suffering to be comparable? Can you paperboy a bit to recover or do you get off and walk on an adjacent treadmill🤔
First question is serious.
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...I rode the GPX that gugie supplied and I am quite certain I will be walking especially after the riding leading up to the mountain.
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If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
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Maybe that could be the next step in Eroica training realism: your Zwift bike set up next to an inclined treadmill for those times everyone needs to walk.
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I've been staring at that for a few days, wondering who still rides at super high pressures anymore? 120psi? I'm running 50psi on 700c x 32, and that's the skinniest, lowest pressure in my fleet.
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If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
If someone tells you that you have enough bicycles and you don't need any more, stop talking to them. You don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
Last edited by gugie; 02-16-20 at 09:22 PM.
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For this I use Rouvy. You can upload and edit any GPX and it will control the resistance of smart trainer according to the grade. Yes I have downloaded my Strava segments and rode them on the trainer and it feels very similar to real live. That being said, I rode the GPX that gugie supplied and I am quite certain I will be walking especially after the riding leading up to the mountain.
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Eroica is poetry in motion.
Where is Regina oro in the Regina hierarchy? I intend to have the biggest cog a 24 to keep it Catalog Correct.
Brooks saddles are so weird. Why on earth does it need to be pointed up like that to keep me from sliding forward? It is mounted in the center of the rails and the saddle to bar drop is my usual 7cm. (Not measured from the weird Brooks saddle nose.)
Where is Regina oro in the Regina hierarchy? I intend to have the biggest cog a 24 to keep it Catalog Correct.
Brooks saddles are so weird. Why on earth does it need to be pointed up like that to keep me from sliding forward? It is mounted in the center of the rails and the saddle to bar drop is my usual 7cm. (Not measured from the weird Brooks saddle nose.)
Brooksies have a wide platform for your sit bones at the widest point of the saddle. If you can't keep your sitbones on those points you'll be on the more forward parts of the saddle and your weight will be borne on soft tissue. As you pedal and rock your hips, ouch! If the saddle is too far back, you could slide forward. If your saddle is not angled up, you could slide forward. If your saddle is too high, you could slide forward. If your saddle is angled too high up, you could have excess pressure on your softer bits. If your reach is too far combined with pelvis rotation, you could slide forward. Plus, B17s are not intended for deep saddle-handlebar drops. Racing saddles included Brooks B17N, Professional, Swallow, and Swift.
Do you have a lot of miles on that bike with the saddle in that position? Any long-distance rides? Do you use the heel-on-pedal technique to get your initial saddle position?
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The saddle is a Team Pro. It looks like that on my RS and also on my Milwaukee which are not so steep in the seat tube. All my saddles are nose up but not as extreme as the Brooks. The bike is pretty new to me but I have a couple 75 mile rides and some 50s. I've ridden that saddle on the BWR (130miles), several 200k brevets and a 300k. My saddle is fine. I realized that I have quite the collection of New Winner FWs and one is an Utra 6 that goes to 24. The new Regina Chain will go on the shelf for another day and I'll get a new and shiny SRAM for EroicaCA.
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Last edited by Classtime; 02-12-20 at 07:27 AM.
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New Hampshire! [fumes silently]
You're right, though, about it being a memorable ride.
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#69
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The best freewheel for Eroica is the one which lets you finish without breaking (and has been properly serviced and not subjected to a flush and dribble).
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The saddle is a Team Pro. It looks like that on my RS and also on my Milwaukee which are not so steep in the seat tube. All my saddles are nose up but not as extreme as the Brooks. The bike is pretty new to me but I have a couple 75 mile rides and some 50s. I've ridden that saddle on the BWR (130miles), several 200k brevets and a 300k. My saddle is fine. I realized that I have quite the collection of New Winner FWs and one is an Utra 6 that goes to 24. The new Regina Chain will go on the shelf for another day and I'll get a new and shiny SRAM for EroicaCA.
In your second post you expressed surprise the nose needed to be up so high. That comment is what I was responding to, volunteering my experience with Brooks. I go a little nose-up with a Professional Select, but with a rather narrower Swallow I'm dead-level. If you're fine with what you have, good for you - the bottom line (lol!) with leather is to find a setup you like. Ride happy!
Last edited by Road Fan; 02-14-20 at 07:07 PM.
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Sheldon tells me you can go down to 36t on the small GS ring, so ...
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Yea, and to be in accordance with rule #5 there is only one route option at Eroica, not 4, that route is of course the 108 mile with 8000'+, everybody here says I'm going to walk my bike, because my low gear is only 28/28, in light of this, there is no way anyone is showing up and riding the 108 mile route with a corncob freewheel and not doing a lot of walking, just not possible on gravel as you can't stand to climb.
And honestly I don't care if you want to be heroic or not, but what I don't understand are all the hand-wringing threads about equipment. It's just a bike. Ride it.
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Right tool for the job, and all that.
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Depending on the era, having to walk your bike up the steep gravel hills was pretty common, anyway. So who cares what other people think while you do it?
(Images pilfered from BikeRaceInfo.com, of course.)
(Images pilfered from BikeRaceInfo.com, of course.)