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Tim Brink

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Everything posted by Tim Brink

  1. Modolo went even further down that road with these... gorgeous on a TT bike, terrible to set up, should have come with a 20kg weight limit.
  2. To be fair to the the blocks on the Deltas, those were the worst brakes ever made. Quintessentially Italian - the prettiest ever made, but not terribly good at stopping bicycles.
  3. https://www.bicycling.co.za/events/swartberg-100-grand-fondo-opts-to-postpone-2020-event/
  4. Hahahaha Who did this? <edit - double-post. but hysterical>
  5. Start batches of 99. #sendsinvoice #payableinbeer #evencorona
  6. I know a guy who wrote a book... "The timing was still being done by hand, essentially, with banks of Rotaractors sitting atop a bridge over the finish line, writing down numbers and time-of-day times as fast as they could, which would then be shuttled to data processors, who would input them to correlate with the finish cards the riders had handed in, and give – remarkably accurately – a finishing time to each card. These would then be processed, and compared (by the computer in recent years, by humans in the early years) with the rider’s start time, and gradually the full results would take shape. So how did the timing crew cope with big bunches? Not a problem: if they got the first rider’s time and number, and the last rider’s number, and the volunteers collecting the finish cards kept them in the right order, the bunch was given the front rider’s time on the line. John Stegmann created this system for the very first Tour, based on the Tour de France’s ruling that all riders in a bunch get the same time, even if the back rider has taken a few seconds longer in the real world: not everyone can be the first one in the group, can they? Again, it was remarkably effective, and robust to the degree that the complaint rate was in the tenths of a percentage point each year, even with 30,000 people finishing in the space of seven hours. Historically, more than half the field finishes in the last two hours of the finish window – that means something like two riders a second crossing the line, for two hours solid. Quite remarkable. As good as the system was – and it could comfortably have been upscaled to cope with a field twice the size – transponder timing was the way forward. For 1999, every rider in the Tour purchased and wore a transponder on their ankle, held on by a Velcro strap. Mats after the start would pick your ‘chip’ up, to show that you had started in the correct group (the clock starts with the gun, not on the mat), and there would be various mats along the route to help the organisers keep tabs on where riders were, and to stamp out cheating. A pair of mats after the finish line would make double sure your chip was registered, with the time adjusted by a few seconds to allow for the roll from the line to the mats."
  7. I still check this, every year. 2020 was my finest effort. Until Sparky finds another lost sub-3 to add...
  8. A Tale of Two Cities. If any visitors to Cape Town missed the brief on how capricious coastal weather can be, Sunday provided a master class. Rolling out for #33 in 1C, it was clear and warm (Captain Conservative had a rain jacket in his pocket anyway, more on this later). Through-and-off on the front to make sure to be clear of the numpties down hospital bend - tick. Ditto for Paradise Motors, which nobody ever mentions, but generates new levels of pucker every year. And then, the 1D cats started streaming through, on a mission. Lots of them. Engage Plan B - use Edinburgh Drive to roll backwards, and crest in comfort to let the numpties go mad onto the Blue Route. Success, except the other half of 1D had other plans. Puckergland cramping by the time we slowed down to a simply dangerous speed. Why the hell do people ride this badly? Do we need to ask Zwift to run PSAs? What is there to gain getting to the front, from the back, through the middle on a 70km/h descent? *slides reading glasses back up nose and mutters into cocoa. Plan B: Hang off the back of the sh*tshow, with time to react. I wasn't the only sensible one, and we tutted to each other as 1C/D caught what turned out to be 1A/B around Millers. By now, the 'group' was monstrous. That we managed to get past the Guardian Angel cop car protecting the fallen Vets riders without adding to the melee was a miracle. Man, I never want to see that again. Onwards, down to Scarbs (who was the stunned rider sitting on the wrong side of the hay bales), through Misty Cliffs - how big were those waves? - and then the battle to regain some groups after ABCD split to shreds on Ocean View. The price of safety is missing these splits, but finishing in one piece feels kinda worth it. Been there, done that. Etc. Chappies was a blast. Suikerbossie was a blast - the kidlets were at the bottom with a big banner for dad, who didn't slow down but managed a wave. The descent to Camps Bay was fast and furious, the first full-gas efforts of the day hanging on to some uber-keen (and Uber-speed) H and J riders. Knick's Folly out of Camps Bay was a swine, as ever, but not nearly as bad as when we used to finish at the top of it. Clifton blurred, and with the main H bunch looming behind, a final 'attack' to hit the St Johns Helter Skelter first brought the 430am oats up one last time. And then, the finish, where I broke the self-imposed electronica blackout to see a glorious 2h58:58 - first sub3 since 2007, and definitely one for the wisdom of age rather than the power of youth. Big Yay. NOTE: zero commentary on individual good riders/bad riders/idiots (although I may have been the nominal gravel bike idiot in our group, spinning the 42-11 out