I absolutely love this vid. I don’t know anything about fixing bikes, but this is so relatable, relaxing, and refreshing! The triple Rs! I do cycle, so watching this is informative, thanks!
Glad you've found the joys of the RedShift system as well. 🤘🏻 And lo' and behold, our tastes match with the handlebars too - I'm running DH bars at the moment, but have been eyeing the Corner Bar very seriously for a while now. 🙏🏻
This has been a great series… you did an awesome job showing the ups and downs of building a DIY frame. One minute you feel like you know what you’re doing, the next you feel like you probably screwed up the whole project. But you never give up, and that’s the most important thing. Break it down into baby steps and plug away. With each frame you get more confident. Props to you for showing the successes and the struggles.
Your series is great! Made me wish I stuck with engineering school instead of smoking pot and drinking my way to an English degree while working at a bike shop! 🤣😂
You can totally put 11 and 12 speed on an 8-9-10 freehub, not even requiring CUES. Anything over a certain number of teeth, 36 I think, is designed to fit on and just have a spacer on 11 speed hub. Common in the mountain bike world. This is how I have a sram eagle cassette on my crappy wheels that came with my specialized diverge. The way they get it to work is setting the first couple gears back from the splines a bit towards the spokes, hence why they can only do it on big enough gears.
This is sooo good. I know you're a professional but this build is so relatable, weird and real. I'm in the process of cobbling an old aluminum city bike fork onto my cx-cum-touring bike, your problem solving and tenacity are really inspiring
Both of my bikes are custom builds (my road bike is even a custom frame, though not built by me) where I picked all the parts myself and built them up from bare frames, and I agree entirely with your sentiment that custom bikes are never finished. I'm often replacing this part or that as my feelings change from season to season and year to year. Your bike looks great.
I just upgraded to Paul Klampers and they are by far the best mechanical disc brake systems available. I would be willing to bet that these brakes may be the ones to change your mind about disc brakes. 🤷♂️😁✌️Thanks for the videos!
Even cable disk brakes are great if both pads move together. Main drawback is that rear wheel through axle. For that, you hang the nose of the saddle from a rope or low tree branch, even a mailbox. @@bkefrmr
I put the Velo Orange Crazy Bars on my tandem. I love them. The hood positions are really nice, but there's still the regular flat bar grips and a space toward the center that I wrapped with bar tape for a 3rd position.
That must be such a great feeling doing a literal frame-up build, its a better definition than what i used to consider a frame-up build which was to strip a used bicycle to the frame & put it back together using new & better parts. Cool series showings the ups AND downs.
The backwards cable stop reminds me of my dad's saying, "Every man has a plan that will not work". Liking the drive setup. but, where's ginormous giant dork disk?
I definitely have an angled rises stem on my corner bars and shifters and levers down on the main part like you ended up doing. That’s the feel for me. I use the extension part for climbing and it actually helps. Hope the shake down was enjoyable that’s one sweet steed !
Here I am, at 71, finding out that watching you build bikes is so relaxing. Makes me wish I’d had the opportunity to learn about bikes when I was young.
Got a big trip coming up and I have a Redshift stem. Love it. Did the base elastomers which worked great until I added my sleep system bag to the bars (hangs off of a BarYak system). I had to go up a setting with the added weight but again, love the stem.
I too chose surly corner bars for my 2 all terrain bikes so I can use mtb components and still have drops - I love them - 1 bike has the 46cm the other has 50cm wide - I prefer the narrowest.i put the brake and shifter controls on the stubs, not one each side of the crossbar; brake towards the rear, shifter to the front, put cut down mtb flat bar grips on the exposed stubs to act as hoods. I can shift/brake from the flat part of the bars as well as from the drops.
Those problems solving videos are Interesting. The horizontal dropouts have one big advantage on a travel bike. If the rear derailleur brakes, you can choose a fixed gear and correctly tight the chain to reach the next point until you can reach a place you can fix it.
