New bike or new gear?
#1
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New bike or new gear?
Getting things in order to start touring. Should I consider a new bike or quality gear, racks, bags and other equipment? Changed the drivetrain on my Trek to a mountain bike Shimano LX group. The bike fits and rides very nice. I was considering a LHT, but keep thinking my Trek will do just fine. Opinions?
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Biggest issue with any bike not designed for touring is if your heels clear the panniers, I toured once with a bike that was close and having to pay attention that my heel didn't hit was really annoying. Oh course touring with a backpack and a bag strapped to the top of the rack was worse. From the pic I can't figure out if your stays are long enough, my gravel bike is just long enough but my sport road is not. If the stays work, get equipment, if they don't get the bike first.
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From the photo, clearance looks nominal. It'll depend on your shoe size and pack size/mounting. If I had that bike, I'd make it work.
Brakes look like single-pivot side pulls. If I were to upgrade anything and had money to spend, I'd look at dual-pivot brake calipers.
Brakes look like single-pivot side pulls. If I were to upgrade anything and had money to spend, I'd look at dual-pivot brake calipers.
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Won't you want fenders? If fenders don't fit on your Trek with your preferred tires, then you need a new bike.
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#5
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Chain stay is 43 and I wear 9’s. And yes the brakes suck.
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#6
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#7
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Any bike you have is better than the bike you don't have for touring.
I'd go ahead and get the gear you want as most or all of it will work with any future bike you want. And a shiny new touring bike with no gear is not a very good touring bike.
I'd go ahead and get the gear you want as most or all of it will work with any future bike you want. And a shiny new touring bike with no gear is not a very good touring bike.
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Great advice here. If u look into panniers and happen to get something with adjustable mounts you can get around the heel strike especially with some of the modern racks. Having said that, I wouldnt want to tour on anything less than 32s and I always want fenders. Doesnt mean you do. Try a tour or 2 without fenders and see where u r. Short weekend or overnighters are a blast and very illuminating.
Great looking bike btw. Might be a 650b candidate.
Great looking bike btw. Might be a 650b candidate.
Last edited by 52telecaster; 05-23-20 at 09:12 AM.
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Getting things in order to start touring. Should I consider a new bike or quality gear, racks, bags and other equipment? Changed the drivetrain on my Trek to a mountain bike Shimano LX group. The bike fits and rides very nice. I was considering a LHT, but keep thinking my Trek will do just fine. Opinions?
A classic touring bike has 46cm stays which allows the load to be moved rearward but still keep it over the axle. On a short chainstay bike, the load ends up behind the axle where it starts to wag the dog. Any side to side motion wiggles back and forth on the bike and makes for...um...interesting steering. It likely has a lighter frame as well which can result in oscillations under load which are, rightfully, called “death wobbles”.
And, if your brakes are bad now, how well do you think they will stop an additional load? You brakes probably aren’t all that bad and could be improved with better pads but they probably aren’t going to be the best brake for stopping a bike with a load.
Yes, you can tour on anything. What people don’t tell you is that touring on anything may not be the best experience. If every downhill evokes terror, it’s not a pleasant experience.
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Stuart Black
Plan Epsilon Around Lake Michigan in the era of Covid
Old School…When It Wasn’t Ancient bikepacking
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
#10
Senior Member
Getting things in order to start touring. Should I consider a new bike or quality gear, racks, bags and other equipment? Changed the drivetrain on my Trek to a mountain bike Shimano LX group. The bike fits and rides very nice. I was considering a LHT, but keep thinking my Trek will do just fine. Opinions?
no mention of how much gear you plan to take, what conditions, or what length of time.
i haven't read "unsupported around the world tour" or "overnight to granny's house" yet.
you might be satisfied with a seatbag and a handlebar bag, and not need of saddlebags a'tall.
it may be possible to get by with a set of small front panniers.
you could go with a bike-a-packing setup, or maybe pull a trailer with no bags whatsoever.
try to fill us in on what sort of touring you intend to do at the start. otherwise, it's like planning
your new life with some chick named sophie, and your mutual dog, after only a couple online
chat sessions and some creepy meetup at some lake in the woods.
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#11
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Mainly unsupported solo rides, my longest was Indiana to Florida on a 99 Trek 520. After that I sold it and started racing. I’m just now getting back into it with a goal of going cross country in a few years. Until then 3-5 day unsupported rides with mainly camping.
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unsupported camping runs into lots of gear when i do it.
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#13
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groovy! you got those wee, skinny tires, so assume you're staying on pavement.
how much gear do you plan to take? any extreme conditions expected?
do you have a thru-hiker mindset, bare minimum?
already have camping gear? lightweight or walmart carcamping stuff?
or are you a guy who needs to carry a collapsible kitchen sink?
how much electronics do you need? laptop with full-spectrum access?
or just a cellphone, maybe a gps?
will you carry an instrument? do you have the urge to carry a cello? a mouthharp?
could you manage with a concertina, or would you require a chromatic squeezebox?
#14
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A bike more suited to carrying full camping gear and gearing for that, better brakes etc will of course be appreciated, but lets look at it this way, you'll have louts of time being attentive and actively looking for a very good used touring bike.
I say this because of dreaming of a cross country tour.
unfortunately some people will be selling bikes because of not being comfortable being out in a covid world.
but buying used involves watching, being quick, and having the knowledge to know if things are amiss.
keeping an eye out for pannier, tent, sleeping mat etc sales would also be a logical thing to do.
