Jump to content

eddy

Members
  • Posts

    5163
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by eddy

  1. The Nic Dlamini saga has highlighted to those of us who only travel to the Cape occasionally that a permit is required to ride certain routes. The article below seems to claim that I can use my Sanparks wildcard to enter the gate at cape point by car, but if I want to enter by bicycle, I need a different permit entirely.. https://m.traveller24.com/News/breaking-of-sa-cyclists-arm-damaging-to-cape-towns-cycling-tourism-highlights-discrepancies-with-permit-process-20191228 Can someone please give us the DUMMIES guide to the rules.
  2. I see it is reported that Boeing has fired Dennis Muilenburg. https://www.bbc.com/news/business-50893490 "The board of directors decided that a change in leadership was necessary to restore confidence in the company moving forward as it works to repair relationships with regulators, customers, and all other stakeholders," Boeing's statement said.
  3. eddy

    Rapha Festive 500

    I'm entered again. I have been resting up since August and ensuring that I am not skimping on taking in suffient nutrition. Should be in optimum condition to kick off by tomorrow.
  4. I am a newby, only having joined in 2004. In that time it seems I have made 5292 posts and I think bought and sold maybe 5 items. Maybe 5 sales and 5 purchases so I am active in the forums somewhere between 500 and 1000 times more often than in the Classifieds. How can I set (both on laptop and Android phone) my landing page to "Active Topics" rather than Marketplace?
  5. In a welcome change from the Bikehub norm, in this case everyone is right. It is a RR Griffon from a Shack.
  6. A few years ago I crashed and broke the driveside chainstay on my S-Works Tarmac and had it expertly repaired. It was impossible to see the repair but I could not sell it with a clear conscience and thus gave it to my brother who still rides and races it successfully. Functionally it was perfect, but economically worthless.
  7. Actually not. The hill from the parking lot is a one way up. Going down it is not a legal option. A collision will certainly lay the blame on the descending rider. Ps. Full disclosure: I have once used it as a short cut down when I had no matches left.
  8. You joke, but in the 1980's when every third person at Wits was apparently a police spy, I made a similar joke in the presence of three classmates I thought I knew well, and that night the cops were at my door looking for a high profile stolen item....
  9. I see the British Cycling doctor who received a stash of Testosterone patches at the Team Sky head office, but claimed it was delivered erroneously, is being tried before some medical tribunal in the UK. He has now admitted that he DID order the patches, but they were not for any cyclist, but for one of the support staff. Whilst the Mail is not the world's ultimate source of truth, it is not a bad recorder, and is here staying away from idle speculation but is reporting on the facts presented to the hearing by his lawyer and The Times is running an identical story behind their pay-wall. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/sportsnews/article-7625725/British-Cycling-doctor-Richard-Freeman-admit-telling-lot-lies.html
  10. The White Swan came straight overhead me near the Jhb Zoo heading SSW. I heard it and popped onto the balcony and saw it just below the clouds. Awesome
  11. Can't see from pictures, but quite possibly the 2015 bikes sold in 2018 by Makro.
  12. Oh hell. Not what Boeing needed. Notice the tone of the FAA letter to Boeing's Muilenburg. .
  13. What a lekker event even if I cut a sidewall 12km in and has a slow leak after I plugged it. Had to keep bombing and pumping until the slow leak became a very fast one and I went down at 80km which meant the end of my ride. Good seeing you again and meeting Ben. Ps, I have the organiser's details if you want them.
  14. I am reserving my rights but in the spirit of Brexit and a negotiated settlement, am considering not getting an interdict preventing you from implementing any changes. I spoke to my main man, JZ, and he told me the Stalingrad strategy really only works if the tax-payer picks up the tab, and I may have to sell my socks to pay the tab even if I can keep this in the courts for a decade or more. So, if you can assure me that my Hub Premium Membership benefits will remain unchanged, I will agree to you going ahead. Please confirm soonest that this is in order.
  15. The knife I am bringing to this gunfight.... .
  16. #MeToo. I still go to Thehubsa.co.za
  17. This is how you deal with corporate spin and fake news.... www.sullysullenberger.com/my-letter-to-the-editor-of-new-york-times-magazine/ Letter to the Editor Capt. “Sully” Sullenberger New York Times Magazine Published in print on October 13, 2019 In “What Really Brought Down the Boeing 737 MAX?” William Langewiesche draws the conclusion that the pilots are primarily to blame for the fatal crashes of Lion Air 610 and Ethiopian 302. In resurrecting this age-old aviation canard, Langewiesche minimizes the fatal design flaws and certification failures that precipitated those tragedies, and still pose a threat to the flying public. I have long stated, as he does note, that pilots must be capable of absolute mastery of the aircraft and the situation at all times, a concept pilots call airmanship. Inadequate pilot training and insufficient pilot experience are problems worldwide, but they do not excuse the fatally flawed design of the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) that was a death trap. As one of the few pilots who have lived to tell about being in the left seat of an airliner when things went horribly wrong, with seconds to react, I know a thing or two about overcoming an unimagined crisis. I am also one of the few who have flown a Boeing 737 MAX Level D full motion simulator, replicating both accident flights multiple times. I know firsthand the challenges the pilots on the doomed accident flights faced, and how wrong it is to blame them for not being able to compensate for such a pernicious and deadly design. These emergencies did not present as a classic runaway stabilizer problem, but initially as ambiguous unreliable airspeed and altitude situations, masking MCAS. The MCAS design should never have been approved, not by Boeing, and not by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The National Transportation Safety Board has found that Boeing made faulty assumptions both about the capability of the aircraft design to withstand damage or failure, and the level of human performance possible once the failures began to cascade. Where Boeing failed, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) should have stepped in to regulate but it failed to do so. Lessons from accidents are bought in blood and we must seek all the answers to prevent the next one. We need to fix all the flaws in the current system — corporate governance, regulatory oversight, aircraft maintenance, and yes, pilot training and experience. Only then can we ensure the safety of everyone who flies. Capt. “Sully” Sullenberger
  18. eddy

