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  1. #16
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    15

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    Wow, I woulda said I don't like pink and I already said I don't think Serottas look all that great on the Serotta website, but that bike is just gorgeous--a real beauty. And nothing beats a great fit.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    MS
    Posts
    220
    I was considering the specialized and my LBS guy suggested a Masi, can't remember which one though.
    Good luck!

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    94
    I highly recommend the Specialized Ruby Expert. I've had it for just over a year and it's been a fabulous and fast ride, a great climber and looks great, imo

    My LBS guy did a fantastic job with the fit, he did swap out the stock stem with a Bontranger Race Lite. My bike is a 54cm.

    Click image for larger version. 

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  4. #19
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Blessed to be all over the place!
    Posts
    3,433
    I too have short legs and a long torso. I have a 49cm Lemond Reno and it's been great for me.

    Previously, I had a "crunched" feeling between my shoulders when I rode SilverSon's 50cm Trek Pilot for any distance.

    The LBS really pondered the recommendation, but concluded that I needed the shorter vertical height and extended horizontal distance. I've not regretted the decision one bit.
    If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers

  5. #20
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95
    Quote Originally Posted by Kathi View Post
    I have a custom Serotta and it is so beautiful and such a joy to ride. Besides fit Serotta did a great job of building it proportionally. I'm 5'1" and have short arms so I needed a very long headtube. Because the headtube needed to be long compared to my Standover height I thought my bike would turn out to be a sloper, like a lot of the WSD frames. However, Serotta was able to build the bike to my needs without an extreme slope of the top tube. The slope is only 1 degree!

    Btw, the fun of building your own bike is that you chose the level of components that you want, not what some company thinks you need.

    A good custom fitter can work with your physical needs to build a frame for you.

    Here's pics of my Serotta
    Wow, Kathi, I have to agree with sklarewc: That's one pink bike I could sink my teeth into! What a beautiful ride!

  6. #21
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95

    Eureka!

    OK, so I had big plans this weekend: Go out and ride as many of the bikes under consideration as I could cram into one action-packed holiday weekend. I prepped Saturday morning by taking the ol' 5200 out for a few hours, plenty of time to get a good ache going in my shoulders and neck so that I would be primed to feel pain during my test rides, 'cause just about any bike feels great when I'm fresh—at least for the first hour.

    I wore bibs under my clothes so that I could coyly drop my pants when I was ready for the salesperson to offer up a test ride. Girl Scouts come prepared.

    Store #1: Agoura Cycles in Agoura Hills, Calif.

    As promised online, the store had a generous stock of Orbeas, including multiple sizes in both the Diva and Onix Dama. I spotted a 49cm Onix Dama, my target size, but it was pink! I haven't worn a dress in 20 years (and even then I looked like a boy in a dress). And by the time I was 12 years old, my bright yellow Sears bicycle had a BMX seat and handlebars where its flowered banana seat and basket once stood. I'm not even sure I can ride a pink bike ironically given that I'm often addressed as sir by people who fail to notice my D-cup breasts.

    Saleswoman Kristen came over as I was checking out the Dama and said, “That’s definitely going to be my next bike!”

    I told her I wasn’t in love with the color, to which she enthusiastically replied that she LOVED it and would be pimping it out further with pink cable housing and pink bar tape. We may have a vastly different aesthetic, but I liked her—especially after I learned, later, that this was a second, weekend job that she had taken on because the store owner called her bluff when she said he needed a saleswoman who could speak directly to women’s needs as well as folks new to cycling. Go, Kristen! And go, store owner!

    What Kristen was unable to tell me was that the Onix Dama only comes in pink, at least in the 2007 model year. But before this came to light I decided that I could, perhaps, straddle a pink bike with a pink saddle. And then once I was straddling one, I figured I might as well take it for a test spin. Outside. Me, on a pink bike.