Nice work up! Might look into the CUE components now, since you appear pleased. Converted a '98 TREK Mountain Track 850 3x7 to 1x7, but a few extra gears in the rear could be useful. Almost went with that style handlebar, might use them on a single speed! Enjoy the shakedown ride!
It took 1000 miles to decide I really hated the outward flare on my Topstone drops. I bent them straight in my ginormous vice. 500 miles later I decided I couldn't deal with the ridiculous 48 mm wide drops. On went the 42 mm straight shallow drops. Manna from heaven. 4 decades of road cycling will do that to you. Always hold the elbows in for aero gains. Gimmicks for profit only.
If ever a bike deserved to be labeled 'Custom Built', this is it - very cool! Not so sure about the cockpit, I think there is too much going on. Gearing looks fantastic, maybe I'm gonna try this, too! I'm still running an Ultegra 3x9 on my gravel rig, which gives me a range of 515%, not too bad.
I never really got my Corner Bars to work quite the way I wanted ‘em to. I’ll give them another try at some point. Don’t sweat the backwards cable stop. Easily fixed. The only real bonehead move you ever have to worry about is putting the BB shell in the wrong way. But that’s a fillet brazed problem. I’ve somehow avoided that one so far.
Really did not picture the bike looking like this, it is interesting to see the surly bars. Personally I'd maybe pick some sweeped bars over this. I'm all ears to hear how your weekend goes, enjoy!
I really like my Ergonomic GP5 grips on my Specialized Sirrus X 5.0. I’m also intrigued by the SQ Labs inner bar ends a see a lot of riders using. You might look at those if you switch to a flat bar
Damn right about adventure bikes never being finished! Me: She's done! Me 5 months later (now): I'm not feeling these drop bars at all anymore, flat bars! Next up is heavy duty enduro disc brakes to replace the mechanicals
With a noodle hitting a rack, I've had success in the past in changing the curve in the noodle. But as you said (about the decaleur), bending tubes is tricky. I'd be hesitant to try it on the fancy Paul noodle but go wild with a cheap regular one.
Real nice build. I thought the hand position looked too low but different riding positions tend to vary with riders. Lately I've been experimenting with short stems and BMX bars.
Love your bike, really great effort hope it pays you back in many hours of riding pleasure. Not sold on the bars, think some drop bars will be be much better along with the Cues brifters when they come out. Top job and great video series.
Great build series! There are a lot of parts here that I've been interested in and it's cool to see someone else trying them out. I tried a knock off aluminum Corner bar and absolutely did not like it. The hand positions felt unnatural to me and like you, I found it too far forward and low. I thought about trying a goofy stem with it like the VO Happy but a bar that has its main position set lower than the stem mount is just silly imho. I have also set up two friends bikes with Cues and it felt solid but not the most refined. I found that the chain length had to be just right to get reliable shifting along with proper B screw adjustment. Russ from Path Less Pedaled showed that a Cues RD can be shifted with a Sword brifter which might work for you if you wanted to stick with that RD and go to drops. I'm building up my first makeshift bikepacking rig right now which is a 1990 Trek 990 with a lugged frame, Humtulips Ridge tires, Box1 oversized V brakes with travel agents as noodles, Sword 1x10, and VO Crazy bars. Very similar to what you're doing with this bike I think so I appreciate your choices.
Andy, it’s been great following along with this series of videos. As a lifelong wrench and doing some framebuilding of my own I greatly enjoy your channel. Thanks for the great content! :)
Excellent series, very interesting to see your process(es) and the unvarnished struggles so often over-looked. I love the unfinished frame... great looking and very pracitcal. I also thought it rather brave to venture into the "Cues" realm... before the introduction of brifters. Keep up the great work (this will be a tough one to follow!) Cheers from Wales. 👍👍👍
I love the whole build series, thanks for sharing. A few comments come to mind. I think you have the cable routed the wrong way around the cable clamp on the rear derailleur. Shimano 11 and 12 speed systems are very sensitive to chain length. If the chain is too long, shift quality suffers. Finally, try Tap Magic cutting fluid. It's incredible how much better it is for drilling, tapping, etc than regular oil.
