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05:01
@Erlkoenig wide-built is a myth
@AndyP I don’t know. Why does anyone join a competition when they don’t have a serious chance to make a podium place? For some it is simply about finishing, even if it’s a sprint triathlon
 
2 hours later…
07:31
@Renaud Awesome, thanks. Yeah it seems that here in Bavaria too the roads around lakes are the worst.
@Michael Then how come that my upper body and pelvis are much wider than with many other men? And no, it's not padded with fat. "Luckily" the Lycra hides nothing, when I see other cyclists I always wonder how everything fits in there...
08:08
I understand that. And I understand ambitions can also scale with your ability. But an objective to just finish something as small/easy as a sprint tri is nothing. Basically anyone can roll off the sofa and finish one - they might walk a lot but even a very unfit person can cover that distance.

In biking for example take "La Marmotte": https://marmottegranfondoalpes.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/07/MarmotteAlpes_Profil2.jpg
This is what i'd consider a proper challenge. A novice can complete it if they are willing to devote some training hours. Or for me I can try for the gold sta
@Erlkoenig Luckily, there are plenty of opportunities for gravel. Although loads of the tours from the komoot link are on the hardcore side of gravel. When we did the tour, my brother had a Specialized Sirrus X 5.0 (a carbon gravel bike with flat handle bar and MTB cassette — but a 40T chainring) and some parts were doable, but not enjoyable. The organiser regularly advices to have a min ratio smaller than 1.
@Renaud I think most people would consider a ratio of ~0.8 pretty standard for gravel. Only someone living somewhere very flat or someone who is a very strong rider would pick a bigger bottom gear for gravel
@Renaud Oh gnarly. I have a 0.9 ratio
@Erlkoenig 38-42?
Exactly. I could switch for a 10-44 cassette but the Ekar cassettes are expensive, not really worth it for one holiday?
I should look for the easier tours then...
08:21
better switch would be the 36t chainring. at the other end 36-9 is still a pretty huge gear for gravel
The smallest ekar chainring is 38 😬
"There are four ring size options: Adventure has 38 teeth; Pure Gravel is 40T, Fast Gravel is 42T, and eGravel 44T". Guess I need "Grandma gravel"
ah, my bad. i thought it was 36->42 and its 38->44 on the chainrings.
@AndyP For some people even walking 5km is an accomplishment they have to train for
it’s ridiculous but that’s the reality :D
injuries can be mind opening for this realization. After my hip surgery just walking 2km was truly exhausting.
just doing 3x15 push ups right now is exhausting and gives me DOMS for 4 days. It used to be my warm up
I’m not even really old or overweight or anything
lol, i cant even do 3x15 pushups and have not been able to ever since I started cycling as my main sport.
so don’t make fun of people because of their goals or abilities
08:32
@AndyP Pretty standard? In the recent (upper range) groupsets, true. But in 1x, the 11/42 cassette is the only supported one for APEX 1 and all GRX 1x. To get significantly lower than 1, it was either a 2x or a mullet.
Which is why if you were to go back a few months in my chat history in here you'd find me saying that current gravel groupsets are borderline not fit for purpose.
Ekar is the best of a bad bunch
1x groupsets just don’t have enough bandwidth
~5 years into gravel and people still need to bodge together mullet groupset to make something viable.
And shimano given the opportunity to design something from scratch decide enormous chainrings designed only for pro riders are whats needed
GRX600 with 46t/30t chainrings and 11–34t cassette looks okay-ish. Though it’s still on the hard side for climbs with luggage
I wouldn't mind a SRAM "mullet": you can now use SRAM brifters with Eagle AXS.
@Michael I have 46/30 chainrings and 11/42 cassette on my hybrid. When doing serious gravel, I'm often on the 30/42. The GRX600 just doesn't have enough range.
08:43
Problem with the SRAM mullet is the steps between gears are disgustingly huge.
Thats why I feel ekar is the best option currently
which is insanity. they had the opportunity to design something totally new. Like 42/26 chainset with 11-40 cassette.
