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Cruxpearl

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Everything posted by Cruxpearl

  1. My understanding is that If you are riding in a licensed bunch, i.e. Elite's, Vets 30-39, Licensed Ladies or whatever Licensed group you are racing in, You have to race with the Kit that is registered on your License, even if you have a Cyclosport License.
  2. Daar was te min tyd om nog trappe op te sit en die fotos geneem te kry voor dit te donker is buite... Die Trappe is nou op!!!
  3. But of Course!!!!! http://www.cannondale.com/bikes/icons/images/size.gifSizes48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 63 cm
  4. Or Fulcrum's? http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/Super6Fulcrum.jpg
  5. So, What works Better... With Bora's http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/Super6Bora.jpg
  6. With Zipp 202's, it's even worse!!!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/Super6Bugger1.jpg
  7. With Bora Wheels, It's not legal!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/Super6Bugger0.jpg
  8. Kimi Raikkonen snatches the ultimate prize! Raikkonen crowned F1 champion Sao Paulo - Kimi Raikkonen won the 2007 Formula One drivers world championship here on Sunday for Ferrari when he produced a flawless run to victory in the Brazilian Grand Prix. The "ice-man" from Finland drove superbly to grab the 15th win of his career and his sixth this year ahead of his Ferrari teammate and local hero Felipe Massa. Defending double drivers world champion Fernando Alonso of Spain finished third in his McLaren and ended up sharing second place in the drivers' title race with his teammate Lewis Hamilton. The luckless 22-year-old British rookie, who began the day four points ahead of Alonso and seven in front of Raikkonen, lost ground at the start, falling back from second to fourth on the opening lap and then plummeting to 18th on lap seven when he suffered gearbox problems. But he stormed back to finish in seventh place and score two points when he needed at least two more to make history by being the first rookie to lift the title. The drivers title race ended with Raikkonen on 110 points and Alonso and Hamilton both on 109 at the end of the first three-way title battle for 21 years.
  9. How can a perfect weekend where the Boks trounces the Inglish to take the 2007 Rugby World Cup get even Better?
  10. Zipp 404 = 58mm Zipp 303 = 38mm Zipp 202 = 25mm
  11. Nice one Foe!!!!
  12. from BikeRadar.com Honda announced at the weekend that the G Cross team will not be continuing in 2008. The statement released by Honda doesn't really explain why the team has been disbanded, but thanks those that have helped to propel the group to the top of the downhill mountain bike world. Honda were the first to show that the gearbox concept in a mountain bike was a viable option in racing conditions, and there was speculation as to whether the G-Cross would enter production. We expect it'll never hit the shops now. We're waiting with anticipation as to which team will snap up the G Cross riders Greg Minnaar, Brendan Fairclough and Cyrille Kurtz.
  13. Courtesy of BikeRadar.com The fact that you are reading this tells me all I really need to know about you. You're a cyclist. I'm a cyclist. We therefore both know what's really important in life (riding). We see the world as it truly is (a place to ride our bikes). If we were each to answer the question, "What would you do with a million dollars?" our answers would vary perhaps in what equipment we'd buy and where we'd go to ride, but in little else. If we were to have a conversation, we'd have an understanding of how each other thinks. Maybe you're a Cat 2 roadie and maybe I'm a cross-country endurance geek, but we both know that turning the cranks in a perfect circle is the ultimate form of self-expression. Sadly, not everyone is like you and I. I am sad to say that there are people out there who rarely - if ever! - ride bikes at all. It's possible you even know someone like this. A coworker. A family member. You'd be surprised at how common non-cyclists are, actually. You probably encounter them several times per day and simply don't notice them, because they aren't interesting. Mostly, you can safely ignore these people, simply by riding away from them. Sometimes, though - at a company party, say - it is impossible to avoid non-cyclists. Surrounded, you have no choice but to communicate with them. Don't worry. I'm here to help. Just follow these five simple rules. Rule 1: Understand their bizarre world view You need to understand that non-cyclists don't realize that cycling is the most important thing any person can be doing at any given moment at any point in the universe. Non-cyclists' eyes - and minds - are shuttered, leaving them to believe that things like friends, community, work, and even family supercede what they naively call "just exercise." It's sad - OK, it's pathetic - but it's true. To appease non-cyclists, when asked about what matters to you, you must from time to time mention friends, family, the environment, or some other such nonsense. Otherwise, they'll never leave you alone and it will be hours until you can get away, back to the comfort and kinship you feel when with your bicycle. Rule 2. Use metaphors from "real life." Non-cyclists aren't ready to hear about your exquisite existence in its unadulterated perfection. No, you will need to