Hey Lisa, you don't want hardware store paint, you want car paint.
Lamborghini, Mazda, Jaguar, Ferrari, Mercedes Benz.... (My bike is a combo of Ferrari & Lamborghini)
Hey Lisa, you don't want hardware store paint, you want car paint.
Lamborghini, Mazda, Jaguar, Ferrari, Mercedes Benz.... (My bike is a combo of Ferrari & Lamborghini)
Nope, I want house paint color. I detest the colors of most car paint. And I helped DH choose car paint colors for his bike last year.
My bike will be powdercoated, and they can match any color I send a sample of. I have been told that they will match any house paint color chip I send pretty closely.
Elk- I was excited. Now I'm still excited, but mostly nervous.
I'll be extremely nervous until I open the box and see it. When I see it, at first I'll be shocked because it's not exactly as I pictured it in my mind. Then I'll adjust to how it looks and likely find it just beautiful.
Then I'll ride it and at first it will feel strange and all wrong (because it won't be at all like my one bike I've been riding for a year now) Then I'll get used to it and marvel at how wonderful it is. Then I'll hopefully be completely happy and excited again.I've been through this routine quite a few times with banjos, mandolins, and dulcimers.
(Hmmmm...do ya think I maybe over analyze things?)
Now I'm thinking beeswax color with a couple of tiny bees on it. And black components. Maybe sky blue or blood red bar tape.....
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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OOOH, I love that idea! Beeswax with bees. Or you could go a little yellower and "dress" the bike like a bee--all black and yellow. Though the red bar tape would be a lovely accent. Hmmm, brings up some ideas for the bike's name, too. Buzz, maybe?
I haven't been visiting this forum as much as usual, so I guess I missed the initial announcement of your having ordered a new bike. Good for you! Can't wait to see the pix!
Bad JuJu: Team TE Bianchista
"The road to hell is paved with works-in-progress." -Roth
Read my blog: Works in Progress
What a great spring present you will have!
I have no doubt that it will be perfect...you already know too much about a.) what you like, b.) fit. for it to be anything else...
and on the off chance that it isn't....well you got a queue of gals here who will help you out...
DId you have a look at the co-motion site for color ideas? check these out:
http://www.cyclofiend.com/cc/index.html
http://www.antbikemike.com/bikes.html
Discipline is remembering what you want.
I already got many color paint chips and wrapped them around a tube with DH in the outside light to envision the bike.
I've decided on a beeswax color that has a tiny hint of greenish in it so it won't be too mustard. It's a soft honey color. Plus , I have mocked up a little bee that will go on the top tube. The components are basically going to be black.
Maybe the bar tape will be a dark red (but not wine) if I can find some. -anyone know of any?
Phase 1: build the frame (happening now)
Phase 2: get it painted (might take 4-6 weeks I think)
Phase 3: build up the bike with components (we are going to be sending her some, hunting for others, and she'll be providing some as well)
I figure at least two more months.![]()
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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Hi Lisa,
Waiting with baited breath for more info...How wonderfully exciting!
2007 Trek 5000
2009 Jamis Coda
1972 Schwinn Suburban
"I rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a bike. It gives her a feeling of self-reliance and independence the moment she takes her seat; and away she goes, the picture of untrammelled womanhood."
Susan B. Anthony, 1896
Oil is good, grease is better.
2007 Peter Mooney w/S&S couplers/Terry Butterfly
1993 Bridgestone MB-3/Avocet O2 Air 40W
1980 Columbus Frame with 1970 Campy parts
1954 Raleigh 3-speed/Brooks B72
You said your bike will have a 12/34 durace casette. I am not aware of such a casette, I thought durace only went up to 12/27. Perhaps you mean an XTR casette (comparable to durace but a mountain casette).
I hear you, I love my 9spd gruppo too but I have found it harder to get replacement parts so just thought I'd throw that out there. I do find it surprising you like your bike geared so low, I don't know how I would do without my 50/11 to go fast on a flat (not a descent mind you, but a flat), and I do find my 34/34 takes me up any climb I want. But we are all different so you know what is best for you. The cool thing about gearing is that its easy to change by swapping casettes.
Enjoy her, I am sure she is going to be beautiful! Perhaps you said earlier, but what steel is she going to be made from. I am sure you said its one of the new light weight alloys. Maybe someday I'll go custom to, but not until my kids finish college and are gainfully employed!
Yes, it's the XTR....I said "DuraAce level", meaning it was in the same league as DA.
My DH is pretty adept at finding parts for 9speed.I hear you, I love my 9spd gruppo too but I have found it harder to get replacement parts so just thought I'd throw that out there. I do find it surprising you like your bike geared so low, I don't know how I would do without my 50/11 to go fast on a flat (not a descent mind you, but a flat), and I do find my 34/34 takes me up any climb I want. But we are all different so you know what is best for you. The cool thing about gearing is that its easy to change by swapping casettes.
You might have more and longer "flats" to gain big-ring speed on over there in Texas than here next to the Berkshires and Catskills- our flats don't last more than maybe 1/2 mile or so, then it's on to the next hill.Some of our hills are pretty steep.
Maybe also because I am almost 54 and have only been exercising for 3 years now that is part of the reason I need lower gears on steep hills than a younger rider might need? I use my lowest gear combo several times on any given ride, yet I might typically use my highest gear only once briefly on that same ride.
Maybe a couple years from now I will need to up my gearing if I get stronger.But I sure need those low gears right now!
I think the steel tubing will be thinner than the tubing on my current Rivendell (which is a production bike and so necessarily made to withstand a +/- 250 lb male rider). I don't know much about alloys, but she said she would use a lighter weight steel tubing based on my weight and riding conditions, maybe that means thinner or alloy I don't know. I should know I guess! The completed bike with components will probably weigh 17-20 lbs.Enjoy her, I am sure she is going to be beautiful! Perhaps you said earlier, but what steel is she going to be made from. I am sure you said its one of the new light weight alloys. Maybe someday I'll go custom to, but not until my kids finish college and are gainfully employed!
And thanks, DebW for the encouragement.I tend to purposely expect less than perfect, that way I'm rarely disappointed!
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Last edited by BleeckerSt_Girl; 01-15-2008 at 02:39 PM.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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Yes, Deb, absolutely, but like Lisa, i think the 10 speed is overkill and really not necessary (and I bought it used so heck, I'm not going to complain TOO much)
we REALLY don't need all those gears!!!
Congrats on the new bike, sounds cool!
No a big deal going 9 instead of 10 speed, we have both and although I wish everything was 10. 9 speed stuff will still be around, but 10 is fairly standard now. What a 10 gives you over a 9 is tighter gearing, so the gears are spaced closer together. This then lets you stay in the correct gear for you, the type of riding, etc...
If you are jumping 2+ gears at a time, you are not shifting enough. Maybe because of the bar end shifters that Grant likes to use, but ideally you should shift as need and when needed. I know mashers that will slug up a him in the same gear they started in. I assume you are getting STI shifters, you'll be shifting with ease in no time.
Enjoy the new bike!