long silences dont mean i have not been doing things, riding places, finding stuff, packing up, plotting, or doing lawn maintenance. so forget those bad thoughts, and read on…
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Mel has been riding some sugino xd 500s for a while now, but for some reason, no matter what, they get chain suck. not every ride, not every shift, but sometimes it happens. And its not her fault. I rode it and the same thing sporatically happens to me. What gives? Changed the rings, changed the chain… She knows how to shift… Anyway, I have been planning on getting rich and buying her either the white industries road double or a pair of TA cranks, set up as a wide range double. That would be minimum 200 bucks though, 200 bucks I dont have. Unless my couch is holding out on me.
Anyway, digging and shooting shit at freeze thaw the other day, and ran across some SR apex cranks. Never heard of them. Minor interweb research led me to believe they were introduced around 1980-1981, had a short market life, and the world moved onto the soon to be standard 11o BCD we all know and sort of love.

here they are, prior to some time with some polish and steel wool, and they still have all 3 rings
118 BCD, came stock with 48/46/28 rings, looked to have a low Q, used standard bolts, standard crank puller, SR made them so they were probally cold forged… nice finish and low wear despite the years in a dust pile. I traded a salsa stem for them, made them a wide range 46/28 double, and slapped them on Mel’s Atlantis.
they look sharp I think. more elegant than the sugino cranks. lighter, lower q.
Ahh lower Q factor. Mel doesnt really know or care about Q factor. But we went for a ride yesterday, and she said something like “why does my bike feel so fast?” also, perhaps more bizarre: “why do i feel more stretched out?” well, didnt know Q did that…. But check out the tread photo:
if this were the 1990s, and it was a basketball game and not a bike part set up thing, and you had made a basket from say, 3 yards beyond the 3 point line, you would say booyah.
OK what else?
Sorry, this post will just go on and on and on and on.
Mel hasnt been on a mtn bike for a while. Last summer. Like me. I suck, I bet she does too. Logs? Ahhhh! Ok so we took a cue from Rob’s Christine course. And set up some obstacles.
start with a rock garden. rock and brick garden that is. you cant not hit some rocks, its a good thing.
log. not big, not small, just right.
log pile with easy finish. for now.
really annoying square edged stutter bumps. ratchet pedal. ratchet!
tiny north shore thing. for balance and confidence building. ends in a drop off.
said drop off. note quality construction.
ends with a teeter totter. easy, but fun. to come: bigger logs, more rocks, a jump. Mel likes jumping.
What else?
Our power went out a while ago, and I decided to try to make an olive oil lamp. I used a tiny glass jar, a rag for a wick, olive oil, and a coat hanger. It worked pretty well, for a while. Then I dont think the kink in my hanger was tight enough. The flame just kept creeping closer to the olive oil.
would cino cinelli hate on me?
I’ve been working on yard salads: using mostly stuff from the yard to put in wraps, have for dinner, etc. I have added dandilion greens now, but this is what i generally use.
I’ve been reworking some images into quadtone images. Here is a sample image, in quadtone and a link to the flickr gallery where more live.
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86 BCD, not 118, sorry.
Way to go ssister when you feel like it you can run on the fin de tour course. Rob and I are going to add some banked turns as well.
D
Backyard bike courses are the new thing. Come on down and ride the pump track and some of the junk lying around in our yard.
everyone’s building these things. i had to take mine down, to mow and show the house. i’ll put it back up though, with an improved rock garden.