translate the sublime cycling experience into terms they might be able to understand. Naturally, you and I know that the following metaphors don't do the actual cycling event justice, but they'll have to do. To describe how it feels to ride down perfectly banked, twisty forested singletrack on a cool autumn morning: "It's like that scene from Return of the Jedi where Luke and Leia are zooming on their flying motorcycle things. Except you're the one powering the flying motorcycle. And you're not being chased by stormtroopers. And you don't have to tolerate the constant chattering of Ewoks." To explain why you gladly get up at 4:30am each weekday morning to ride your road bike for three hours on an entirely unremarkable road: "You know how you have to drive your car in stop-and-go traffic to get to work every morning? Well, imagine if you didn't have to stop. And imagine your car going as fast as you can make it go. And imagine starting the day feeling perfect. It's kind of like that." To explain why you pay $200 to participate in a race you have very little chance in winning: "Ever play the lotto? It's like that, except much, much more so." Rule 3: Pretend to be interested in their life This one's going to knock you off your feet. Believe it or not, non-cyclists sometimes think they have something interesting to say, have an interesting hobby, or an interesting experience to relate. This, of course, is utter nonsense. Still, for the sake of propriety, you must act as if you care. Feel free, as they talk, to pleasantly daydream about biking. Just smile and say, "Absolutely," from time to time. Warning: It's entirely possible that a non-cyclist will say something with which you disagree. When this happens, do not engage. If you do, you will have unwittingly stepped into a non-cycling conversation, and who knows where that will lead, or when it will end. Always remember: Be polite, be brief, be gone. Rule 4. Act like their theory on doping in cycling is very interesting A tactic non-cyclists will often employ, once they have discovered you are a cyclist, is to try to talk with you about cycling. This usually takes the form of trying to talk with you about doping in cycling. You will, no doubt, be tempted to gouge your ears out rather than hear their simplistic, uninformed opinion ("Doping is bad") to its rambling, incoherent conclusion. After all, as a cyclist, you have no doubt been pummelled with story after story after story about doping. You have heard so much about doping that you could now be called as an expert witness at the next doping trial. Or open a lab. Or be the next president of WADA (and you're rightly confident you'd do a much better job). But if you point any of this out to your non-cyclist "friend," he will no doubt take that as a sign that you are interested in continuing the conversation. So, instead, repeat this simple phrase, "Yeah, doping sucks." Your friend will feel like he has made his point, whatever it was. Rule 5. Don't tell them the truth about how much your bike cost. Few people ever own anything that works, fits, or looks as well as a truly well-built bike. And yet, when they find that your bike costs as much as their high-end computer or mid-range stereo, they will fake a heart attack, guaranteed. The solution? Tell non-cyclists you paid $499.99 for your bike, no matter how much you really paid for it. This number has been scientifically formulated to sound like more than a non-cyclist would pay for a bike, without otherwise drawing attention to itself. No matter how you try, you can't always avoid non-cyclists. All you can hope to do is minimize contact with them - so you can get back to what's important. And I think we both know what that is. Elden "Fatty" Nelson blogs as The Fat Cyclist, where he says ridiculous things about bikes, biking, and bikers on a daily basis. Oh, and sometimes he gives stuff away, too. So that's something.Cruxpearl2007-10-08 05:20:29
  14. And That folks is the End of an Awesome, Awesome Day's playing in the Mud!!! It Was FUNNNN!!!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to229.jpg
  15. Well then again... maybe not even a mother could love this!!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to228.jpg
  16. Only a Mother (and a girl call Marina) can love this face!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to227.jpg
  17. This bike was found abandoned after the 8to2 MTB race... Anyone recognise it or know the whereabouts of it's owner?? Bike is receiving counceling at present to combat feelings of rejection... http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/Image068.jpg
  18. The winner did 8 laps - 108km in total Christoff and Jaco did 9 Laps of 12 km, for 108 km total...
  19. Lekker, Lekker Lekker!!!!!! Aai can with laaik to ride Mountain Bike!!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to226.jpg
  20. Jaco looks pretty gatvol, and lekker vuil after 9 laps http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to225.jpg
  21. This is ONE seriously DIRTY DUDE!!! http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to224.jpg
  22. Jaco Finishing in 2nd Place behind Christoff van Heerden http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to223.jpg
  23. IanJ's whitey pom legs http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to222.jpg
  24. One very very Muddy Cannondale http://www.tcsn.co.za/downloads/8to221.jpg
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