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udxcob

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Everything posted by udxcob

  1. I am looking for transport to the J2c if anyone can help?
  2. I have never ridden with a hydration backpack but will probably need to for the J2c, my pack has bottom straps that go around the belly but to me feel very uncomfortable. Do you guys ride with these straps of would it be better to cut them off? Would be interesting to hear the comments
  3. Eish, i think this may be a huge blow for their morale
  4. Revolution cycles, cycle lab, Cwc, to name a few in the town area, there are more but forgot their names. We are spoilt for choice in the northern suburbs
  5. Hahahahahahaha it is getting a bit much now hey
  6. That was before mountain biking became the new golf and the pro shop took over, they no longer offer the service apparently
  7. I-Man777 does the wolfchainring fit in place of the large chainring and just remove the small chainring?
  8. How do i convert a X9 2x10 to a 1x10?
  9. Can anybody help? this is my first time doing the J2C from Cape Town, how do you get your bike to the start and home from the finish?
  10. Category Position Overall Position Name <td class="tableHeading" "="" style="font-weight: bold; font-size: 11px; background-color: rgb(66, 66, 66); width: 60px;">No. Gen. Cat. Time Difference 1 1 Urs Huber 16 M SM 3:30:39.419 - 1 2 Christoph Sauser 1 M SV 3:33:56.387 +03:16.968 2 3 Karl Platt 14 M SV 3:38:18.526 +07:39.107 3 4 Frantisek Rabon 18 M SV 3:38:19.063 +07:39.644 4 5 Erik Kleinhans 3 M SV 3:38:19.215 +07:39.796 5 6 Stefan Sahm 15 M SV 3:38:20.652 +07:41.233 6 7 Kevin Evans 9 M SV 3:45:19.630 +14:40.211 7 8 Neil Macdonald 8 M SV 3:47:58.616 +17:19.197 8 9 Darren Lill 13 M SV 3:49:07.320 +18:27.901 9 10 Waylon Woolcock 11 M SV 3:49:07.595 +18:28.176 2 11 Adriaan Louw 93 M SM 3:49:08.405 +18:28.986 10 12 Nico Bell 5 M SV 4:01:55.830 +31:16.411 3 13 Matthew Beers 129 M SM 4:02:01.425 +31:22.6 1 14 Adrian Enthoven 105 M VM 4:02:50.033 +32:10.614 4 15 Lourens Luus 6 M SM 4:02:51.238 +32:11.819 5 16 Christopher Wolhuter 145 M SM 4:02:51.563 +32:12.144 11 17 Derrin Smith 73 M SV 4:04:18.824 +33:39.405 2 18 Stuart Anderson 141 M VM 4:05:16.281 +34:36.862 12 19 Hannes Hanekom 2196 M SV 4:10:21.315 +39:41.896 3 20 Craig Gerber 177 M VM 4:10:22.605 +39:43.186 4 21 Franso Steyn 75 M VM 4:10:55.285 +40:15.866
  11. eish
  12. Team RECM @Team_RECM .@attakwas Tech 2, 83km: Huber leads; Sauser +3'15"; Kleinhans, Rabon, Platt, Sahm, Stiebi +7'20" Retweeted by Attakwas Extreme MTB
  13. Sounds like great weather and competition for the atta. Good luck all
  14. so it looks like it's the Bronson V/S Pyga one twenty 650
  15. Trail bike
  16. Which frame would you choose and why?
  17. So come on then guys, give us your race times
  18. 3 of us are starting tomorrow at about 6am, riding up to silverming, doing the loop and then making our way down again
  19. please dont post all 54 of them
  20. « This plastic is made out of carbon sucked from the air http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/themes/vip/grist/img/ui/invisible.png?m=1341367895g 8 Comments 2 Jan 2014 2:11 PM Share on facebook[/url] Portland made it through 2013 with zero bike fatalities By Sarah Laskow http://grist.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/bikes.jpg?w=470&h=265&crop=1Jeff Youngstrom Biking in a city, with big hunks of car and truck zooming by, can be frightening. But it shouldn’t be. And it doesn’t need to be. As Bike Portland reports, in the whole of 2013, in one of the most biking-est cities in the country, nobody died in a bike accident. Bike Portland: There were several serious collisions, covered here on the site, including one major hit-and-run that remains unsolved. But the number-one reason Portland is the country’s best big city for biking is that this is, compared to any other large U.S. city and lots of the smaller ones, an extremely safe place to ride a bicycle. This isn’t a new feat for Portland: the city also avoided any bike-related fatalities in 1999, 2000, 2002, 2006, 2008 and 2010. This is one of those virtuous cycles. Safer biking means that more people (especially women) decide biking’s a good option. More cyclists make for safer streets — and the more people cycle, the more likely it is that city planners think it’s worth putting in bike infrastructure. And one of the great advantages of bike infrastructure is that it makes the roads safer — and not just for bikers. Everyone wins. Source The 4 biggest Portland bike stories nobody wrote in 2013, Bike Portland Sarah Laskow is a reporter based in New York City who covers environment, energy, and sustainability issues, among other things. Follow her on Twitter. Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.
  21. I have the exact same problem
  22. Looks like the air is so bad that they ride with masks on
  23. And leftys?
  24. Cannondale need to bring out a RIGHTY frame to go with their left fork
  25. Finish the joberg2C 2014
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