Addiction LXXVI
#1801
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
Remember how the drivetrain on the Habanero was finicky and skipping at times? I replaced the chain (even though it did not measure as worn), cleaned/lubed the RD, and cleaned off the cassette. At least in the stand, everything works fine now. I won't have a road test until Wednesday. Fingers crossed this solved the problem.
#1802
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
#1803
smelling the roses
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Tixkokob, Yucatán, México
Posts: 15,320
Bikes: 79 Trek 930, 80 Trek 414, 84 Schwinn Letour Luxe (coupled), 92 Schwinn Paramount PDG 5
Liked 901 Times
in
612 Posts
Yesterday was beautiful but I didn't get a chance to get out. Today looks like more of the same. The visitors, from NOB, who prevented yesterday's ride, are flying out tomorrow morning.
#1804
smelling the roses
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Tixkokob, Yucatán, México
Posts: 15,320
Bikes: 79 Trek 930, 80 Trek 414, 84 Schwinn Letour Luxe (coupled), 92 Schwinn Paramount PDG 5
Liked 901 Times
in
612 Posts
I have a large stash of used chains. Where do these things come from? At any rate, I'm not particular about buying new ones as long as these are still within specs. KMC is my favorite brand if I have to buy new.
#1805
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
in
3,221 Posts
#1806
smelling the roses
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Tixkokob, Yucatán, México
Posts: 15,320
Bikes: 79 Trek 930, 80 Trek 414, 84 Schwinn Letour Luxe (coupled), 92 Schwinn Paramount PDG 5
Liked 901 Times
in
612 Posts
From the C&V for sale thread, I have recently purchased a lifetime supply of bar tape(5 bikes worth) and a Suntour/Dia Compe brake and shifter/derailleur set. I had been on the lookout for aero levers and six speed indexed. This purchase gives me both. One would hope we are nearing the end of componentry purchases too. However, if a set of 105 SLR brakes were to appear.....
#1807
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
I have a cold-weather cycling question. I know there is a whole sub-forum devoted to this, but let me throw it out here first.
My concern is with cold weather gloves. I am fine with conventional gloves down to about freezing. For below freezing, thin gloves are not adequate and my fingers get too cold...but thicker gloves are too thick in the fingers and I lose my dexterity/feedback with braking/shifting etc. The solution I have used is to go to mittens with glove liners, which keep the fingers warmer, but I lose even more dexterity. Bar mitts are also an option, but you can't brake from the drops with them as they force you on the hoods. So...
I am wondering if there is a good winter type glove that has THICK insulation on the back of the hand/fingers, and between the fingers, but THINNER insulation on the palmar aspect of the fingers. The idea is to keep fingers warm but preserve tactile feedback/dexterity. With typical hand positions this side of the hand is not in the wind anyway.
Is this a valid ask? Anyone know if this exists and if it solves the problem??
My concern is with cold weather gloves. I am fine with conventional gloves down to about freezing. For below freezing, thin gloves are not adequate and my fingers get too cold...but thicker gloves are too thick in the fingers and I lose my dexterity/feedback with braking/shifting etc. The solution I have used is to go to mittens with glove liners, which keep the fingers warmer, but I lose even more dexterity. Bar mitts are also an option, but you can't brake from the drops with them as they force you on the hoods. So...
I am wondering if there is a good winter type glove that has THICK insulation on the back of the hand/fingers, and between the fingers, but THINNER insulation on the palmar aspect of the fingers. The idea is to keep fingers warm but preserve tactile feedback/dexterity. With typical hand positions this side of the hand is not in the wind anyway.
Is this a valid ask? Anyone know if this exists and if it solves the problem??
#1809
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
in
3,221 Posts
I have a cold-weather cycling question. I know there is a whole sub-forum devoted to this, but let me throw it out here first.
My concern is with cold weather gloves. I am fine with conventional gloves down to about freezing. For below freezing, thin gloves are not adequate and my fingers get too cold...but thicker gloves are too thick in the fingers and I lose my dexterity/feedback with braking/shifting etc. The solution I have used is to go to mittens with glove liners, which keep the fingers warmer, but I lose even more dexterity. Bar mitts are also an option, but you can't brake from the drops with them as they force you on the hoods. So...
I am wondering if there is a good winter type glove that has THICK insulation on the back of the hand/fingers, and between the fingers, but THINNER insulation on the palmar aspect of the fingers. The idea is to keep fingers warm but preserve tactile feedback/dexterity. With typical hand positions this side of the hand is not in the wind anyway.
Is this a valid ask? Anyone know if this exists and if it solves the problem??
My concern is with cold weather gloves. I am fine with conventional gloves down to about freezing. For below freezing, thin gloves are not adequate and my fingers get too cold...but thicker gloves are too thick in the fingers and I lose my dexterity/feedback with braking/shifting etc. The solution I have used is to go to mittens with glove liners, which keep the fingers warmer, but I lose even more dexterity. Bar mitts are also an option, but you can't brake from the drops with them as they force you on the hoods. So...