And instead they just made a road groupset for less fit people and called it good
@Renaud which derailleur has this much capacity?
I have an Deore RD-M5120. It's officially above specs, but Giant sold at some point a bike with this configuration, so I took the risk. Otherwise within specs in 9 speed, the Microshift Advent long cage and in 11 speed the RD-M8000 (but I couldn't get a compatible chainring with a 73mm BB).
09:10
@AndyP Totally agree, and that's why I stick with my hybrid. I'm tented to buy a gravel, but transmissions turn me off (same with MTBs, that being said, and they would be overkill here).
@AndyP At least it has a clutch derailleur and improved brifter ergonomics for riding in the hoods, so not completely road-like
I'm yet to buy a gravel bike too, despite ~50% of my riding being gravel rides.
My 29er is totally overkill, but it works for the job and the additional tyre volume is something i'm a fan of.
I'm pretty happy with the Ekar, haven't encountered a hill I couldn't climb because of gear ratio yet (but a few that were too slippery for my tyres)
I'm trying to find a gravel bike that would do good shared duties between a winter/audax bike and some light gravel.
Been looking at this, but the lack of a 3rd set of bottle mounts puts me off a little: https://www.ribblecycles.co.uk/ribble-cgr-ti/
I considered that one too before I bought my current one 😄 Trail is pretty high. 3 bottle cage mounts are indeed pretty useful...
09:27
On the plus side, it looks nice, the price is right, it has all the other mounting points and it's not quite full on gravel geometry so should still be relatively fun to ride on road
Not full gravel at that high trail? 🤔 Price is pretty good indeed
When you compare to their dedicated gravel bike with slacker head angle, shorter top tube etc: ribblecycles.co.uk/ribble-gravel-ti
Then no, the cgr isnt 'full gravel'
09:59
Hmm maybe they changed their lineup since last time I checked
10:22
yes, it got a minor revision ~1-2 years ago I think. Not sure what else changed but older one didnt have the dropped seat stays iirc
From the Ekar manual - what exactly is the wear indicator in Fig. 2?
10:42
@Erlkoenig I can't find any decent images on google, but it looks like your pads are supposed to have some sort of colour/paint on the corner to help you identify when pads are worn without needing to pull them out
Great, and they show a grayscale figure 🤣 I don't see any color on my pads... I think that beveled corner is the indicator... it's visible on my pads
ahh, so that corner has like 2 different radii? wider curve for 'OK' and the tighter corner for 'replace'? That would make sense and I can sort of see how the image could represent that
2
10:59
Yeah exactly. Makes most sense to me. But they could have shown it better 😬
 
3 hours later…
14:02
Going back to yesterday's discussion of bigger more powerful riders.
Stefan Kung seems to have transformed into a mountain goat 🤯
 
1 hour later…
15:12
Mountain G.O.A.T.?
15:32
err, i wouldn't go that far.
but for such a big guy that's been know for his flat time trialling being with the last 10-15 riders of GC group on several mountain stages is impressive
 
1 hour later…
16:52
youtube.com/shorts/B1maDFJ2DGc?feature=share Happens to the best of us 😄
silly to ride with cage pedals in this day and age
imho they never really made sense (except maybe for track riding)
btw: I recently rode on of those eScooters and I was wondering how balancing on a scooter translates to bikes and the other way around. Would riding a scooter be a good way to learn how to balance on a bike?
Probably identical. But I'd rather learn on an ordinary bike with the pedals removed and the saddle way down, used as a vélocipède, just like a kids balancing bike. Those scooters are heavy and fast...
of course a kick scooter would be safer, especially because the acceleration of those eScooters is quite binary and jolty
the biggest surprise for me was how twitchy the steering is. Giving hand signals is really sketchy. Especially if you want to signal to the right and have to release the accelerator
17:29
Explains the lackluster riding by scooter users...
17:54
My worst such incident was on a bikepacking trip.
I was coming down a semi technical little singletrack and tried to make way for a walker coming up the hill whilst also keeping an eye on the rocks and roots.
Forgot to unclip and just toppled over still attached to the bike.
And then couldnt unclip......
