Hardly a bike can pass through my gaze without invoking a visceral reaction; admiration for a well-manicured machine regardless of it’s discipline, delight at a vintage gem or a diamond in the rough, anger at an owner who has neglected a beautiful machine, horror at an abomination of sensibility and taste.
When I see these machines my mind flies instantly to what it must feel like to climb aboard and turn the pedals, if even for a moment. I imagine how difficult it must be to move the rusted pedals of an old commuter; I might wonder at the smooth feel of easing the downtube shifter forward as the chain slips into the next cog; I cringe at the thought of grasping bars rotated too far up or down. It is our lot as Velominati to feel this way about a bicycle. To identify with it, to want to care for it, to make it free. On some level, to feel as though each bicycle has a soul, and that it must be cared for.
This same love leads us to always find room in our hearts to aquire another bicycle, however magnificent the other bicycles already own may be. Always, there is the Next Bike, be it in another material, for a different discipline, or a different purpose; the combinations of carbon, steel, aluminum, titanium, road, cross, mountain, and commuting quickly collaborate to fabricate the justification of bike number n+1.
But never is the next bike acquired simply for the sake of owning another machine, for a bicycle must be ridden if its soul is to find salvation. A bicycle that stands by in a corner, year after year, waiting in great anticipation for the Next Ride as the air slowly seeps from its tires is a tragedy beyond articulation. My three road bikes are from three different eras, and each is an enviable beauty. The Bianchi TSX hails from 1997 and represents perfect Italian style; my only lamentation is that I was unable to acquire aluminum Ergo shifters and had to “settle” for carbon. The Bianchi XLEV2 hails from the Pantani Period and, while it sports the same top tube length, is more upright than the TSX, has a taller head tube, and boasts a higher bottom bracket. The Cervelo R3 is 2006’s Roubaix-winning carbon fiber lightweight masterpiece of contradictions: light, stiff, and strong.
But more importantly, these three bicycles represent three eras in my own evolution as a Velominatus. The EV2 was acquired upon my return to the sport and was my first experience with a truly fantastic bike shop. I bought the frame and wheels from Grand Performance and sourced the rest from eBay; after months of collecting the bits, the sight of the complete bike was one that shall never escape the gin-infested cobwebs of my memory. The TSX tested my patience to curate the perfect steel machine, learning where to compromise classical convention for modern convenience. The R3 is the end result of a design process that started when Cervelo’s engineers decided to better the design of their R2.5 after Tyler Hamilton rode it to victory in the 2003 Tour de France stage to Bayonne. As it happened, my VMH and I rode the 2003 L’Etape du Tour, which happened to be over that same route. And we were on the course the day of the stage, and watched on television as Tyler Hamilton held the field at bay over roads we ourselves had suffered on only days before from a cafe called La Calamity Jane. Suffice it to say, each one of these bicycles means a tremendous amount to me, and every time I throw my leg over one or the other, all of that climbs aboard with me.
Invariably, however, one of my bicycles always feels better than the others. Somehow, a note is struck that brings a harmony to rider and machine that can’t be found with the others. Thus begins the endless pursuit of identifying the nuances that create the unique conditions which coax the maximum amount of (either) pleasure or The V from our beings. This pursuit, this quest to find what the Italians call la Posizione, is the true work of the Velominatus – to never be satisfied with “good enough”. The tape measure and the plumb line both show the setback on the saddle to be the same, yet it feels better on one bike than it does the other. The bars are the same distance from the saddle on both machines, yet one is a stretch and one is perfect. These are the differences that mathematics dispute but our bodies know exist.
For me, the mystery of the bicycle begins with the notion that I can ride two identically set up machines up the same climb on the same day and have one deliver me to a back ache and the other into the arms of La Volupté.
Vive la Vie Velominatus.
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
@Netraam
You don't have a bike at all?
@frank
Lesson taken.
@RedRanger
A normal bycicle I use for travelling. A BMX, which I've outgrown. But I don't have something decent yet.
Speaking of, my n+1 is probably going to be a BMX for fanging around town on. After years of hating fixies and asshats who try and pull mad barspinnnzzz on a road bike, its time for me to get a dog in the game. Goodbye teeth.
I was n+1 compliant for 2 days until bike 2 wAs stolen. I'm thinking of getting a old steel frame to turn into a commuter.
@frank
Thanks for sharing your life with those interested enough to read. It pays to be prepared re. camping. In Scotland we often have all four seasons weather in the same day and people often get caught out. The story of the R3 was great especially the surprise wheels, would your VMH really be so cruel as to turn up with the empty box? Fingers crossed, if my VMH knows me as well as yours does, next birthday I'll be riding the V-kit!
@Minion
My n+1 was a fixie build I put together over the winter with an 1980s Raleigh frame. Before you go anti-hipster on me, I also throw a Rule 11 deviance seat on the back of it, so I can blow past hipsters on the uphills with an extra 20kg on the back. I call it training.
@Netraam
Congratulations"”this will be fun. What kind of a budget do you have? And what's your timeline?
I believe the actual company name is "Home De Pot".
Great post as always Frank and very timely as I myself just picked up my new Jamis comp yesterday. After one year of cycling the bike which got me into the sport, a Trek 1.1 (bad I know), has been demoted to bike #2 and now serves the role of uni commuter/rain bike. After 120km I can say that the difference in frame and components is amazing, even if it is only 105 on a mono-composite frame- beats the old 2200 on Alu'.
The only problem Im having is that I have gone from a 58cm frame, which had the seatpost beyond maximum, to a 61cm setup which with the seat at maximum but still feels short. When I climb there seems to be an uncomfortable feeling in the front of my knee and also seems that my usual style of pedaling with my toes down cannot be achieved the same. Any suggestions? thinking I might drop my stem? Will try and post a pic soon.
@Cyclops
That would be so much fun to give that a go, then you get to ride a machine of your own creation.