I’m fluent in three languages: Dutch, English, and Hyperbole. The third is an acquired talent developed by creative and narcissistic tendencies; the narcissism feeds a belief that normal words can’t properly describe the magnitude of my experiences, and the creativity struggles to cope with restrictive paradigms like “facts” and “reality”. I have also been diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder which, when taken with everything else, suggests that my darling partner exhibits some questionable judgement.
I have a visceral response to clutter; when I see things out of order, my insides turn about themselves and cause me physical discomfort. If the clutter escalates to becoming a “mess”, my mood changes and I become irritable. This applies to everything from our house, my workshop, my office, desk space, my computer desktop, my briefcase, and my bicycles’ cable organization. I don’t have to tell you that the last one is the only one that really matters.
The tidiness of the cables on a bicycle are one of several key factors that elevate the Velominatus above the Common Cyclist. The old style of STI shifters and their protruding cables were barbaric; they represented a principle reason for my dislike of Shimano’s system. Campagnolo took a few extra years to produce the Ergo shifters, and I am quite convinced they spent that extra time sorting out how to internally route the cables.
The organization of a rider’s cables and the length to which they are trimmed is a critical detail to which we must all pay close attention. No matter how beautiful the bike, disheveled cables will always bring it down. I hereby give you the V Principles of Cable Routing:
Go with Merckx, and do not violate these principles. Vive la Vie Velominatus.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Cables/”/]
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Fill me in...new TRP CX8.4 brakes. Around the little flip-flop pivot piece where the cable guide pipe enters the brake is a small rubber donut/clasp.
I don't know what this is, what function it serves, or where it goes. My only idea is that it somehow keeps the cable guide pipe attached/in that black pivot piece.
Ideas? Use it? Or, is this just something they ship with?
@Ron
It goes here:
I don't use it, but most people do. I may end up putting mine on; they are supposed to keep dirt from crawling up the noodle, but I'm skeptical of how much dirt normally crawls up noodles and how much that would matter.
@Ron It's lavender paint on the tubes with a top coat of blue tinted pearl. It never looks the same in different light. Unfortunately, there's no way for the painter to mix a touch batch and I've already scraped the chainstay.
@LadyV
Whelp, time for a new paintjob!
@Steampunk
This.
@frank
Okay, so that looks like the sleeve rubber thingy. I have that on there. This is a rubber donut, almost like a rubber band for braces (never had 'em!) that was on the left side of that TRP-labeled flip-flop thing. I don't know if it serves a purpose of holding the noodle in the flip-flop arm or if it was for shipping purposes only.
In this photo, aren't the brake pad holders backwards? Shouldn't the little screw that holds the pad in the holder be at the rear of the brake, not the front?
@Ron
Thats a rear brake pictured, not a front. No clue what donut you're talking about, mate. Probably nothing.
@brett
may I also humbly suggest that where frame protector pads are used, that the cable should biset them evenly when viewed side-on.
stupid quote thingy. *hangs head in shame*
Ah, a rear brake, why didn't I think of that? Hmm.
Okay, so now a new question about those TRP brakes. Where the cable goes into the barrel adjuster on the noodle, Frank/others - are you using a regular ol' housing ferrule or do I spy in the photo of the rear brake housing a "stepped" ferrule, meaning one of the types that normally go into the RD cable stop where the housing starts before heading to the RD?
I used just a regular ferrule but did notice it didn't go into the barrel adjuster very far.