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adventure road ohhkayy

my crust malocchio 700×33.3 cava race before a 200k 2 weeks ago

when I last visited road bikes in 2009, it was all very one dimensional — 23c tires pumped to the max had me only riding on the road, road. even a slight deviation on a different surface could result in disaster, or the fear of such disaster, and no one likes having to walk their bike in their road cleats. clip clap slip blap and so on…..

lately i’ve been titillated with the idea of Jobst Brandt style adventure roadying. long distance all day rides on mostly road — but with chunky, often times bike hike connectors. I love this style of riding, as I find the bike hikes to be rejuvenating, especially after pinning it to the rivets roady style as we click off the miles. my riding friends around here now know what I mean when I call for a road ride — as long as it’s mostly road, its a road ride.

the Rivendell roadini was my re-entry into road bikes a few years ago. I set it up with 32mm tires and found quickly just how capable that size whilst underbiking all over the tucson area. as someone who really loves underbiking, I found this to be a liberating experience — many long rides spent in the saddle (and off) of that bike. its too hefty IMO to be a true road bike though. weighs several lbs more than my Malocchio with a similar build — plus weight really matters in adventure road, as you often times have to carry your bike.

2018 photo cred Cass Gilbert

the off road riding is so good in my home area of East Haddam CT that I never really thought of getting back into the speedy bikes around here … but then we (ultradynamico) did a 33c road tire and I started getting roady curious again. while experimenting, the pro road racers started figuring out that wider tires were faster, and I even read a few seemingly reputable tests on this theory. I wont link to them as I am feeling lazy. does this hurt my reputability? turns out 30c is the sweet spot for the pros — anything bigger would be faster, but not aero. since I can’t seem to ride fast enough anymore for marginal aero gains to matter (I average 9-16 mph on an average ride), 700×33 is pretty dang good. things feel faster once the pros use them too i’ve found.

another entrance into my road bike chat thread is this Connecticut made Beach Club rim brake road bike. funny that rim brake has to be specified, but it does these days. I again have reputable sources that I am too lazy to link to with pros talking about how they don’t care about disc brakes. road calipers are so good and simple — short arms mean very little flex — they modulate well — so easy to adjust and re-center — lightweight — I could go on. but discs are something new to sell, so big bike is fully committed to making the last vestige of attractive bicycles into the opposite of attractive — to me at least — and this is my blog after all.

Alexander Dyson photo cred

I am not into the Columbus carbon fork on this Beach Club (Darren is making me a steel one), but I love everything else. I don’t mind carbon forks — but really the only ones that look good to me are the Cannondale skinny ones, and of course our olde friends Wound Up. no one is putting money into high end rim brake road forks these days though — so this Columbus one has paltry tire clearances, and there is nothing to be done about it. the ship hath sailed on carbon rim brake forks. I have to lower the front wheel in the drop out in order to clear 700×30 on this one, so the beach club is relegated to being kind of more of a road bike and an adventure road bike, but those 700×30 tires are still surprisingly capable on dirt, and they fly on the road.

I am also using Shimano SPD sandals. yikes. but dang!

photo cred Joe Hubba

the above bike is my olde Grandis. longest ownership of all my bikes. its been all sorts of things including a 650bx38 fast bike. I think I will turn it back into one of those cuz it really does not ride as well as the beach club and Malocchio. I don’t know …. it definitely feels sluggish. its a high end Italian bike from the mid 80s, and I’d like to think thats as good as anything now … but its not. funny how that works. those sandals make up for the lack of performance though.

so in closing on this opinion piece, I think road bikes are poised to make a big comeback this year with the Netflix series and all the exciting young racers who participate all the disciplines. we have very well rounded “balance bike” generation pro road racers out there mixing it up in this new era of roadies. they love riding bikes, and it’s apparent in the way they race. should be an interesting summer!

Ronnie

10 responses to “adventure road ohhkayy”

  1. ericmarth Avatar
    ericmarth

    While everyone’s waiting for Isola to drop the Jobst Brandt book I highly recommend Ray Hosler’s Once Upon A Ride. He rode with Jobst and the book collects his ride reports departing from Palo Alto and includes some weekend tours in the Sierra Nevada. Definitely some fire roads, hiking without a road, threatening neighbors and appearances by Tom Ritchey. Great reading.

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  2. Rilo Avatar
    Rilo

    Adventure road is where I feel like at lot of us started in this new alt bike thing, its nostalgic. I remember being so excited about being able to fit a 28 in an old 90s carbon specialized epic comp and stringing together bike paths and river trails in Ohio. The next leap was converting a 27 inch concord royal tour to 700c and fitting a 35c cross tire in it and doing at tour through Kentucky down to red river gorge. The golden days of soft road, these days I don’t ride anything under 47.

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  3.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    This story speaks to me. Currently building up an old LeMond Poprad CX bike to be an all roader and more versatile like a Bridgestone RB-T. 33c, 2×9 barcon drivetrain, mini-V brakes, new bosses for racks. Should be able to tackle everything

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    1. coolultraromance1598 Avatar

      that sounds like a great bike! love the underbike math problems along with cruising fast and free on the pavement. sounds like you’ve got the perfect machine — lets see some photos? can you post photos in the comments?

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      1. tom Avatar
        tom

        @coolultraromance1598

        Here you go (hope link works) – this is how the bike sits now, collecting some parts for it

        https://1drv.ms/i/s!AlEgeUQZdFceg8E1yXT6ifdwmNrfmA?e=qS31rE

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  4. Kyled Avatar
    Kyled

    That malocchio build is niiice. I do enjoy the offensive blue beach club as well though. I’m somewhat in between a malocchio and a canti lightning bolt for a fall time replacement for my big S carbon fibrè diverge. Thoughts on active differences in true usefulness of those two for an 80/20 road and dirt mix of a similar pace to you?

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  5. Stephen Avatar
    Stephen

    Man, the malocchio build is rocking, loving all the red. Between it and your FTW prototype you’ve been giving me lots of road build inspiration.. Got a rambouillet I want to take this direction. Gotta get my hands on some of those campy brake/shifters.

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  6.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Good post. However, I will do anything I can to avoid riding on paved roads. To each their own I suppose, but I find it much more interesting to ride trails and rail trails. Yeah, those sandals man.. they remind me of the rubber ice cleats I strap onto my boots in the Winter. I’ll take the Bedrock wearin, Alumalith ridin Ronnie any day!

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  7. Jaybird Avatar
    Jaybird

    Good talk on road bikes. For most they seem to be a great entry into riding more so then Mountain bikes or BMX.
    Then once interested we can get them off the road and onto dirt……
    Crazy sandals.

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    1. ronnie Avatar
      ronnie

      lol these Sandals — my friend Jared says they remind him of those boots you strap on to walk in a cast.

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