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Re: Cycling
Posted: Sat Mar 12, 2016 3:46 pm
by Horizon
Very nice
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sat Mar 12, 2016 6:00 pm
by sid10
One of my mates has started doing night rides to Edinburgh and back from Carlisle , next one is a bit further 250 miles round trip .
I went for the disc spec one as most manufacturers are going down that route , the reviews on the 105 compared to the ultegra were very good so thought I would save £500 and spend it on some new wheels , unfortunately the amount available is very limited and I was advised to wait until next year as the wheels are fairly good on it Maddux 2.0 ( no I had never heard of them either ) as Mavic are bringing out some cracking wheels disc spec . Up to now it is very good it is a more upright ride as I found the Supersix fantastic but a bit too sporty for me . Must be getting old .
The Caad10 is a brilliant light and pointy bike , my son 13 loves it , he had a Scott S20 before but says this is in a different league .
The BMW is very light for a 58cm 7,25kg without the pedals it is a great ride and quite scarce now ! will use lightly .
I watched a youtube vid on squeaky brakes with try and find as they used a house hold product to eliminate it .
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sat Mar 12, 2016 6:45 pm
by Horizon
A night ride of 250 miles
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sat Mar 12, 2016 10:03 pm
by sid10
My son did the coast to coast last year with school in 24 hours , I was shocked they even planned it . It would have killed me ! That was practise for the Alps .
The synapse has the wider tyres as the wheel rims are bigger to aid with comfort .
Like most people on here I should have gone for an electric bike as I seem to be getting slower instead of faster .
Re: Cycling
Posted: Mon Mar 14, 2016 1:30 pm
by X Box
Another cycling fan here - hence why I haven't been on here much!
Have a couple of road bikes, an mtb and a fat bike!
Re: Cycling
Posted: Mon Mar 14, 2016 4:58 pm
by sid10
pics
Re: Cycling
Posted: Mon Mar 14, 2016 7:53 pm
by Horizon
[quote="sid10"]
My son did the coast to coast last year with school in 24 hours , I was shocked they even planned it . It would have killed me ! That was practise for the Alps .
The synapse has the wider tyres as the wheel rims are bigger to aid with comfort .
Like most people on here I should have gone for an electric bike as I seem to be getting slower instead of faster .
[/quote]
The mention of the Alps has made my legs start to hurt, and I'm only sat on the sofa.
We had 4 days in Majorca last May, they unfortunately had a mini heatwave that week and it was 40degrees for 3 days.
Fantastic place to ride though, lots of climbing up near Alcudia
Re: Cycling
Posted: Thu Mar 31, 2016 12:12 am
by Pinewood
[quote="X Box"]
Another cycling fan here - hence why I haven't been on here much!
Have a couple of road bikes, an mtb and a fat bike!
[/quote]
Only 3 bikes ::)
I started off with a road bike,
Then a rebuilt steel hybrid
Finally a 29er .....
But then I wanted a Dahon folder :-[
Re: Cycling
Posted: Thu Mar 31, 2016 11:46 am
by toonarmy
I'm down in shape near bedale this week doing some cycling walking drinking Guinness we've done a few big rides now coast to coast extended version /coast to castle Edinburgh back to South Shields /South Shields to reeth bit of the Tour de France then back to South Shields very hilly then last year we did London Paris .....London to new haven ferry to dieppe then on to a small village called gissors then onto Paris finished there on sat Tour de France finished on Sunday amazing
Re: Cycling
Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2016 10:53 pm
by Pinewood
Sounds amazing. Would love to be in Paris to see the TDF one year. My longest rides have been for charities close to my heart. 107 miles from Bristol to London and the following year London to Birmingham which topped 120 miles. Both were done in a day,so now the idea of a multi day tour involving over night stays and beer are my next target.
Cycling
Posted: Sat Apr 30, 2016 11:58 pm
by jaynana
From which side of London is that?
I do 15x2 miles to Central London from north west, 2 to 3 times a week.. On this[emoji13]
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sun May 01, 2016 9:45 am
by DiscusbT
Amusing really to think that bikes are using disk brakes. In my cycling days, which is more than half a century ago, what would you call the braking system, where you had a a round metal thing with a tyre round the outside in contact with the road, and two pads that were squeezed onto the sides of it to brake.
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sun May 01, 2016 10:42 am
by Pinewood
[quote="jaynana"]
From which side of London is that?
I do 15x2 miles to Central London from north west, 2 to 3 times a week.. On this[emoji13]
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
[/quote]
I cycle in from Hillingdon along the Uxbridge Road to Shepherds Bush and into the city (EC2), find it difficult to do more than twice a week as i need a laptop etc. But it's so exhilarating compared to sitting in the X3 for 90-120 mins EACH WAY!
Re: Cycling
Posted: Sun May 01, 2016 11:43 am
by X5Sport
[quote="DiscusbT"]
Amusing really to think that bikes are using disk brakes. In my cycling days, which is more than half a century ago, what would you call the braking system, where you had a a round metal thing with a tyre round the outside in contact with the road, and two pads that were squeezed onto the sides of it to brake.
[/quote]
If you were really lucky they actually worked properly too. After that the backup system (FOR) foot on road helped a bit
Re: Cycling
Posted: Mon May 02, 2016 11:32 am
by Pinewood
Did none of you ride bikes with non existence brakes?
Jam foot between rear tyre and frame was the default braking system.... Followed by a whack from mum every 2 weeks as you needed new shoes/trainers for school!
(she passed 18 months ago, and i remember the funniest strangest things
)