The shame still burns to this day!
Also, sky news article describes him and his wife as keen cyclists.
So why is he riding an old cheap hybrid thats a size too small for him when hes worth $$$$$$$$$$
@AndyP I was wondering the same, but maybe he doesn’t care? I earn a lot of money and yet I still wear shirt and pants with holes in them
not worth the hassle of buying new ones (and I want to avoid creating even more trash)
@Michael The shirt and pants probably fit though
kinda :D
hell, i'm sure Trek would donate a new bike that fitted rather than seeing that thing in the news with their name on it :P
fit doesn’t look too bad
18:06
his knees are almost hitting the bars whilst riding in the saddle, he's almost bolt upright and hes got a mountain of spacers under a riser stem.
Size larger would resolve/improve all of those
give him a 140mm stem
lol, could also work I guess. although i'm not sure anyone would make a 140mm stem with whatever crazy rise angle that is
the longer the stem, the less extreme angle you need to achieve the same stack
true
secret service guy has the launch codes on his rack? :D
:D
mhhhhhh, which rear wheel do I want to get for the commute/cyclocross/travel bike? bike24.com/p2408680.html
currently has an 28 hole DT Swiss RR411 rim and 340 hub
18:17
@AndyP That moment when the bodyguard rides the more expensive bike than the president
That 105/CXP combo seems a sensible choice.
For that style of bike my single criteria is 'its cheap'
Although for flexibility of options i'd be heavily in favour of getting a tubeless compatible rim if possible
And that look on his face.
That's the level of misery that can only be achieved by riding a hybrid with a suspension fork :P
Not enough spokes!!111
@AndyP I’d kinda like straightpull spokes for the robustness. But it looks like the hubs are only available with ≤28 holes
@AndyP Looks like an ebike... He's probably like "I did not sign up to be a babysitter"
he’s probably cursing his pants
why does a simple bike ride of Mr Biden have this media coverage?
18:23
He's the president. If he's outdoors in an area people can access it has media coverage.
Because Joe falling off his bike generates more clicks than covid/ukraine put together
did he at least injure himself?
apparently not.
although his chief of staff and publicity team will tell him off later for looking even more like a frail old man than he did before
:D
a rather famous Austrian ex-politician at least had the decency to break his hip when the same thing happened to him 5 years ago
and he at least rode a road bike
guess when you are 70 falling on your side can end badly too
I don't really recommend it at any age!
Hmm, I got a social ride with some slower people (probably around 23-24km/h for 3.5hrs).
Ride the 29er and have to work too hard for an endurance ride, or ride road bike and be zone1 and feeling cold
cold? Do you not live in the northern hemisphere?
what are the other people going to ride?
18:39
Other people will all be riding road bikes.
= riding the 29er is kinda like reverse intervals. hard keeping up on the flat and getting a rest on the climbs
really depends on how bad they are
And its Scotland, its always cold.
Forecast 14C and windy tomorrow. which if I'm on the road bike riding z1 is basically needing winter kit.....
if normal traveling speed in flat terrain (without wind) is still ~28km/h then I’d pick the road bike and ride in front
I recommend Gabba and arm and leg warmers
Scotland? Poor you
@Michael I dont think we'll go that fast on the flat. Our road surfaces are terrible. 28km/h on the flat is ~180W = above FTP of people i'm riding with
whatever speed you ride for a given power in europe, subtract 2-3kmh for what same power gives here
oh, okay
Scotland would be a nice country if the weather were better
you have some nice crags for climbing and bouldering
18:48
Hell yeah. Even if we got weather from south of england it would be really nice here.
But instead they are having a 'heatwave' whist we are having 'its autumn already'
19:00
I guess road bike is right call.
Better to ride long rides too easy rather than be too cooked to do intervals later in week
indeed
and for a social ride it never hurts to stay fresh and relaxed
unless you’ll feel bored
19:41
You just gave me severe case of first world problems.
Got Gabba to wear, but then I 'have' to wear the matching nanoflex arm warmers.
And finding arm warmers was no problem, but could not for the life of me remember where I put those particular arm warmers!
