Commuter cycling thread; No fenders, no care.
#1
Tour de Franzia
Thread Starter
iTrader: (6)
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Republic of Dallas
Posts: 29,085
Total Cats: 375
Commuter cycling thread; No fenders, no care.
Baggy clothing, toe-clips, Arcade Fire, disc brakes, riding without a computer, and getting dropped can all be discussed in here.
Stay out of the cycling manliness threads, please. That thread is pure and holy.
Stay out of the cycling manliness threads, please. That thread is pure and holy.
#3
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
I've given up on trying to find a rim-brake pad which works well in cold and wet conditions, and have started looking for something with a disc or hub brake. Happened across the Schwinn 411 recently, and I am being seriously tempted by it:
It ticks all the right boxes. Disc brakes, internally-geared 5 speed rear hub (thus no derailleurs), looks fairly rugged, and that basket on the front is actually integrated into the handlebar. The space inside the triangle looks too small to accommodate my big U-lock with the stock mount*, but I could easily just hang it from the basket when riding.
The stock mount supplied by Kryptonite- it's quite clever:
It ticks all the right boxes. Disc brakes, internally-geared 5 speed rear hub (thus no derailleurs), looks fairly rugged, and that basket on the front is actually integrated into the handlebar. The space inside the triangle looks too small to accommodate my big U-lock with the stock mount*, but I could easily just hang it from the basket when riding.
The stock mount supplied by Kryptonite- it's quite clever:
#6
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
What I'd *REALLY* like is to find a kit that will let me cheaply retrofit internal hub brakes into the red 7-speed Schwinn pictured above with the vacuum cleaner strapped to the back of it. Does anybody even make such a thing? Seriously, I love every single thing about that bike except for the brakes.
#8
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
And it'd still be a hack that I can't easily reproduce on the next bike after this one is stolen.
I want a simple, store-bought solution. If I have to pay some money for that, I will. Just exploring options right now. It seems odd that nobody makes a simple front hub brake that I can buy for $25 and take to a LBS to have re-threaded into my existing rim.
Or, is there some other commuter bike out there which is cheaper and less visually appealing than the 411 which has hub or disc brakes already? I've seen a few that have a disc on the front and a rim brake on the rear. That might be an option.
#11
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
There's a much less hipster way to solve that problem. Let me show you a picture of my current bike taken from a slightly different angle:
Yes, I have a chainguard and a kickstand. Yes, I like them both very much.
FWIW, the 411 comes stock with this:
In most of the owner-pictures I see, it's been removed. No idea why people would want to do that; seems like the same mentality that makes people cut their valve cover to expose their timing belt and stock cam gears.
Ironically, the person who I sold my old turbo '92 to just recently sold it to someone else (after ******* it up horribly), and the new owner managed to track me down. He shared with me this picture:
The ****** painted the STOCK cam gears purple and cut the valve cover to expose them! (He also removed / fucked up a ton of other stuff under the hood, but that's a different matter...)
Pulling the chain guard off of a commuter bike offends me in much the same way.
Yes, I have a chainguard and a kickstand. Yes, I like them both very much.
FWIW, the 411 comes stock with this:
In most of the owner-pictures I see, it's been removed. No idea why people would want to do that; seems like the same mentality that makes people cut their valve cover to expose their timing belt and stock cam gears.
Ironically, the person who I sold my old turbo '92 to just recently sold it to someone else (after ******* it up horribly), and the new owner managed to track me down. He shared with me this picture:
The ****** painted the STOCK cam gears purple and cut the valve cover to expose them! (He also removed / fucked up a ton of other stuff under the hood, but that's a different matter...)
Pulling the chain guard off of a commuter bike offends me in much the same way.
#12
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
Coming this spring to a subway platform near you, the creators of Shіtibiki and Shіtibike Resurrection bring you a riveting tale of cheapness beyond imagination. It's...
Shіtibike II: The Shіtening!
It followed me home.
Not quite identical twins, but close. On the left is the one I've had for about 6 months, which is private-labeled as "Admiral" and sold by WalMart. On the right is the new acquisition, branded as "Wayfarer" and sold by K-Mart. Both are Pacific Cycles bikes imported under the Schwinn brand. Same bike, different colors, and the K-mart one didn't come with a bell.
Interestingly, the rims on the black one appear to be un-painted, whereas the red one came with painted wheels that resulted in my spending several consecutive long evenings sitting on the sofa with a glass of reasonably-priced whiskey, tediously wet-sanding them down to bare metal. (Protip: even with $40 pads, painted rims are for **** if you're trying to stop in the rain.)
Currently in the process of doing the customary complete teardown / cleaning / re-greasing of all the major bearing assemblies. I've found that the Chinese war orphans who get paid 10 cents a day to assemble these don't bother wiping down all of the metal flakes / diamond dust / etc., that's used during the process of machining the bearing races.
