#1
|
|||
|
|||
New bike ?
Thinking about getting a Habanero disk bike. Mark finally has the stuff and they would be pretty cool. I will probably ride it pretty much as a road bike alternative but I do think it would give me some more flexibility. At present my Habanero Team Issue is a fantastic road but but I run 23 or 25 tires and you don't go anywhere except the real pavement. I don't even go on the roads they just chipped till they get packed down.
So would to you think smart move or just wasting time. I also thought it might make for a better bike in the mountains. I would have lower gears and make a tad more stability and the disk brakes. Certainly if I took my present Habby to the really steep stuff I would put a 32 or 34 on the rear. That would do fine no question. Deacon mark |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
New bike ?
Op woensdag 10 maart 2021 om 21:48:37 UTC+1 schreef Mark cleary:
Thinking about getting a Habanero disk bike. Mark finally has the stuff and they would be pretty cool. I will probably ride it pretty much as a road bike alternative but I do think it would give me some more flexibility. At present my Habanero Team Issue is a fantastic road but but I run 23 or 25 tires and you don't go anywhere except the real pavement. I don't even go on the roads they just chipped till they get packed down. So would to you think smart move or just wasting time. I also thought it might make for a better bike in the mountains. I would have lower gears and make a tad more stability and the disk brakes. Certainly if I took my present Habby to the really steep stuff I would put a 32 or 34 on the rear. That would do fine no question. Deacon mark Tough question to answer for you. You only live once. I must admit that it took me also a long time to decide to buy my last bike. But looking back this last year that was a waste of time. Riding my bike(s) this last f*ck year was one of the things that kept me sane. In the nine months I have this bike I put on 5000 km (Ok 4991.9, just checked) almost half of my years total. So if you think buying this bike does improve your riding experience go for it. Life is too short. Succes. Lou |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
New bike ?
On 3/10/2021 3:06 PM, Lou Holtman wrote:
Op woensdag 10 maart 2021 om 21:48:37 UTC+1 schreef Mark cleary: Thinking about getting a Habanero disk bike. Mark finally has the stuff and they would be pretty cool. I will probably ride it pretty much as a road bike alternative but I do think it would give me some more flexibility. At present my Habanero Team Issue is a fantastic road but but I run 23 or 25 tires and you don't go anywhere except the real pavement. I don't even go on the roads they just chipped till they get packed down. So would to you think smart move or just wasting time. I also thought it might make for a better bike in the mountains. I would have lower gears and make a tad more stability and the disk brakes. Certainly if I took my present Habby to the really steep stuff I would put a 32 or 34 on the rear. That would do fine no question. Deacon mark Tough question to answer for you. You only live once. I must admit that it took me also a long time to decide to buy my last bike. But looking back this last year that was a waste of time. Riding my bike(s) this last f*ck year was one of the things that kept me sane. In the nine months I have this bike I put on 5000 km (Ok 4991.9, just checked) almost half of my years total. So if you think buying this bike does improve your riding experience go for it. Life is too short. Succes. Lou What Lou said. I've always been pretty tight with a buck, but I decided about 8 years ago that life was too short to have frequently-used equipment that bugged me. And you can't take it with you. And "what are you waiting for." If your (Mark's) point was that you can't fit tires bigger than 25mm on your existing Habanero, and that your roads are crappy, I'd say go for it. Most of us on this group are too old to enjoy being pounded by rough roads. PS - if the new bike could be used on gravel, say with some bigger tires, all the more reason. I used to be pretty much pavement-only. Got a gravel bike two years ago. Now I use roads that are only ~1/2 mile away from the sometimes-semi-busy rural roads I know like the back of my hand, but are essentially empty (counted at ~8-12 motor vehicles per HOUR), with new scenery to boot. "It's a whole new world." Mark J. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
New bike ?
