Only one way to get better at hills!!!!!!
...Now just need to work on my hills!

ewww - running - no thanks!
or, in the words of the knee-cutter who fixed me 18 months ago... "ride the bike all you want, but if I even hear that you've run for so much as to catch a bus I'm taking you off my treatment list faster than Mark Cavendish on the Champs Elysees"![]()
I could add swimming and do a tri!
On a completely different subject- wheels and tyres. My bike currently has 700c 32mm continental contacts on it on its alex Alex DP17, Double Wall, 32H
wheels. Am I correct in thinking that these won't take skinnier tyres?
I am thinking of keeping these for winter use (good grip and nice and stable) and getting something skinnier for the other times of year. Would I need new wheels as well as tyres? If so would it just be easier to get another casette as well and leave the current one on the old wheels?
Or should I just buy a fancy road bike for summer? (This is currently not an option- the wife would kill me. I will have to wait until she asks for a better bike- mind you she already has a hybrid and a brompton!)
I am finding the Charge Spoon seat quite comfy.
best sub £25 saddle ever.
It may be the best thing about the bike!
Edit: Charge now do custom versions too- really nice!
Have you tried a slight tilt forwards? I had the same problem, couldnt feel stuff for a few hours after a long ride...fitted a bontranger (slight indent) and slightly angled it....
Just bought a Prologo...bit uncomfy atm but needs to bed in.
Sometimes its worth considering yoru shorts too!
specialized offere a fitting service if you go into a designated shop...they measure your sit bone imprint and work out the best one for you...Sella do a similar thing...it took me 3 saddles to find the right one on the winter bike...just hope this new one beds in ok!
I could add swimming and do a tri!
On a completely different subject- wheels and tyres. My bike currently has 700c 32mm continental contacts on it on its alex Alex DP17, Double Wall, 32H
wheels. Am I correct in thinking that these won't take skinnier tyres?
I am thinking of keeping these for winter use (good grip and nice and stable) and getting something skinnier for the other times of year. Would I need new wheels as well as tyres? If so would it just be easier to get another casette as well and leave the current one on the old wheels?
Or should I just buy a fancy road bike for summer? (This is currently not an option- the wife would kill me. I will have to wait until she asks for a better bike- mind you she already has a hybrid and a brompton!)
just bought my son a new bike. 24 inch Carrera blast. took off the utterly crap clarks CMD-11's with tektro levers and replaced them with avid elixir 3's.
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I can go into Evans and Action bikes without lust but I am scared to go over to Pearson's and wander in. Their stuff on the internet looks just beautiful.
Mind you I have had bikes from there before as a kid (cruddy ones!) as I grew up in Sutton.
I've done their sit bone measurement and helpful as it is, I don't think it's nearly sufficient in saddle fitting. It's a marketing tool more than anything.
The problem I have is most saddles are to high in the centre and low in the wings, which directs all the pressure on the soft tissue along the centre and consequently cuts of blood flow. I need a virtually flat saddle so that my sit bones are carrying my weight before other areas have the chance to come into contact.
This is the 2nd Selle Italia I've spent a lot of time on and neither is quite right so I think it's time to try a different make.
Things aren't too bad up until about 1.5hrs as long as I stand for 30 seconds regularly to keep the blood flow going, though it certainly isn't something I should tolerate for very much longer.
Have a wander up new Kings Cross and go to the Condor shop. I mentioned the place to a work colleague a few years ago, he went in just for a look and came out with £1500 of new bike![]()
I guess they took pity on him and sold him the entry level clunker...It's always interesting to hear what people make of various saddles. I'm riding a Selle Italia Flite Gel Flow - bought for the cut away centre - and it's not pleasant. Instant pressure on the gooch regardless of the for/aft or angle adjustment means that numb you-know-what is inevitable. I really need to have an experiment with a few others but I loathe the idea of parting more money on saddles that probably won't work either. I really want to give the Fizik Kurve a try but at around £150 it's a huge sum to be experimenting on a saddle with in my eyes.
To be honest, even though in my head I KNOW that the "off the peg" string and glue Dolan is a far better performing frame than I've ever ridden - there's still part of me that hankers for the "made to measure" Bob Jackson 753 that was nicked from the back of my van, the Custom Columbus SLX Harry Quinn TT that went under a truck when I crashed... or even the retro steel Colnago that I left with my "second family" back in Italy when I returned home maybe 10 years ago...
Sometimes its more about the heart than the head...
I've got a couple of Old Raleigh Competition Shop 531 frames in the loft which are the correct vintage, one's half built with 7400 Series Shimano Dura-Ace (6 speed), the other's based on Campag Victory..Article 6 – Criteria for admission
Only cyclists with vintage bicycles will be permitted to participate.
Your vintage bicycle must have all the following characteristics:
• road racing bicycle, built before 1987 (not cyclo cross or time trial bike);
• steel frame (the only aluminum frame bikes permitted are ALAN or VITUS with either screwed or glued joints);
• gear shift levers on the down tube of the frame (exceptionally, only pre-1980 bar-end gear shifts are allowed);
• pedals with toe clips and fitted straps (quick release pedals are not allowed, except Cinelli M71 pedals);
• the passage of brake cable outside the handlebars.
New bicycles with steel frames can be used but they must be assembled with vintage components (gear levers, handlebars, pedals, etc..).
I don't think I've EVER stopped with bike lust though...
I'm currently building (very, very slowly) a bike that's compliant with the regulations of L'Eroica...
Specifically
I've got a couple of Old Raleigh Competition Shop 531 frames in the loft which are the correct vintage, one's half built with 7400 Series Shimano Dura-Ace (6 speed), the other's based on Campag Victory..
It's shaping up to be probably as expensive a project as building the Dolan- Every time I find a groupset that looks half tidy, some nice german chap or other pays more than it'd cost for a brand new Di2 or EPS version...
I think what I'm doing is pretty much the same as what Ped did with those rangefinders a while back...
Also a bit of inspiration:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324532004578358780883339720.html
...slightly depressing that he's referred to as a big guy at 180 and 6'5" though...