Dogtrousers
Lefty tighty. Get it righty.
Like ABS? Seat belts? CB Radio??
I think CB radio on a Friday Night Ride to the Coast would be a hoot.
Like ABS? Seat belts? CB Radio??
The real breakthrough in saddle development came in the 60's, with the non leather, plastic Unicanitor saddle. This was the ancestor of all modern saddles.
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Not the past 25 years, but no older than a whole load of other things suggested above ... Quick Links.
In the 70s when I started playing with bikes the only way I knew how to break and re-join a chain was using a nail punch to drive a rivet out and then to use a hammer to peen the rivet over when re-joining. I think I may have bought a chain tool around then too. Anyway it took skill and mechanical sympathy, neither of which I have. There may have been a better way but my mentor Richard Ballantyne didn't tell me about it in his book.
Anyway, around 1980 or thereabouts I saw an advert in the CTC magazine for something called a Super-Link or some such. So I sent off for one. It was like a modern quick link - almost. There were two "rivets" permanently attached to one plate, that had threaded holes along their length. You screwed the other plate on with little screws. No more bashing and peening, or subtle fiddling with a chain tool. What bliss.
Now that those weird Shimano snap-off rivets seem to have gone away it seems that the victory of the quick link is complete.
Much better than my 1970's Brookes Professional which sunk in the centre following a long and wet mudguardless ride.
A real waste of my schoolboy earnings!
Even after adjusting the tension bolt the ruddy thing was never the same again.
Much better than my 1970's Brookes Professional which sunk in the centre following a long and wet mudguardless ride.
A real waste of my schoolboy earnings!
Even after adjusting the tension bolt the ruddy thing was never the same again.
I like the security of being able to whip out a spare tube fix puncture and away you go.
Don't really think the comparison with cars is valid. Car tyres are great big thick things and less likely to puncture - worse case scenario you call green flag or whoever.
Why does that make tubeless bad?
Everybody on here who has tubeless and said anything about the matter has said they carry a tube in case of a puncture that is too much for the sealant, even with plugs.
THe comparison with cars is completely valid. The fact car tyres are less likely to puncture is irrelevant.
It has a strange effect of offending some people at a conceptual level
I used to think this but Tristan Ridley put me off. As he's an adventure cyclist, he's always had to carry a spare but the spare (which was the same age as his original) snapped shortly after he put it on. He was lucky that he could replace it within a few days but he went back to chains shortly afterwards. Think I'd prefer to take a handful of spare links.
If you're just into commuting and day trips, they're fine, I'd imagine.