I say this because of dreaming of a cross country tour.
unfortunately some people will be selling bikes because of not being comfortable being out in a covid world.
but buying used involves watching, being quick, and having the knowledge to know if things are amiss.
keeping an eye out for pannier, tent, sleeping mat etc sales would also be a logical thing to do.
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Unless you really -need- a feature found on the LHT, it's not a big enough upgrade from your current rig. (wide tires for soft surfaces)
The #1 thing I would say is that it's not air travel friendly. Otherwise just ride the #$&@# out of it until so many parts are dying you may as well buy a new bike.
The #1 thing I would say is that it's not air travel friendly. Otherwise just ride the #$&@# out of it until so many parts are dying you may as well buy a new bike.
#16
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Being a combat Marine veteran helps with minimal camping. I still have some quality camping gear, eureka solitaire tent and a few other things that fit in Panniers well. No plans on taking my guitar or leaving the asphalt if I can help it.
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#17
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For 3 to 5 day rides, if your camping gear was lightweight and you packed pretty minimal, that bike would do. But I can't tell from the photos how low the gearing is, your rear sprockets look a bit small for touring. I suspect that most touring bikes today would have much lower gearing than that bike. The shifters look like older friction shifters, modern indexed shifters are really nice to have in comparison.
I do not see mounting points on the fork for a front rack. Thus, most weight would be on the back wheel. But for 3 to 5 day trips, you can pack light enough that you can get by with only rear panniers and maybe a bag on top of the rear rack.
I am a bit confused by the photo, the rims do not look like they have been used with rim brakes, but you have rim brakes on the bike. Perhaps it is just the photo that is confusing me?
You said you have toured before, so I suspect it is unlikely you would do some short tours and then decide against it. But if there was any possibility that touring is not for you, try it on the bike have before investing in a newer bike.
I do not see mounting points on the fork for a front rack. Thus, most weight would be on the back wheel. But for 3 to 5 day trips, you can pack light enough that you can get by with only rear panniers and maybe a bag on top of the rear rack.
I am a bit confused by the photo, the rims do not look like they have been used with rim brakes, but you have rim brakes on the bike. Perhaps it is just the photo that is confusing me?
You said you have toured before, so I suspect it is unlikely you would do some short tours and then decide against it. But if there was any possibility that touring is not for you, try it on the bike have before investing in a newer bike.
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For 3 to 5 day rides, if your camping gear was lightweight and you packed pretty minimal, that bike would do. But I can't tell from the photos how low the gearing is, your rear sprockets look a bit small for touring. I suspect that most touring bikes today would have much lower gearing than that bike. The shifters look like older friction shifters, modern indexed shifters are really nice to have in comparison.
I am a bit confused by the photo, the rims do not look like they have been used with rim brakes, but you have rim brakes on the bike. Perhaps it is just the photo that is confusing me?
I am a bit confused by the photo, the rims do not look like they have been used with rim brakes, but you have rim brakes on the bike. Perhaps it is just the photo that is confusing me?
#19
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Rims look like that because the bike is mint. Bought it off the original owner that rode it once and hung it in the garage.
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#20
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126mm rear spaced hub?
6, 7 speed?
Rear hub will determine if you can easily go up to 7 or 8 speed, new shifter of course. Microshift is an option, although not sure of 8 availability. Probably used only.
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If the bike is that old, adding grease to the hub bearings would be a good idea. If the bottom bracket is cup and cone, re-greasing that too would be a good idea. And while at it, the headset.
I assume it is freewheel, not freehub rear hub.
I assume it is freewheel, not freehub rear hub.
#22
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think gearing will be ok?I can't tell what chain rings you have.
You can use clamps to put front rack on, and basic panniers for front, with lighter stuff.
lots of options as it is, but you know best for how bike would work for carrying stuff
brakes I'm sure can be changed at reasonable price if needed.
are wheels up to handling more weight?
#23
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you're getting way ahead of yourself here. you haven't explained what you mean by "touring".
no mention of how much gear you plan to take, what conditions, or what length of time.
i haven't read "unsupported around the world tour" or "overnight to granny's house" yet.
you might be satisfied with a seatbag and a handlebar bag, and not need of saddlebags a'tall.
it may be possible to get by with a set of small front panniers.
you could go with a bike-a-packing setup, or maybe pull a trailer with no bags whatsoever.
try to fill us in on what sort of touring you intend to do at the start. otherwise, it's like planning
your new life with some chick named sophie, and your mutual dog, after only a couple online
chat sessions and some creepy meetup at some lake in the woods.
no mention of how much gear you plan to take, what conditions, or what length of time.
i haven't read "unsupported around the world tour" or "overnight to granny's house" yet.
you might be satisfied with a seatbag and a handlebar bag, and not need of saddlebags a'tall.
it may be possible to get by with a set of small front panniers.
you could go with a bike-a-packing setup, or maybe pull a trailer with no bags whatsoever.
try to fill us in on what sort of touring you intend to do at the start. otherwise, it's like planning
your new life with some chick named sophie, and your mutual dog, after only a couple online
chat sessions and some creepy meetup at some lake in the woods.
#24
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My very limited experience with loaded touring on a way too light bike, points to trying to get as much weight in front lowrider panniers as possible. A Blackburn front rack combined with Blackburn low riders would be the right vintage for the bike and together are attached to the fork a 5 points. A basket could go on top of the front rack but that's extra weight up high. Light stuff can go in a dry bag on top of the rear rack or in panniers pushed back enough to clear you heels.
#25
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46-24, 26-14 7 speed freewheel and all the bearing have been cleaned and repacked. It came with the original Blaze group. The only thing left is the brakes and levers. Which I need to change the calipers. I haven’t had the bike long.
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