IIRC disc brakes weren't a thing until around 1997 or 98. when i bought my Klein mb in 1996 everything was still regular old pull brakes. personally, i never saw the point in disc brakes since i can already launch myself over the bars just fine with old-school brakes, and they seem like an obvious fail point that you can't fix while away from home. i can jerry-rig a fix on regular brakes, but good luck doing that with discs.
In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
FIFTY YEARS OF SCARING THE CHILDREN 1970-2020--and i'm not done yet
Yeah they aren't really necessary. I have them because I bought a new bike in like 2005, but they don't work any better than the old rim brakes for sure
This thread has given me GAS to get my bike back from my dad's house and go on a ride this weekend maybe!
dubkitty wrote:IIRC disc brakes weren't a thing until around 1997 or 98. when i bought my Klein mb in 1996 everything was still regular old pull brakes. personally, i never saw the point in disc brakes since i can already launch myself over the bars just fine with old-school brakes, and they seem like an obvious fail point that you can't fix while away from home. i can jerry-rig a fix on regular brakes, but good luck doing that with discs.
I actually hate disc brakes at this point. The brakes on my mountain bike somehow got contaminated, I lost almost all my brake power and they squealed like mad. So I replaced the pads and cleaned the discs. Road it twice. Contaminated again. I just want the simplicity of rim brakes back.
Vintage MTBs like Thurber has are great for cruising around (been building and riding those as commuters for years), but I'll take a modern bike with wet discs, slack HT, longer front center, taller stack, and a dropper post any day off road. Especially after riding old XC bikes on trails back in the day. MTB evolution has been fantastic (mostly).
I transferred all the stuff I had on this cheapo Chinese carbon CX frame to this Soma a couple weeks ago, I'm actually not sure if I like it. I want to throw some racks on it and start bike camping/touring and stuff but the frame actually doesn't ride as nice as the cheap Chinese CX frame I had, and its also surprisingly kind of twitchy in handling.
It's not horrible, its still a good frame but kind of not living up to reputations I've read about Wolverines from reviews, I mean you'd think a frame made for touring/gravel would be really comfy and handle nice and lazy, but this thing is less comfortable with 32mm tires than my aluminum CAAD12 is on 28mms, and it's twitchier.
What even is going on here? This looks incredible. I used race downhill skateboards and this reminds me of "the good ol' days" of downhill skateboarding. By that I mean now everyone is incredibly good and I can't keep up
For nastalgia sake, I'm in this around the :40 mark.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KeontkY7VDk[/youtube]
Iommic Pope wrote:This is the best you've been.
Suffering suits you.
BitchPudding wrote:Let this be written in our history as proof that ILoveFuzz is one tight knit internet family.
repoman wrote:
I transferred all the stuff I had on this cheapo Chinese carbon CX frame to this Soma a couple weeks ago, I'm actually not sure if I like it. I want to throw some racks on it and start bike camping/touring and stuff but the frame actually doesn't ride as nice as the cheap Chinese CX frame I had, and its also surprisingly kind of twitchy in handling.
It's not horrible, its still a good frame but kind of not living up to reputations I've read about Wolverines from reviews, I mean you'd think a frame made for touring/gravel would be really comfy and handle nice and lazy, but this thing is less comfortable with 32mm tires than my aluminum CAAD12 is on 28mms, and it's twitchier.
That’s really interesting to hear...I always though that SOMA stuff was over engineered...to hear its twitchy and not comfy is not good!
Anyone on here do any bikepacking? I’ve been loving riding my bike about, and I love backpacking. Seems like a great combo of two things I love. The thing I’m nervous about is my lack of mountain bike skills (I’ve never even tried it) but it seems bikepacking is mostly about riding dirt trails that don’t require any intense skills. Kind of like how you don’t need to know how to rock climb to go hiking...
Iommic Pope wrote:This is the best you've been.
Suffering suits you.
BitchPudding wrote:Let this be written in our history as proof that ILoveFuzz is one tight knit internet family.