This has been an excellent series of videos, very enjoyable, well done. looking forward to seeing the final project. By the way, I tried those handlebars. Also not a good look didn’t really work the way I thoight
In a very weird emphatic way i enjoy watching you struggle so much, Haha! Reminds me of myself. All the love, learned a lot from your vids and keep up the good work.
Hey BikeFarmer, I really like your videos and I'm impressed by your practical approach and also showing things that don't go perfect first try. I like the bike and the choice of components. Anyways I think you're loosing mechanical advantage when adjusting the brakes with parallel "arms" in the "open position". I recognized this when I changed to the bigger spacers on my brake pads. The smushy feel actually means good braking power. A hard feel in the lever means less power. Keep up the good work!
in the sort of alt bar space, I've used upside down velo orange granola bars, and upside down albatross bars; you get a sort of forward hook and a lot less drop than you've got there I think. I sort of think for me, it may be that or narrow drop bars. Haven't had the best luck with wide drops.
Red shift stem will work well on the hoods, wont do much on the drops as the stem is a comfort / fatigue reducing componant. Those kitchen sink bars will be way nicer when you get some levers for the cues. Had a similar issue so i got rid if the corner bar and used a 22mm dia pit bike bar with some nice back sweep ( removed the bolt on cross brace) i rolled the bars back untill slightly dipped and put some SQ labs inner bar end up where the hoods would be. Ran a 90 mm bontrager stem with a 22 to 26mm shim for the pit bike bars. Fixed the height issue and got those 3 hand positions for less than half the price of the surly corner bar and no need to change out my levers and shifters 👍
I think it’s more of a dropout issue. I also never checked the hanger. I rode it all weekend and it did just fine. It was just a little squirrelly on the stand. I’ll futz with it a bit more as I add fenders, build wheels, replace dropouts, etc
I'd say we have a winner, killer bike. Love those bars. Everything, all the parts look built for that frame. Off-road tyres looks modern on this old looking bike. That seat looks the part. Fantastic selection on the parts. I really wish I could afford your time and knowledge and commission a frame for me. That would be too good for who's it for. As a consolation prize, I ride with that same cues system on my own bike. They're very good and I don't care that they are on the heavy side as long as they shift every single time and they do.
It turned out quite well. Now it's a beta version, let's see how it behaves during the user acceptance tests, then we'll see the fixes and the 1.0 release. I'm curious to see if and how you'll modify the frame, or if you'll go for a new frame, based on the experience from this one. We shall see. Meanwhile, kudos!
The Adventure Touring bike I just built has the range of 38x11 to 24x46. Crazy wide range just like yours. I really only use a few when riding around town, but I expect when I load it up for touring the easier gears will come in handy more
This has been a brilliant series of vids dude warts and all excellent my friend I’ve really enjoyed following the journey.. well done man it’s turned out super nice.. look forward to seeing what you think of the rides on it.. Pete 🚴🏻👍
You may not want to go here, but the upper head lug is designed to give you the option of cutting it shorter. Take your hack saw and guide and cut it down to length, thenream and face it and Bob’s your uncle.
I have been wanting corner bars since I bought my Moloko bars last year. Decided I was going to use them on my next build but I'm torn between those and the Ritchey Buzzard bars now.... Let us know your long term opinion on them. Love the bike.
Love watching the custom builds. Thank you!!!!
Love to hear a bike mechanic say he doesn't understand the B-screw :D amazing . feeling better as a home mechanic
I've just binged essentially this whole series tonight. Thank you for persevering and showing us warts and all. Really been an excellent watch.
dude, you rock. You're videos are all the things - soothing, calming, so many chuckles. keep at it.
