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TyronLab

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Posts posted by TyronLab

  1. 2 minutes ago, _David_ said:

    Is that a M/L frame, how tall are you? I am looking at buying the same bicycle. I am 178cm tall and i't looks like I can fit a M/L or L.

    I'm 177cm and the M/L is perfectomundo for me. For reference I rode a Large Titan Switch with a 70mm stem, a 54cm Specialized Sequoia with the stock 90mm stem, and generally ride Medium XC mountain bikes.

  2. I'd take the Aluminium 2022 model. 

    • Wider tyre clearance as mentioned before (I think the older ones could only do 42mm, or 45mm with no mud clearance). Having that option is lekker down the line.
    • The aluminium version is plenty comfy, one of the comfiest bikes I've ridden and I've had carbon, steel, and aluminium gravel bikes.
    • 105 groupset doesn't have a clutch derailleur, which the GRX does. Having a clutch makes a big difference in how quiet the bike is even with relatively mild gravel.
  3. I've project managed capital items worth a few hundred thousand USD, to commodity items made by the container load from China / Spain / Brazil / Russia and from local manufacturers.

    I think some logic here would help. Bundling manufacturing in China together in one big lump makes zero sense.

    Are there dodgy, kid-based, zero-safety shitholes making millions of parts for a few cents? Yes, 100%.

    Are there high quality, cutting edge manufacturing facilities that are world-class in terms of quality and are just smart enough to leverage the Chinese government's powerful pro-manufacturing policies, and an abundant and driven workforce? Yes, 100%.

    I've been in shitholes and beautiful facilities in every one of the countries I've mentioned above. "China is shitty cheap stuff" is as logically sound as saying "All South Africans are racist", "all Brazilians samba to work" and "All Americans are overweight"...

    Would I buy a carbon handlebar from Temu for a downhill bike? Nope. Is that decision based on perception and gut feel more than any technical reasoning? Yep.

  4. Out of all of the options out there, there's no one bike that is perfect for every situation, unless you only ride one type of thing and only that thing.

    To me, you need to understand why you're riding and what you want to get out of it. Unless you're really at the pointy end of the field and you're looking for every advantage you can, ride what feels lekker. At the end of the day, ride the bike that is "you". The one that makes you stop at the end of the ride and stand and stare at it in the garage for a minute before you go in the house.

    I've had some of my best rides on bikes that were very far from what would be considered "optimal". 

    My riding is very similar to yours. A bunch of road miles in the week, longer distance road and gravel mixed routes on the weekends with trails thrown in the mix (mostly with tar commutes to the trails). That's why I ride rigid MTBs and gravel bikes. They're not the perfect bike for most of the rides, but it puts a smile on my face more than any other bike.

  5. After being "forced" to buy another bike, I took some time to ponder and compare and spreadsheet the hell out of this choice. Wishlist:

    • Not a carbon frame. I'm too nervous that it breaks, and I've had bad experiences with "good" carbon frames.
    • Drop bars.
    • Hydraulic brakes.
    • 1x drivetrain.
    • Nothing proprietary or hard to maintain.
    • 50mm + tyre clearance.
    • 3x bottle cages.
    • Dropper compatible.

    I landed on this and, so far, it has exceeded my expectations:

    image.png.896b26dba0618d4b00673493af8f851a.png

    image.png.6bf99f03a8308b1189027a9af14e13a8.png

    It's a Giant Revolt 1 with a 40T GRX 600 crankset and a pair of 50mm Maxxis Ramblers as upgrades from the get-go. I was unsure of the colour at first based on the online pictures, but in the flesh (and with the tan wall tyres) I absolutely love it. Still needs a proper trail test, but so far it's been efficient enough on the road and, on the dirt bits I've thrown in, supremely comfortable.

    The fit is also bang-on in stock form, which I was pretty sure of before purchasing thanks to Bike Insights and having quite a few bikes to use for comparison.