Wheels were surprisingly not too bad in terms of straightness. .056 - .062" total runout front and rear.
Shіtibike II: The Shіtening!
It followed me home.
Not quite identical twins, but close. On the left is the one I've had for about 6 months, which is private-labeled as "Admiral" and sold by WalMart. On the right is the new acquisition, branded as "Wayfarer" and sold by K-Mart. Both are Pacific Cycles bikes imported under the Schwinn brand. Same bike, different colors, and the K-mart one didn't come with a bell.
Interestingly, the rims on the black one appear to be un-painted, whereas the red one came with painted wheels that resulted in my spending several consecutive long evenings sitting on the sofa with a glass of reasonably-priced whiskey, tediously wet-sanding them down to bare metal. (Protip: even with $40 pads, painted rims are for **** if you're trying to stop in the rain.)
Currently in the process of doing the customary complete teardown / cleaning / re-greasing of all the major bearing assemblies. I've found that the Chinese war orphans who get paid 10 cents a day to assemble these don't bother wiping down all of the metal flakes / diamond dust / etc., that's used during the process of machining the bearing races.
Wheels were surprisingly not too bad in terms of straightness. .056 - .062" total runout front and rear.
#14
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
They're not quite as horrible as you'd think in terms of comfort, but they are pretty bad in terms of controllability .
That's the stock handlebar that all of the Admiral / Wayfarer bikes come with- the red one had them too. It's faithful to the style and geometry of the 60s/70s era Schwinn Collegiate which this bike is a reproduction of:
(I'm just glad that the new one comes with linear-pull brakes and a twist shifter, as opposed to the suicide shifter and side-pull calipers on the original.)
I've ordered another of the same handlebar I put on the red bike to replace it- fits perfectly with the stock quill stem: Dimension Sweep 600 Riser Bar > Components > Handlebars and Stems > Mountain Bike Handlebars | Jenson USA Online Bike Shop
I use the 45mm rise, 24° sweep version. It yields a nice, wide bar that's slightly more stable and comfortable than a completely flat bar, but still very quick and controllable.
That's the stock handlebar that all of the Admiral / Wayfarer bikes come with- the red one had them too. It's faithful to the style and geometry of the 60s/70s era Schwinn Collegiate which this bike is a reproduction of:
(I'm just glad that the new one comes with linear-pull brakes and a twist shifter, as opposed to the suicide shifter and side-pull calipers on the original.)
I've ordered another of the same handlebar I put on the red bike to replace it- fits perfectly with the stock quill stem: Dimension Sweep 600 Riser Bar > Components > Handlebars and Stems > Mountain Bike Handlebars | Jenson USA Online Bike Shop
I use the 45mm rise, 24° sweep version. It yields a nice, wide bar that's slightly more stable and comfortable than a completely flat bar, but still very quick and controllable.
#15
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
Aaah, the wonderful aroma of clean, shiny ***** packed in fresh lube.
And the dilemma of the urban cyclist- the missus versus the mess:
(I do so miss having a well-appointed garage to work in...)
And the dilemma of the urban cyclist- the missus versus the mess:
(I do so miss having a well-appointed garage to work in...)
#20
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,039
Total Cats: 6,604
Hehe. Low-light panorama shot hurredly.
Not much visible progress. The wheel and crank bearings are all cleaned, lubed, adjusted and re-assembled. This evening as I was heading home, one the pedals on the red bike froze up, so I had to steal one off this bike to replace it. My bad for not attending to it as soon as it started making noise. Protip: when you buy a cheap bike, you really do need to dismantle and rebuild ALL of the bearings- even the very small and seemingly trivial ones.
Still waiting for a few parts to arrive (tires, handlebar), but the most important one showed up on Friday. Decided to try a rigid, top-mounted basket as opposed to the folding, side-mounted basket that I've used on all the other bikes. The folding basket is nice for groceries (is holds one paper grocery bag exactly), but my backpack doesn't fit into it when I'm packed for a weekend excursion. Here it is roughly mocked-up on the red bike (which has the same rack as the black bike) just to get an idea of the fitment:
Not much visible progress. The wheel and crank bearings are all cleaned, lubed, adjusted and re-assembled. This evening as I was heading home, one the pedals on the red bike froze up, so I had to steal one off this bike to replace it. My bad for not attending to it as soon as it started making noise. Protip: when you buy a cheap bike, you really do need to dismantle and rebuild ALL of the bearings- even the very small and seemingly trivial ones.
Still waiting for a few parts to arrive (tires, handlebar), but the most important one showed up on Friday. Decided to try a rigid, top-mounted basket as opposed to the folding, side-mounted basket that I've used on all the other bikes. The folding basket is nice for groceries (is holds one paper grocery bag exactly), but my backpack doesn't fit into it when I'm packed for a weekend excursion. Here it is roughly mocked-up on the red bike (which has the same rack as the black bike) just to get an idea of the fitment: