I find it interesting to observe the chasm between parties engaged in a conversation, particularly in response to questions being asked. I’m thinking, at present, of the question, “How many bikes do you have?” My feelings in response are nothing short of complex and maybe a bit confused; reservation that I feel I should have a more well-rounded stable, love as I picture each machine, longing as I immediately then also imagine riding it, some regret at the realization that I’m not riding it at that moment, and a touch of consternation as to whether I should include in my count the partially-built machines hanging in the basement. Their feeling, in contrast, is composed of one-dimensional and unveiled shock.
Several years ago, the VMH and I got lost while out Mountain biking north of Cle Elum and spent the better part of four hours riding our mountain bikes on gravel roads. It was one of the best days we’ve had on a bike, and as a result I’ve been increasingly obsessed with the notion of hitting the gravel mountain roads in the North Cascades on a bike tuned for gravé. These small roads liter the mountainsides and offer access to parts of the world where a road bike can’t go, but provide a range that would be untenable on fat-tired bikes.
A Graveur differs from a road bike in the sense that it has cantilever brakes and wide tires. It differs from a Cyclocross bike in the sense that the rider’s position is tuned to fast riding over relatively smooth terrain. A friend who I met at the Portland Cogal turned me onto a small Portland frame builder, Veloforma. Apart from building fantastic frames and having a great reputation locally, the owner is similarly obsessed with fast gravel riding as he lives in the boonies beyond the reaches of asphalt. A few chats with him and his infectious passion for his bikes, and I was sold completely. It goes without mention that I couldn’t resist the option to have the frame painted in Velominati colors.
I placed the order for a Veloforma Team CCX in November and immediately set about collecting the bits I would need to build it. A few weeks later, the owner sent me a mockup of the proposed paint scheme. It immediately became my desktop wallpaper and hardly a day has passed since then that I haven’t contemplated at length the various flavors of Awesome that were sure to pass beneath the tires of this machine as we explore the bounties of the Cascades. The VMH obviously also required a Graveur and her will was quickly done.
For those of you wondering how I’m preparing for my Hour Ride this weekend, it includes generous amounts of “natural interval training” on the CCX Graveur in the local park. There is zero flex in the tapered steer tube (my first), and VF’s proprietary BB66 bottom bracket is absurdly stiff; I can’t flex this thing for shit, which means more of my V winds up on the road instead of in the tubes where it does nothing productive. And paired to the Café Roubaix Arenbergs with Dugast 32m file tread tires, I practically need to tie it down to keep it from floating off.
As far as specs go, I’m riding the XL with a 14cm 17 degree stem, which gives me precisely the same position as on my road bikes. The fizik Cyrano Carbon seat pin holds up a custom black and orange Arione CX. I went with a 50T outer ring (it’s only a BIG RING when its over 52T) paired to a 38T inner ring on a 130BCD spider. The 50T will get more use than would a 53T given the increased drag, and the 38T shortens the gear just enough to keep the legs turning over on long gravé climbs. For CX racing, I’ll glue on some nobbies, go to a 10 degree stem to lift the bars up a touch, and drop the outer ring to a 44T or 42T.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Graveur Robber/”/]
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@Nate
Yes although there's no science to back it up really.Just personal experience.
If you are to install a 3 year old tire and ride over a large glass it will simply puncture so some automatically assume that ageing was a nonsense however I noticed that aged tubulars suffer much less from little cuts and nicks simply because small flints,stones or gravel do not stick to aged rubber in the same way as to the 'fresh'one.
Unless it's something large-broken glass for example-most punctures in bicycle tires are created by small, sharp objects that stick to the outer tread and then get pushed in, till they reach the inner tube so If I can prevent it a bit more by ageing why not.
Current tubular production leaves you with only few brands worth ageing anyway so not many bothers any more.
@Weldertron
Say wha? Mine didn't come with another noodle, and I don't see one mentioned on the spec sheet online (http://www.trpbrakes.com/category.php?productid=1120&catid=185).
The braking is fine (though tough to get adjusted initially) and the cable curves are nice and round - but I'd love to know more about this mystery noodle, especially if there's more magic to be found in the performance of the brakes or their adjustability.
I guess they don't offer them anymore, and mine are long gone to a friend. Seems they only offered them for a short while (I got the 8.4s the week they were released)
I've only found a tiny picture of them to.
Tomorrow at 10am the early season hopes of hundreds of Seattle-area cyclocrossers will be crushed when I show up on the course.
I would be glad to provide that same service to Frank if he can get out of bed by then.
@G'rilla
We started yesterday. Actually last weekend. I'm guessing that Seattlites rolled down to PDX to see how you set up a course. If you and @Frank have enough V, maybe you'll actually come down fro a Cross Crusade race this year.
@G'rilla
Poor bastards.
Note to others: a wide slection of barely-used cross bikes should appear on Seattle Craigslist this week.
@frank See, when I think "gravel bike", I think DK200 or Gravel Worlds, where the road is freakin' crazy, and I want to have as much bunny-hopping, line changing, fishtailing ability as possible. I'm with that interview with Dan Hughes: the best gravel rig is a CX rig. For some of the lighter stuff that might sneak into a road ride, 23s on A23s on the road bike are perfectly good enough.
Obviously, none of that mess matters on the Burley express train. :)
@frank
You could also try flexible brake noodle.Jagwire has them for example.
@TommyTubolare
http://jagwire.com/products/v/Linear-Pull_Noodles_Boots
@RedRanger
Hey.Cazzo.Grazie mille.Perfect link.