Somewhere in the "miscellaneous bike stuff" box?
@Erlkoenig Almost. Unfortunately for me rather than a box its an entire room in the house 😳
20:08
@AndyP oops. I'm not at the "I have a bike room" point of my cycling career yet.
Enjoy some blue sky.
Sigh. And perfect tarmac.
You should be careful or i'll start posting pictures of wheels with no reflectors ;-)
interesting how every country has different guide posts
you can tell this is in Germany
@AndyP That's pretty rare though 🤣
@AndyP Oh yeah give me the good stuff.
@Michael I hadn't even noticed, I was too busy gazing lovingly at the road surface 😍
The constant close fly-bys by cars kind of disturb the serenity though 😬
@Michael Yeah they are basically a cultural good 🤣
@AndyP Notice: No bike lane, no sidewalk, just perfect tarmac for cars. Priorities straight!
20:27
At least its good for something.
We have no bike lane, no sidewalk and tarmac only fit for monster trucks
Inner city streets are much worse here though. Patches over patches... A street nearby has so many strange little bumps in regular spacing, riding over it feels like the wheel is out of true.
That's pretty typical of state of many of our roads. it's like the surface has just eroded away in places
@AndyP Looks like your average inner city street 😬
our inner city streets are like that with moon craters in
Well, Germans get angry if they can't drive at 150 kph, so politicians have to provide for that 😅
20:41
lol :D
Basically here we had 40 years of not spending enough on infrastructure.
So our roads are bad, our trains are bad, our busses are bad, our hospitals and schools are falling apart.
Britain is in many ways a 3rd world country living on its past reputation
Interestingly the Ti bike (with Ti fork) with 30mm road tyres is much more comfortable, even on cobblestone, than the aluminum trekking bike with 35mm marathon tyres. The magic carpet effect!
marathons have pretty stiff sidewalls, that wont help.
When I finally decide on my winter/distance/gravel bike i wont go below 32c for sure.
I'm thinking it might be wise to have that bike also equipped with sram so I can swap nice wheels off my race bike for long distance road rides
@AndyP Well, our infrastructure is crumbling too, except for the road surfaces... Many bridges are in need of repair, some have been closed. Train tracks are in such a bad state that on some connections, it's literally impossible to be on time. A recent train derailment (5 dead) is suspected to be caused by bad tracks. Train stations are in such a bad state they put up nets to catch debris falling from the ceiling.
The best parts of our infrastructure are the ones the Prussians built in the 19th century
@AndyP Good choice...
with disc brakes you can use your nice wheels all the ime
*time
@Erlkoenig This doesnt surprise me. I think UK is ahead of the curve on stuff falling apart. But a big chunk of the western world kinda squandered their wealth and now have both big national debt and infrastructure falling apart.
20:55
@AndyP Yeah, particularly by spending too much on car infrastructure!
@Michael Yeah. Ordered a 2nd (shallower) set today actually for use in the mountains. So can have nice wheels on 2 bikes and 3rd set with more robust tyres for winter/gravel
Although I do need SRAM to actually make some cassettes!
1 cassette between 2 sets of wheels will get tiresome pretty quickly
time for bed, good night
My bike is an all-year bike 😜
I'm faaaar too lazy with maintenance to ride nice stuff during the winter
If I was just looking for a winter bike i'd literally spend £500 on it and tolerate whatever garbage components it had.
But since i'm also looking for something to perhaps do some audaxing on then something a bit nicer but not crazy expensive makes sense
21:10
I'd rather ride something nice all the time and do some maintenance... There's not much difference in cleaning snow/road salt to cleaning mud/dirt from gravel biking
Yeah, i dont really do cleaning.
Just ride and put it in the shed
Then enjoy a noisy drivetrain 🤣
lol, maybe 5 years ago I had a winter bike whose drivetrain was semi permanently seized. I would 'lube' it with WD40 every ride.
But that's still easier than having to do a proper clean/lube of the bike 3-4x a week
Now I have my glorious single speed with anti rust chain. New chain one a year and its happy :)

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