This makes me appreciate the fact that the Wright brothers were bike mechanics.
That cockpit is bananas. I'm stealing it.
I'm calling the police
I absolutely love this vid. I don’t know anything about fixing bikes, but this is so relatable, relaxing, and refreshing! The triple Rs! I do cycle, so watching this is informative, thanks!
Glad you've found the joys of the RedShift system as well. 🤘🏻 And lo' and behold, our tastes match with the handlebars too - I'm running DH bars at the moment, but have been eyeing the Corner Bar very seriously for a while now. 🙏🏻
I thought I was the only one who experiences not go right shit glad to see you having the same fun their should be a club 😊
This has been a great series… you did an awesome job showing the ups and downs of building a DIY frame. One minute you feel like you know what you’re doing, the next you feel like you probably screwed up the whole project. But you never give up, and that’s the most important thing. Break it down into baby steps and plug away.
With each frame you get more confident.
Props to you for showing the successes and the struggles.
Nothing like the first ride on your own hand made frame. Great work! 🎉
Your series is great! Made me wish I stuck with engineering school instead of smoking pot and drinking my way to an English degree while working at a bike shop! 🤣😂
That is one great looking DORK disc so clean you can see right thru it
You can totally put 11 and 12 speed on an 8-9-10 freehub, not even requiring CUES. Anything over a certain number of teeth, 36 I think, is designed to fit on and just have a spacer on 11 speed hub. Common in the mountain bike world. This is how I have a sram eagle cassette on my crappy wheels that came with my specialized diverge. The way they get it to work is setting the first couple gears back from the splines a bit towards the spokes, hence why they can only do it on big enough gears.
You forgot to put the BF special dork disc on
This is sooo good. I know you're a professional but this build is so relatable, weird and real. I'm in the process of cobbling an old aluminum city bike fork onto my cx-cum-touring bike, your problem solving and tenacity are really inspiring
@BikeFarmer - The oldest headset press is some all threaded rod. 2 metal plates with holes and 2 nuts.
Both of my bikes are custom builds (my road bike is even a custom frame, though not built by me) where I picked all the parts myself and built them up from bare frames, and I agree entirely with your sentiment that custom bikes are never finished. I'm often replacing this part or that as my feelings change from season to season and year to year. Your bike looks great.
Those Paul brakes are great. It took me a while to adjust mine properly. Several degrees of freedom.
Very tricky setup, but once dialed, they’re great!
A lot of drop. Go with the higher angle stem :). Love the long wheel base!!
Glad you mentioned not understanding B-screw adjustments. I've messed with them but just leave them at 50/50.
I just upgraded to Paul Klampers and they are by far the best mechanical disc brake systems available. I would be willing to bet that these brakes may be the ones to change your mind about disc brakes. 🤷♂️😁✌️Thanks for the videos!
I would not take that bet! (That means I agree with you, right?)
Even cable disk brakes are great if both pads move together. Main drawback is that rear wheel through axle. For that, you hang the nose of the saddle from a rope or low tree branch, even a mailbox. @@bkefrmr
I put the Velo Orange Crazy Bars on my tandem. I love them. The hood positions are really nice, but there's still the regular flat bar grips and a space toward the center that I wrapped with bar tape for a 3rd position.
So many times I've considered buying one of those Redshift seatposts.
Great job Farmer Dude
That must be such a great feeling doing a literal frame-up build, its a better definition than what i used to consider a frame-up build which was to strip a used bicycle to the frame & put it back together using new & better parts. Cool series showings the ups AND downs.
Andy is like the Bob Ross of bike mechanics 😂
Very soothing and happy.
The backwards cable stop reminds me of my dad's saying, "Every man has a plan that will not work". Liking the drive setup. but, where's ginormous giant dork disk?