    Maiden voyage:

    image.png.115f18fba9c29515887ee09004a4323e.png

  6. Anyone surprised by the average age / weight / demographic in here has evidently not been on your average roadie group ride lately... or maybe that's just the groups I'm fast enough to ride with 😄

    At 1.77 I'm exactly on the split between M and L mountain bikes. I've generally been more comfortable on M frames with slightly longer 50-60mm stems but have had issues with my 755mm bb-to-saddle distance causing seatposts to run at ther min insertion.

    55cm roadies or M/L gravel bikes are perfecto with ~70mm stems. 

    Size 10 shoes (it sure looks like I'm more on the Kenyan end of the spectrum of torso/leg length here).

    35 (or, halfway through a below average innings)

    85-89kg depending on how much I travel and whether it's my birthday month.

  7. strava5348805863070652678.jpg.ed1ec48a1f765772ab918fe85e5be97c.jpg

    Managed to cross something off of the challenge/bucket list this morning; Riding Suikerbosrand on a singlespeed. 

    34x20 worked well on the climbs, but seeing as I spun out at 25kph it meant the flats and mild downs were pretty slow in comparison to normal and meant I couldn't gather some momentum to coast over rollers.

    The wheels did proverbially come off on the last big climb, where the beautiful morning turned to sweltering heat and a small tailwind which made it feel like riding in an air fryer. Didn't have to dab, even though I was proper grinding by then.

    Always fun!

     

  8. 9 minutes ago, Michael Dewing said:

    Hahaha “let me fit that for you sir, and remember left break is the front.”

    that’s classic 🤣🤣

    Psssssht, right brake is the front, moto-style. And yes, when a buddy wants to try rigid singlespeeding I want to sprinkle the added brain-screw of having wrong-way-round brakes into the mix too. I'm sadistic like that.

    (Actually, in truth, I swapped these brakes from another bike, lines were a little short, so instead of wanting to shell out for new hoses and bleeding I just swapped the lines. I'm also stingy like that.)

  9. Also ride alone the vast majority of the time. I like riding with people and riding alone for different reasons, riding with others just doesn't work out most of the time.

    I already work too many hours so I limit my riding in my family's waking hours. As such I'm always out of the door very early (also for quieter roads). Groups I could ride with start later, and oftentimes stop for coffee or a beer mid-ride on weekends, which seems like a waste, so end up riding alone.

    My morning routine also dictates that I need to be in the shower by 0530 or the whole system at home doesn't work. Most groups plan rides that only finish after that, so I often peel off mid-route and ride back alone.

    I try to be very conscientious about where and when I ride, stay alert and up to date on current hotspots. I also see no point in resistance so my bike is insured and I'll happily let it go. Hell, I'll adjust the saddle height for them before they ride away.

     

  10. 4 minutes ago, Skubarra said:

    This is actually a bit worrying to me - are they struggling for entries? Getting the vibe that if this event is on your bucket list don't put it off for too many years....

    I don't think it's a lack of entries, I think it's a cashflow issue (based on zero knowledge, purely an assumption). Lots of people get bonus in December and March, I'm guessing the majority of entries happen then. Might just be an incentive to get the entry numbers up ahead of time and have some cash to work with?

    Judging by the WhatsApp group, and how many people already entered for 2024 based on the special, I think this is one of those that has a substantial percentage of repeat riders and not a whole bunch of new faces every year.

  11. 1 hour ago, Shebeen said:

    tjaainas going aero at TdF in 1998

     

    Cipollini racing the 1996 Tour de France.

    Rim brakes, gross....

    And yes, I'm just stirring *** now. That hip angle of the front guys is making my stomach hurt.

    Back to the dot watching. Marnus Nothnagel is starting to get close and closer to the cut off marker. See he's arrived at WP3 now Let's go boytjie, no time for dawdling! I can however relate to arriving close to last place at a WP, checking the tracker, and seeing that the winner has travelled double your distance (or in my case at the Grit, finished already). Strangely not demotivating, but rather awe-inspiring.

    image.png.2cf5f8cedda2f2fe3fdabdd082c67245.png

     

    @gemmerbal also needs to watch his time. He's a third done, but there's not a lot of margin.