On Wednesday, March 10, 2021 at 3:46:07 PM UTC-8, Mark J. wrote:
On 3/10/2021 3:06 PM, Lou Holtman wrote: Op woensdag 10 maart 2021 om 21:48:37 UTC+1 schreef Mark cleary: Thinking about getting a Habanero disk bike. Mark finally has the stuff and they would be pretty cool. I will probably ride it pretty much as a road bike alternative but I do think it would give me some more flexibility. At present my Habanero Team Issue is a fantastic road but but I run 23 or 25 tires and you don't go anywhere except the real pavement. I don't even go on the roads they just chipped till they get packed down. So would to you think smart move or just wasting time. I also thought it might make for a better bike in the mountains. I would have lower gears and make a tad more stability and the disk brakes. Certainly if I took my present Habby to the really steep stuff I would put a 32 or 34 on the rear. That would do fine no question. Deacon mark Tough question to answer for you. You only live once. I must admit that it took me also a long time to decide to buy my last bike. But looking back this last year that was a waste of time. Riding my bike(s) this last f*ck year was one of the things that kept me sane. In the nine months I have this bike I put on 5000 km (Ok 4991.9, just checked) almost half of my years total. So if you think buying this bike does improve your riding experience go for it. Life is too short. Succes. Lou What Lou said. I've always been pretty tight with a buck, but I decided about 8 years ago that life was too short to have frequently-used equipment that bugged me. And you can't take it with you. And "what are you waiting for." If your (Mark's) point was that you can't fit tires bigger than 25mm on your existing Habanero, and that your roads are crappy, I'd say go for it. Most of us on this group are too old to enjoy being pounded by rough roads. PS - if the new bike could be used on gravel, say with some bigger tires, all the more reason. I used to be pretty much pavement-only. Got a gravel bike two years ago. Now I use roads that are only ~1/2 mile away from the sometimes-semi-busy rural roads I know like the back of my hand, but are essentially empty (counted at ~8-12 motor vehicles per HOUR), with new scenery to boot. "It's a whole new world." Mark J. Totally wrong. Mark's two, clear choices are a Felt CX bike or a 2003 Merckx Elite 7005 Easton aluminum bike. These are probably the two finest bikes every made, and I can get one or both of them for cheap. I know a guy. -- Jay Beattie. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
New bike ?
On 3/10/2021 6:46 PM, Mark J. wrote:
On 3/10/2021 3:06 PM, Lou Holtman wrote: Op woensdag 10 maart 2021 om 21:48:37 UTC+1 schreef Mark cleary: Thinking about getting a Habanero disk bike. Mark finally has the stuff and they would be pretty cool. I will probably ride it pretty much as a road bike alternative but I do think it would give me some more flexibility. At present my Habanero Team Issue is a fantastic road but but I run 23 or 25 tires and you don't go anywhere except the real pavement. I don't even go on the roads they just chipped till they get packed down. So would to you think smart move or just wasting time. I also thought it might make for a better bike in the mountains. I would have lower gears and make a tad more stability and the disk brakes. Certainly if I took my present Habby to the really steep stuff I would put a 32 or 34 on the rear. That would do fine no question. Deacon mark Tough question to answer for you. You only live once. I must admit that it took me also a long time to decide to buy my last bike. But looking back this last year that was a waste of time. Riding my bike(s) this last f*ck year was one of the things that kept me sane. In the nine months I have this bike I put on 5000 km (Ok 4991.9, just checked) almost half of my years total. So if you think buying this bike does improve your riding experience go for it. Life is too short. Succes. Lou What Lou said.Â* I've always been pretty tight with a buck, but I decided about 8 years ago that life was too short to have frequently-used equipment that bugged me.Â* And you can't take it with you.Â* And "what are you waiting for." If your (Mark's) point was that you can't fit tires bigger than 25mm on your existing Habanero, and that your roads are crappy, I'd say go for it.Â* Most of us on this group are too old to enjoy being pounded by rough roads. PS - if the new bike could be used on gravel, say with some bigger tires, all the more reason.Â* I used to be pretty much pavement-only. Got a gravel bike two years ago.Â* Now I use roads that are only ~1/2 mile away from the sometimes-semi-busy rural roads I know like the back of my hand, but are essentially empty (counted at ~8-12 motor vehicles per HOUR), with new scenery to boot.Â* "It's a whole new world." As a guy who long ago complained about the silliness of close-clearance frames, I'm sitting here smiling. :-) -- - Frank Krygowski |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
For Sale: Bike, Bike, Bike, Bike, Frame, and wheels. | gplama[_137_] | Australia | 53 | July 3rd 07 09:37 AM |
road bike / race bike / hybrid / touring / fitness bike - which one | Maurice Wibblington | UK | 44 | September 27th 06 10:53 PM |
road bike / race bike / hybrid / touring / fitness bike - CHOSEN AND BOUGHT | Maurice Wibblington | UK | 26 | September 27th 06 11:56 AM |
We've had the row bike, kick bike, treadmill bike (yes really) now the..... | PiledHigher | Australia | 0 | August 4th 06 07:03 AM |