The Sigma 1100

Simplicity.  There is little in this world that I find more exciting than a complicated problem solved by a simple, elegant solution. Focusing on simplicity is particularly useful when weighing intricate competing facts because it allows you to say, “None of those complicated factors are likely to work out in my favor, so I'll ignore them and instead focus on the ones that my tiny, Twitter-saturated brain can comprehend in seven seconds or less and which support my hypothesis.”  I am to understand that most American businesses are run using this model. But enough about philosophy and business.

It may come as a surprise to you, but I am a bit of a gear head. The last time my VMH and I were on holiday, the hotel staff unloading the car asked us when the rest of our party was arriving. Yeah, no, 'fraid not – just us. Being a technologist professionally also offers me the benefit of not being terrible with electronics, so the complexity of the gear is generally of little concern from a technical standpoint.

It doesn't take long for new gadgets and gizmos to find their way from the shelf into my gearbox. When Mektronic hit the market, my first reaction was, “Bullocks to these antiquated cables and levers; computerized shifting is the Future.”  It was during my tenure with Mektronic that I had my first epiphany about technology and cycling. As with most epiphanies, mine was unexpected and came while sitting on the side of the road with broken chain after some kind of rogue radio signal sent my derailleur into hysterics and I realized: technology does not always improve the enjoyment of the ride.

I have been to the dark side of cycling computers. I had the full Polar setup that tracked loads of data and allowed me to download it into my computer so I could wonder at the pretty wiggly lines. I was obsessed. Each ride started with the dance of getting the heart rate strap positioned just right so it could prove I was alive. As I started rolling, I'd punch the big red button on the computer to order it to start it's recording. Finishing my ride, I would focus on punching the same red button a second time to stop the recording, for fear that recording while stationary would lower the overall squiggliness of the lines. The value of my rides was measured by how far, fast, and high I'd gone.

It came to it's peak during L'Etape du Tour in 2003.  After the ride, I found that the computers had stopped recording about half way through. I was devastated. It took a while, but time does indeed mend a broken heart. I eventually came to understand that the ride was just as amazing with or without the data, and slowly left the numbers obsession behind.

The natural progression from that point was to abandon the computer altogether.  For a while I indulged in the simplicity of the road, focusing completely on the ride itself and nothing else. Eventually, however, I came to understand that the very nature of Rule #10 implies that no data at all is a very difficult way to judge how your climbing is progressing.  After all, speed makes up 50% of that Rule, otherwise it would just be, “It never gets easier” and that would be pretty demoralizing. Besides, I always feel like I've got the anchor down when I'm climbing, so the speed is what I use to judge if I am, in fact, going faster or if I'm just suffering and slow. (Unfortunately for me, it's usually the second.)

With that, I present my Rule #10 meter of choice, the Sigma 1100.  It is lightweight and mounts on the stem, which are the two most critical things. It also uses a beautiful, simple rubber band to mount all the parts, which means no messy zip-ties or screws are required; the whole installation requires zero ties or tape whatsoever. It is not wireless, which means one less battery to run down, and the cord is nice and thick and wraps beautifully around the front brake cable.

Clean and simple, the almost-perfect computer – second only to the V-Meter.

[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/frank@velominati.com/Signma 1100/”/]

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • I think we all agree the above is how we all believe we look on a bike. Sadly Pedale.Forcheta is the only one...

    Although i am a Shimano man from Day 1 (Shimano 600EX) i am surprised to see an Italian on anything other than Campag.

    By the way Frank you have too many logos on your bike. I think we need a de-logoing drive to leave the Sacred Cog as the only discernible image when we look down. You need to lead us back to the promised land of Reynolds 531 tubing and down tube levers. We are losing our way.

  • While I would generally agree with the computers are cockrings for your stem sentiment, I spend enough time on the trainer that my Garmin is a godsend... unmeasured suffering on the trainer is just so much less motivating than knowing I just laid down 50k at 75% of max in the garage while all my riding buddies were junketeer down by the fire hiding from the storm.

  • @Marko
    Bemidji

    @Jeff in PetroMetro
    I do some skate skiing and such, but no speed skating. Maybe if I knew someone to teach me a few things about it.

  • Speedos and HR monitors are good, if used correctly - even at a fairly basic level.

    Was having coffee with a bloke this morning - he once wrote a pretty good article on how to use a speedo for some relatively simple discussion.

    @Hitchhiker

    Hitchhiker :
    And if your not Pagan, then Bollox to the lot of you! (I mean that in the nicest possible way, of course)

    That would be "if you're not Pagan..." If you live by the sword of a pedant, you die by it too.

  • @Pedale.Forchetta
    That's you on your cage-less Merlin? Excellent! You are (or were) part of the Merlin family, as am I. I must finally put up a photo of my #1 bike, my Merlin Extralight.

    I like your anti-water bottle commitment but I would die an ugly death without much hydration as I'm a big sweaty freak of nature.

    @Hitchhiker
    And a A Dog's Bollox of a Christmas back at ya!

  • I believe that Pedale.Forchetta never rides long enough to need to drink or he uses a Camelback.

    @Jeff in PetroMetro, @ZachOlson,
    I spent a bit of time speedskating, it is like doing squats the whole time - Rule 5

  • @michael
    With bikes like the ones I've seen belonging to Pedale.Forchetta here, I can't imagine he'd only go for short rides. That would be a travesty. And that's a very fine pic above, which suggests he looks very comfortable in the saddle (even if his left leg is down"”maybe it's the angle of the shot). Very nice shot.

    I drink very little when I ride, too, though I do tend to go through 2-3 litres of water a day off the bike. It calls for very little fluid while riding, unless I'm training with intervals particularly hard.

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