  12. 3 minutes ago, Roul said:

    Chalk it up to year-end fatigue and a difficult financial/political/any other relevant context.

    (0-time Munga finisher)

    Good idea, maybe for the purpose of the thread we should be identifying ourselves with our pedigree. Maybe that chills everyone the **** out.

    2-time Grit Cradle finisher, but I identify as a Full Munga finisher.

  13. Why is the Hub so blerrie aggressive these days? Every thread turns into some disagreement (hell, the last couple of posts is the third just in this thread)...

    Just, be lekker. We're watching dots on a screen that represent people spending second-hand-car money to ride their bicycles (that cost new-car-money) through the desert in December for zero benefit outside of bragging rights and personal fulfilment... None of this makes sense or should be taken so seriously.

     

  14. image.png.74866bbab970fcc596085f347e336e46.png

     

    How is that even possible. I come back from a solo 27kph/1hr road ride on my mountain bike and I've done a solid Z3 training session. 

    How in the name of all things holy has he averaged that over 650km?!? Conditions being advantageous or not, that's a mind-bending pace.

    Out of interest, is the record time an actual recording of Ramses' traverse along the route, or just an average speed assumption based on his finishing time (similar to the cutoff marker)? If it's the former, Drikus is killing it.

    @Carlog also going well, only 1hr stopped so far and at ~430km. Strong riding!

  15. 8 minutes ago, hboli4 said:

    Drikus is truly flying - looks like a tailwind since VDK. 

    I agree with you Shebeen. When I rode I decided to do it my way and not be bothered about what others are doing - it is out of my control as well as how the rules are enforced(or not) - as long as I stay within  the rules. To this end I never rode with anybody else and only briefly chatted to riders at RV's & CP's and a couple of times on the route. Stupid to not make use of drafting? - probably. But I made up my mind before the start to do my own thing and ride as if drafting was not allowed. Also - I am probably too slow to draft anybody in any case.😁

    I also think that in a race this long you're going through ups and downs, strong times and weak times. Unless you're really committed to and patient with your drafting partner, you're very similar and going through the same motions at the same time, it's likely that at some stage you'll organically separate (well, that's what has happened to me).

  16. 19 minutes ago, Baracuda said:

    So should one be on a gravel bike or MTB for this race. I thought there were lots of rocky jeep track sections later on that are "tricky" on a dropbar bike?

    I think this is very much a personal preference thing, what's most comfortable and familiar to every individual rider. Unfortunately there aren't very many locally available options for off-the-shelf drop bar bikes with MTB tyre clearance, and the options that exist are very expense (Curve, Sling cycles). 

    Interestingly, my first grit I did on a steel drop bar gravel bike with 48/43mm tyres, and didn't have any severe hand/bum issues. Second one I did on a steel mountain bike with flat bars and "inner bar ends" (not the proper ones, cheapo Decathlon ones I just put inside of the grips) with 2.35" tyres and I had horrendous saddle sores and couldn't use my pinkies for a week.

  17. 58 minutes ago, Shebeen said:

    I didn't realise it, but whole race is draft legal now. seems like a good idea to ride in a bunch whilst everyone is fresh.

    but as @LarryMTB would point out, as a zero time munga finisher, what would I know?

     

     

     

    Wish I had some slap chips to go with all of the salt in this post...

    I think drafting is going to really come into play in the Tankwa with the infamous headwind. Interesting racing!

  18. 4 hours ago, shaper said:

    That's a mate of mine on the Rapide Tigre,  Oren Azmanov doing I think this is his 3rd Munga and 2nd time on the Tigre

    Off Topic: How badass of a name is Oren Azmanov?!? It's the name of a person that invented the first tank that shoots lasers and sharks. Please tell me he has a wild, bushy moustache...

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