I am wondering if there is a good winter type glove that has THICK insulation on the back of the hand/fingers, and between the fingers, but THINNER insulation on the palmar aspect of the fingers. The idea is to keep fingers warm but preserve tactile feedback/dexterity. With typical hand positions this side of the hand is not in the wind anyway.
Is this a valid ask? Anyone know if this exists and if it solves the problem??
#1810
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
Aha. I may have to go shopping then. The ones I have tried seem to have the same thickness all around.
#1811
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
It's a thing. Electric heated bar tape. Let me see if I can find a link....
https://ame-grips.myshopify.com/coll...ke-heated-wrap
https://ame-grips.myshopify.com/coll...ke-heated-wrap
#1812
Administrator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Hudson Valley, NY
Posts: 33,146
Bikes: Merlin Cyrene '04; Bridgestone RB-1 '92
Liked 6,886 Times
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3,581 Posts
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm convinced all these chain problems nowadays are the result of 11 and 12 sp drivetrains along with the weight weenie craze necessitating a thinner gauge chain. BITD when I used to ride tons, chains never broke unless installed improperly. Sure we didn't ride 20,000 miles a year like some of you nuts guys, but we rode plenty.
__________________
See, this is why we can't have nice things. - - smarkinson
Where else but the internet can a bunch of cyclists go and be the tough guy? - - jdon
#1813
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
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3,221 Posts
My neuropsych guy, Mike, and I had the only bikes in our part of the garage this a.m. Sad.
#1814
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
in
3,221 Posts
It's a thing. Electric heated bar tape. Let me see if I can find a link....
https://ame-grips.myshopify.com/coll...ke-heated-wrap
https://ame-grips.myshopify.com/coll...ke-heated-wrap
#1815
Administrator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Hudson Valley, NY
Posts: 33,146
Bikes: Merlin Cyrene '04; Bridgestone RB-1 '92
Liked 6,886 Times
in
3,581 Posts
Crabon bars would assplode.
But seriously, do crabon bars conduct heat like metal?
But seriously, do crabon bars conduct heat like metal?
__________________
See, this is why we can't have nice things. - - smarkinson
Where else but the internet can a bunch of cyclists go and be the tough guy? - - jdon
#1816
Administrator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Hudson Valley, NY
Posts: 33,146
Bikes: Merlin Cyrene '04; Bridgestone RB-1 '92
Liked 6,886 Times
in
3,581 Posts
Did you mean sane? Is sad a typo, or . . .
__________________
See, this is why we can't have nice things. - - smarkinson
Where else but the internet can a bunch of cyclists go and be the tough guy? - - jdon
#1817
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,770
Bikes: Have two wheels
Liked 4,658 Times
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2,554 Posts
A proper utility bike.
#1818
Should Be More Popular
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Malvern, PA (20 miles West of Philly)
Posts: 43,322
Bikes: 1986 Alpine (steel road bike), 2009 Ti Habenero, 2013 Specialized Roubaix
Liked 9,227 Times
in
4,277 Posts
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm convinced all these chain problems nowadays are the result of 11 and 12 sp drivetrains along with the weight weenie craze necessitating a thinner gauge chain. BITD when I used to ride tons, chains never broke unless installed improperly. Sure we didn't ride 20,000 miles a year like some of you nuts guys, but we rode plenty.
#1819
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: TC, MN
Posts: 39,520
Bikes: R3 Disc, Haanjo
Liked 9,456 Times
in
4,672 Posts
One other thing that this makes me wonder about is swapping or adding another layer of bar tape to something that'll insulate from those heat-sink handle bars a little more effectively. It wouldn't do much good if your hands are primarily on the hoods (which big heat vampires, IMO) but it might help a lot in the drops.
#1820
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,770
Bikes: Have two wheels
Liked 4,658 Times
in
2,554 Posts
I am not opposed to synthetic socks. And I do not shun all cotton.
#1821
Mostly Harmless
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: At Large
Posts: 56,770
Bikes: Have two wheels
Liked 4,658 Times
in
2,554 Posts
#1822
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: TC, MN
Posts: 39,520
Bikes: R3 Disc, Haanjo
Liked 9,456 Times
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4,672 Posts
Edit: take it with a grain of salt, but this was the first search result:
Composite made from carbon fiber and epoxy resin is a material with heat conductivity x 40 times less than aluminium and 10 times less than steel
#1823
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
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3,221 Posts
#1824
• —
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Land of Pleasant Living
Posts: 12,344
Bikes: Shmikes
Liked 5,974 Times
in
3,221 Posts
#1825
he said member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: is everything
Posts: 13,802
Bikes: yes please
Liked 1,951 Times
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1,207 Posts