everywhere). Because, to be honest, if you are tilting at the sub3 from the front groups, we all ride like idiots. Fight club, on wheels. Three hours of totally out-of-character aggression, swearing, bumping, pushing, not a smile in sight. PART II The above note is why, against government orders, I ride the second lap. Sharing the CTCT with thousands of people who should be hating the day, hating their bikes, hating their bums, hating the weather, hating their life choices. But they don't. The start up Nelson Mandela Boulevard was a tad lonely - KOM-Nicker Ross and I riding silently into the growing headwind, wondering if this was a good idea. By Wynberg Hill, we got into the back of the bunches (this is a loose term), so at least there was some company. Already, the day seemed to be proving long, but happiness prevailed. E-BIKE NOTE: I must have seen half the e-bike field on the second lap, and I saw no arseholedness at all, either from the e-bikers, or the regular pedal pushers. Happy harmony. Maybe these were the guys and girls who hadn't chipped their steeds (2h48 by an 80-year-old smacks of some dishonesty, doesn't it), and were equally shoulder-chip-less. Healthy banter, nothing more. The e-bikes were the least of the worries, if we want to finger a group for disorderly riding... the lack of experience and bike handling skills is unsurprisingly low, but this is what makes this bike race great. We can all give it a crack. The Second Lap Savages slid past the Jubilee Square feed station - the only one I found solid munchies of any form on the route, in the form of naked cream crackers. Instant parrot-cage mouth. Regrets, I've had a few... so I hoofed it after them to say hallo, and then returned to the solo mission. You guys are too nauseatingly happy, sometimes a bit of misery is called for. And was it on the way... a few drops on Smits, grey verging on dark in scars... where had summer gone? Where had the morning's summer gone? Chappies II was reminiscent of 1987. Raindrops the size of watermelons, and a ten-degree drop in temperature were not on the forecast, but Captain Conservative had his rain jacket, so he was warm. Finally found some food, in the form of a giant choc-chip cookie and the best espresso in Hout Bay at Dario's. Finished the cookie just before the top of Suikerbossie - Gaimon is onto something - and rolled into the finish with yet more happy faces in spite of winds that were now rivalling last year's. Gratefully grab a second medal (against the rules, I know), because bringing home one medal for two toddlers makes the second lap even more worth it. Some would say necessary. Happy, happy, happy. That is what this event is about, not us wanna-be pros. The second lap is the BEST thing any one frightening 3 hours can do - it takes you back to why you started this cycling lark in the first place. Thank you, CTCT, for letting us do it (and for Sparkie for letting us mess up his timing system). 17km home to Plumstead into that headwind; about those life choices. 33rd Tour done (the second lap doesn't count as 34. Dammit. 256km for the day, 4600 calories burned, happy chappie. Best. Day. Ever. Every. Year.
  9. A jolly decent one: https://songezo.co.za Rotary helps, financially, with proceeds from CTCT.
  10. Reguster Verb 1. To find one's second wind. The Savoy Cabbages regustered just in time for a second lap of the 'Argus'.
  11. Negative, Sir. That would have been Peter Callow or Chris van Zyl, both partnered with Graham Hall to win.
  12. Li'l Darren started with Elite, from memory, but was a surprise inclusion in Doug Ryder's race-winning move, being all young and unknown and stuff. Legend has it Doug offered him a contract at the finish... In the old days, the recumbents or tandems that were fastest would get the overall win, there was a trophy for the first 'registered rider' too. That changed when the Giro started becoming a thing, again from memory. In 1982, Mark Pinder won overall, when B (the first non-registered group) caught the pros for five minutes at Millers Point in a mad southeaster. Only Ertjies worked out what this meant, and attacked on Smits, gaining four minutes by the finish, but not the full five he would have needed to win. Pinder finished with the rest of A, to win outright, with Lloyd Wright second (riding a normal bike from B, not a recumbent).
  13. https://www.cyclingnews.com/races/etoile-de-besseges-2020/stage-4/results/ Ben O'Connor wins at Etoile de Besseges.
  14. Keyboard Warrior: "These damned e-bikes cost as much as a motorbike!" Ducati: "Hold my birra." Click here: BRRRRAAAAAAAAAP Ducati unveiled Thursday afternoon the new benchmark for superbikes in the Superleggera V4. Based on Ducati’s Panigale V4, the Superleggera V4 throws all of that heavy aluminum in the trash and replaces it with giant swathes of lightweight carbon fiber. The entire load bearing structure—including frame, subframe, swingarm, and wheels—is crafted from CFRP. All of that carbon allows the Superleggera to lose a little over 35 pounds. Structural carbon, however, is incredibly expensive to manufacture. Ducati hasn’t yet confirmed what this limited-to-500-units bike will cost, but thanks to a leaked spec list, it’s expected to hit the market for a cool $100,000. The base Panigale is $40k... R900 000 to save 15kg (roughly 10 percent of the total weight, it seems). Bargain.
  15. Did you watch the finish? Cavendish dead-wheeling off his lead out man, everyone hesitates 'cos they still think Cav still has it (wadda they know?), lead out man wins. Very clever.
  16. Thankfully you couldn't get past his calves on the single track, or you would really have popped.
  17. And then there is this, from Piddles' post-race interview:
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