docnjoj
1 GW
Your work is becoming much more clean and professional each year. Great job, AW.
otherDoc
otherDoc
Thanks--I dunno if I'm amazing for that, but I do worry about them.DAND214 said:Is this guy AMAZING or what?
He worries more about his dogs than most worry about anything.
I LOVE DOGS!!!
Thanks--I am not exactly sure when and why I decided to do things more cleanly, but I guess I did, at some point. I still don't do them nearly as cleanly as I would really like to, partly from lack of time/materials, partly from laziness.docnjoj said:Your work is becoming much more clean and professional each year. Great job, AW.
You are amazing for what you do with your bikes AND how you care for your dogs. I wish I could build like you have. Putting it together, take it apart and back together till you get it right.DAND214 wrote:
Is this guy AMAZING or what?
He worries more about his dogs than most worry about anything.
I LOVE DOGS!!!
Thanks--I dunno if I'm amazing for that, but I do worry about them.And I love them too.
Or at least...taking it apart and mostly putting it back together...in some slightly (or radically) different way. :lol:DAND214 said:You are amazing for what you do with your bikes AND how you care for your dogs. I wish I could build like you have. Putting it together, take it apart and back together till you get it right.
It does help, I think--though it's not nearly as rough-looking as I used to keep them.May not be the a Rolls but they are very interesting and functional.
Oh I forgot, the rough look that keeps the thieves away.
Don't take that as a baad thing, because it's not.
amberwolf said:Wet roads don't let the front wheel do much braking without skidding, so I have to use the electric braking on the rear wheels to do any quick braking. I wonder: if I could lock out the front suspension during braking, would it brake better?
I *am* sure that the fork's internal looseness that lets it wiggle fore/aft doesnt' help..
On non-smooth road surfaces, I agree with that; I'm just not sure about wet but smooth ones--the only thing the suspension does in that case is allow the wheel to be "pushed away" from the surface as the spring is compressed during braking.1JohnFoster said:I think any suspension that actually moves at all (up & down) improves traction, unless it is so underdamped that the wheel bounces. (I've had that!)
Struts--the plastic rings and whatnot that keep the outer tubes from wiggling back and forth on the inner tubes are all worn out, possibly even missing by now; this is an old cheap RST fork that I used for a long time on CrazyBike2 before I put it on this trike. I'd go without suspension at all but it does help with the numerous potholes and driveway entrances around here, a little bit. Rather have a much better fork but I'll have to build it from experiments as the only slightly better fork I've got is on CB2 and staying there.Is it the struts that are loose, or the headset?
Yes, I have it at about 20PSI right now, which seems to be the best balance from experimentation, between worry of rim or tire/tube damage from potholes, and braking traction. However, I have no idea what the actual curves are for any of these tires; havent' ever seen that data available for bicycle tires.Reducing tire pressure a bit helps traction. Each tire has curves for of loading weight vs pressure for maximum traction.
I remember when I sort of felt embarrassed to be riding a bike at all (in a non-sporty sort of way) as an adult- in the 80's & 90's. People associated bikes only with kids, and were confused and embarrassed for me, always offering me rides. Now it's very fashionable in Vancouver, for a certain type of person anyway. Maybe if enough people stop being embarrassed about the functional workmanship and lack of gloss of their reuse efforts we can make "custom" and DIY be fashionable again like it was when we were kids.
I couldn't do it the way I wanted to
I kinda need it for tomorrow's work commute (still have CB2 but should have some boxes to take home tomorrow taht won't fit on CB2)).
amberwolf said:Whoops. :/
Oh, no, it bent just fine, not damaged by the bender. You can bend the road bike steel just fine that way.dogman dan said:Guess my pipe bender is no good for frame steel. Good to know, I've been collecting old steel road bikes for material. Forget bending it.
Wow--that's nice.But since then, my neighbor gave me about 150' of half by half square tube. When it gets too cold for riding, I'll be welding up something weird.
You mean this hitch?bowlofsalad said:Is it possible to expand the carrying capacity of your trailer and add a hitch to CB2 (I am assuming you haven't already added the hitch)? If nothing else, you might do this in the near future to protect yourself against this sort of issue.
Yeah, my welding isn't pretty, but it's very rare for an actual weld to break; it's usually some other predictable but non-weld failure (like the above) caused by repeated stress on an improperly designed or braced area.1JohnFoster said:That's hilarious! All's well that ends well. Is it stable to ride no hands? If it ever does break again, could you just coast to a stop? Looks like you learned welding from the same school I did, koodos on your persistence. I gave up and turned to using wood and fiberglass, everything I ever welded broke.