Bee
Active Member
Hello all,
I finally took the plunge after Christmas and ordered myself a Brompton M6L/R (44T), which I've had now for a month or so and am loving it. People said things to me like, "the Brompton is ok for short commutes but no good for doing distance". Well, after a 50 miler at the weekend, I am beginning to feel vindicated in doubting! For me the geometry seems to work rather well... which of course might say as much about me as does about the Brompton
I've added one or two bits: Ergon GP2 grips, Shimano A530 pedals, Zefal Spin mirror and a Garmin Edge 25 GPS -- all of which have turned out to be real winners.
The new Schwalbe Marathon Racer standard issue tyres are a bit light-weight -- had a rear puncture already, but the cuprit was a bent safety pin so quite likely a sturdier Marathon would have succumb also. The good thing is that these Racer tyres are pretty easy to get off and on with bare hands.
Any way, other than to say hello, and say what a useful forum this is for mining, I have a conundrum...
The left-hand (non-drive side) fork has a cylindrical braze-on on the rear edge - fixed with it's axis horizontal and perpendicular to the that of the bike at wheel-rim height. What the heck is it for???
I finally took the plunge after Christmas and ordered myself a Brompton M6L/R (44T), which I've had now for a month or so and am loving it. People said things to me like, "the Brompton is ok for short commutes but no good for doing distance". Well, after a 50 miler at the weekend, I am beginning to feel vindicated in doubting! For me the geometry seems to work rather well... which of course might say as much about me as does about the Brompton

I've added one or two bits: Ergon GP2 grips, Shimano A530 pedals, Zefal Spin mirror and a Garmin Edge 25 GPS -- all of which have turned out to be real winners.
The new Schwalbe Marathon Racer standard issue tyres are a bit light-weight -- had a rear puncture already, but the cuprit was a bent safety pin so quite likely a sturdier Marathon would have succumb also. The good thing is that these Racer tyres are pretty easy to get off and on with bare hands.
Any way, other than to say hello, and say what a useful forum this is for mining, I have a conundrum...
The left-hand (non-drive side) fork has a cylindrical braze-on on the rear edge - fixed with it's axis horizontal and perpendicular to the that of the bike at wheel-rim height. What the heck is it for???