    I took it up a hill and into some fun, winding roads, all woo-hoo and such, and then, about 30 minutes in, my lower back started screaming at me. Great, I thought, there’s no pain in my neck and shoulders, but now there’s pain down south. It’s like there’s some finite amount of pain that must be felt somewhere, so where would I like it? Then I noted the toe overlap. Granted, I was riding in sneakers, but you can see where this test ride was headed. I returned to the bike shop, mentally crossing the Onix off my dream list. Dare I ride the Diva?

    My partner was waiting for me in the store, wondering whether I had maybe been hit by a car and how long she should wait before hopping in her own car to search for my remains. But then I came riding up, shaking my head dejectedly.

    “It’s probably best that you don’t like it, because it comes in pink only,” she said. “But the mechanic said the men’s 48cm model has very similar geometry, so we set one up for you with a shorter stem!”

    She was so cute, all gung-ho and trying to get me just as excited about giving another Onix a whirl. But I was pessimistically certain that I would have the same problems on the similarly apportioned men’s model. Nevertheless, they had set it all up for me, so I had to give it a college try.

    The Onix TdF felt different the moment I got on. Pedaling on flat road was a dream, and when I started up that first hill I felt my whole body respond to the task, working the pedals with a kind of fluidity I had never experienced on inclines of any note. The farther I went, the more I could feel my lower face compulsively breaking into some kind of freakish smile.

    I had always sneered previously when reading those bike reviews in which the testers go on and on about the bike coming to feel like an extention of themselves, but now I knew exactly what they meant!

    To paraphrase Jane Austen, “Readers, I married it.” How could I not? Several days have now passed and that freakish smile still hasn’t fallen from my face. On Sunday I took it out on a 35-mile canyon route that I had always, always had to break into two legs, such was the pain that had always overtaken my neck at mile 15—I know, pitiful. But on Sunday I had zero desire to get off the bike. Break? No way! That would cut into my available biking time. Omigod, road biking doesn’t have to hurt? Hallelujah, and pass the chain lube.

    So, to sum up, I went to exactly one bike store and rode just two bikes, which wasn’t my master plan. But they say that when you find The One, you just feel it. My response to the Onix was as visceral as the first pangs of true love—I was just lucky enough to find mine on the first date.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Folsom CA
    Posts
    5,667
    LOL, I love your story. Well done and congratulations - may you have many happy miles together.

    2009 Lynskey R230 Houseblend - Brooks Team Pro
    2007 Rivendell Bleriot - Rivet Pearl

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Blessed to be all over the place!
    Posts
    3,433
    That's great. Congrats
    If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    S. Dak.
    Posts
    488
    Sounds like a marriage made in heaven! Have many wonderful adventures with your orbea. Pictures please?

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    What a great story! And beautifully written... I second the motion for pictures. I'm a sucker for pictures of a new bike!

  11. #26
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95

    Da pics

    OK, finally managed to arrange a photo shoot with my new bike—it's very busy, you know. Thanks for asking!

    The only mods from stock are the Thomson seatpost, the pimped-out handlebar tape, and my beloved Selle Italia LDY seat.
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  12. #27
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    Beautiful! I've been lusting after Orbea's in the park... Yours looks fantastic!

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Maine
    Posts
    959

    Talking What am I missing?

    Ummm lots of great imput! Like you, I am generally the same size as you. With that said, although I own several nice road bikes, I still find my custom Ti bike the most comfortable. If you are interested in Ti, have you thought about Lynskey? These are the people that used to own LItespeed in the 90's... and sold the company. They make awesome frames, with custom sizing and paint schemes as well... I have to admit that my next frame will be from them... Dear Santa, HA!

    Have fun looking!

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    820
    BTW, how's the standover height on that bike? Their website doesn't say...

  15. #30
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    95
    Quote Originally Posted by rij73 View Post
    BTW, how's the standover height on that bike? Their website doesn't say...
    Hmm, I have a 29-inch inseam, it's a 48 cm frame, and we work well together, with the proper inch or so of clearance. It is strange that they don't post SO height online.

 

 

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