    Rugby...

    And we will, of that I am sure. Rassie is a very astute manager of players and they will not be underestimating the Japanese and will match them for intensity. It will be a great game and if I could have chosen our QF opponent, I'd have gone with Japan every time. But I think that the second half of the Scotland game showed how a stronger pack can drive the Blossoms off the ruck ball and big runners can go through the defensive line. We have the stronger pack and a much stronger bench : We have two full, international strength front rows and three of the best 5 locks at the tournament. Frankly, any one of Etzebeth, de Jager or Snyman would have made the difference for the Scots in the last quarter of their game. Unlike the Scots, we wont be scared of the set pieces and take quick throw-ins. We will play to our strengths and put them under pressure to make mistakes. We will slow the game down (which is not the same as being slow) and wear the down physically; no matter how fit they are. It may be close for a while, but I can see us moving away decisively in the second half.
  19. I downloaded the GPX. What is difference between it and TCX on a Garmin ? Edit. Google told me. I'll use TCX
  20. What price range should I budget for when looking for for a straight steerer 29" fork ?
  21. #MeToo. I'll be on an old-school Ritchey CX bike with canti brakes and 35mm takkies. (or more importantly, an old pair of comfortable shoes)
  22. Like the Johnny Cash song about the guy working at the Cadillac factory and stole a car one piece at a time over the course of his career and the challenges of fitting it all together : front fender from a '47 but a headlight from a '61, a engine from '50 and a transmission from '59, etc.
  23. One of the best pieces of luck was when my daughter and I were at the Intrepid, an ex-BA pilot was taking a group of worthies on a private tour and we were allowed to join. My daughter was even allowed to sit in the left-hand set...
  24. I suspect that if you try and buy a brand new complete engine for your Polo or M3 you would find the list price to be close to 50% of the new car cost. A plane needs 2, so maybe not so far fetched.
  25. #metoo. I should have done so before entering, now it is too late. Ah well, someone has to get the lantern rouge
Settings My Forum Content My Followed Content Forum Settings Ad Messages My Ads My Favourites My Saved Alerts My Pay Deals Help Logout