Inclement weather has limited my ability to clip in and go
testing , so turbo trainer aside; its been a question of
completing existing reports ahead of deadline, resurrecting the book projects
with continued hunting of something suitable in temp land.
January’s close is oft regarded as the worst for morale,
Christmas’ and New Year sparkle tempering quickly against cobalt skies and
sometimes harsh, economic realities. Tired of well meaning but ultimately empty
enthusiasm, I made contact with an accomplished author and editor (who I’d
approached some twenty five years previously, eager to write for his newly
established magazine) to see if he’d be tempted by my project outline.
Fenders fitted to my favourite fixer; substituting its
stocky Surly long haul trucker for a 6061 Topeak Super Tourist DX seemed an
obvious move since it only hosted a cotton duck rack bag, shaving several
hundred grams in a stroke. Reasonable payloads aside, wanderlust is limited to
commuting, weekend touring and of course, Audax duties but then things seldom
give trouble when built properly and used as per design brief.
Then came the big thaw, seeing the Univega plucked from its
hook and introduced to the 933g Tortec epic, fitting with consummate ease
having found a full compliment of stainless (as distinct from the chrome plated
hotch potch) fasteners. However, doing so necessitated forgoing its Torch
fender fit blinky and plugging the holes with silicone, bathroom type sealant.
To my surprise, the epic is only 40g heavier than Tubus’
legendary Logo with an identical payload. Repeated exposure to slushy, salted
roads hasn’t given any cause for alarm, although are readily ingrained along
with fingerprints and light dirt into the slightly dimpled texture. Warrantee
wrangles aside, the tubus is more easily repaired or adapted with pump pegs,
bespoke light fittings and similar nick nacks using brass, not fusion
welding.
Arguably a
no-brainer but you’d be surprised at the number of folk who I’ve seen
introducing a common or garden wire feed MIG/MAG unit to proceedings only to
find their lugged and brazed frameset melts like the proverbial waxwork. Keeping the cargo theme for a minute, having
also spent some of this enforced confinement exploring home built homages to
the mighty mono-wheeled Bob Yak (Most notably here:
http://www.instructables.com/id/My-version-of-a-YAK-Bike-Trailer/?ALLSTEPS
http://www.instructables.com/id/My-version-of-a-YAK-Bike-Trailer/?ALLSTEPS
It occurs to me that trailer racing would make a superb
sub genre-whether fixed or freewheel, trail or tarmac. Categories could include
custom/bespoke, production or backyard special with further segregation
according to budget, wheel-size, extent of modification, payload etc. Making
best use of slack time and with the help of a pop rivet gun and sixty odd 4mm
aluminium rivets, I’ve been devising my own snow specific tyres from part worn
rubber.
Taking inspiration from Continental’s Nordic spike, I haven’t put sufficient mileage on this little Kenda to comment as to its worthiness but it’s an interesting experiment nonetheless. If successful, I might extend this to 700c and 26inch mtb formats. Some months ago, I was lamenting the lack of (relatively) narrow, commercially available options-42mm and 2.2 inches being pretty much the limit. Kenda offer a Klondike in fender friendly 35,38 and 1.75 sections.
Taking inspiration from Continental’s Nordic spike, I haven’t put sufficient mileage on this little Kenda to comment as to its worthiness but it’s an interesting experiment nonetheless. If successful, I might extend this to 700c and 26inch mtb formats. Some months ago, I was lamenting the lack of (relatively) narrow, commercially available options-42mm and 2.2 inches being pretty much the limit. Kenda offer a Klondike in fender friendly 35,38 and 1.75 sections.
Alas, at the time of composition, they’re not a UK import.
Temptation was to order a set from across the pond were it not for a relatively
weak pound since snow and Ice look set to becoming increasingly frequent
patrons of our winter landscape but then these Schwalbe “Winter” arrived on my
test bench.
Available in the magic 1.75 diameter, these are reckoned
to require twenty-five miles on asphalt before taking to skiddy stuff and look
to be a fair bit swifter than most variants I’ve used to date. February’s
always a tricky month weather-wise so, we’ll see how they behave after the
initial run-in.
Elsewhere, I’ve been chatting with Rory at Upgrade bikes
regarding two very innovative Kinesis builds that follow in the convertible, yet
ultra capable one bike does all road path tradition and at the other extreme,
some splendid DMR coffee receptacles.
Dropping by Maldon shot blasting & powder coating
revealed this slightly intriguing mid 80’s touring frameset refinished in a
very tasteful orange. Initial impressions suggested something 531st
from the Holdsworthy works- Claud Butler Dalesman/ Coventry Eagle but some
unusually (by production standards) intricate lugwork around its semi sloping
fork crown infers something older/ smaller scale…