❤ best luck ❤
Love the gear rang and the cockpit
I definitely have an angled rises stem on my corner bars and shifters and levers down on the main part like you ended up doing. That’s the feel for me. I use the extension part for climbing and it actually helps. Hope the shake down was enjoyable that’s one sweet steed !
Bike looks super cool, I don’t know what to think of those bars. The kitchen sink bars might be the way to go
Here I am, at 71, finding out that watching you build bikes is so relaxing. Makes me wish I’d had the opportunity to learn about bikes when I was young.
Diggin the Surly bars! Cool 😎. Reminds me of the Kona Sutra or the Surly Trucker.
Good observation on the geometry of the bar and the stem, and the resultant zero suspension effect on the lower position.
Got a big trip coming up and I have a Redshift stem. Love it. Did the base elastomers which worked great until I added my sleep system bag to the bars (hangs off of a BarYak system). I had to go up a setting with the added weight but again, love the stem.
It was really cool to see this bike come alive in this episode. I like how you are not afraid to experiment with outside of the box ideas.
Really enjoyable series. Much appreciated-
My first test ride is to jump off the curb and hope nothing falls off or breaks. It's so cool to see the process, thanks!
Sunrace cassettes like the CSMZ901 can make you ride a 1x12 drivetrain on an (old) HG hub. I had it on my MTB, works great!
I too chose surly corner bars for my 2 all terrain bikes so I can use mtb components and still have drops - I love them - 1 bike has the 46cm the other has 50cm wide - I prefer the narrowest.i put the brake and shifter controls on the stubs, not one each side of the crossbar; brake towards the rear, shifter to the front, put cut down mtb flat bar grips on the exposed stubs to act as hoods. I can shift/brake from the flat part of the bars as well as from the drops.
I’m going to need a set of those golf putters for my own corner bars!
Those problems solving videos are Interesting. The horizontal dropouts have one big advantage on a travel bike. If the rear derailleur brakes, you can choose a fixed gear and correctly tight the chain to reach the next point until you can reach a place you can fix it.
Nice work up! Might look into the CUE components now, since you appear pleased. Converted a '98 TREK Mountain Track 850 3x7 to 1x7, but a few extra gears in the rear could be useful.
Almost went with that style handlebar, might use them on a single speed!
Enjoy the shakedown ride!
It took 1000 miles to decide I really hated the outward flare on my Topstone drops. I bent them straight in my ginormous vice. 500 miles later I decided I couldn't deal with the ridiculous 48 mm wide drops. On went the 42 mm straight shallow drops. Manna from heaven. 4 decades of road cycling will do that to you. Always hold the elbows in for aero gains. Gimmicks for profit only.
Chesters and Paul brakes, what is not to love
Cliche for a good reason!
that ended up looking awesome, love the raw frame, and kinda digging the weird cockpit setup !
If ever a bike deserved to be labeled 'Custom Built', this is it - very cool! Not so sure about the cockpit, I think there is too much going on.
Gearing looks fantastic, maybe I'm gonna try this, too! I'm still running an Ultegra 3x9 on my gravel rig, which gives me a range of 515%, not too bad.
I never really got my Corner Bars to work quite the way I wanted ‘em to. I’ll give them another try at some point.
Don’t sweat the backwards cable stop. Easily fixed. The only real bonehead move you ever have to worry about is putting the BB shell in the wrong way. But that’s a fillet brazed problem. I’ve somehow avoided that one so far.
Really did not picture the bike looking like this, it is interesting to see the surly bars. Personally I'd maybe pick some sweeped bars over this. I'm all ears to hear how your weekend goes, enjoy!
Being an ex road racer I thought I wouldn’t like the bike but when I saw the finished product I loved it. Really enjoyed the mini series thank you 👍
I really like my Ergonomic GP5 grips on my Specialized Sirrus X 5.0. I’m also intrigued by the SQ Labs inner bar ends a see a lot of riders using. You might look at those if you switch to a flat bar
I liked the look of those handlebars. One type of bar that used to be gaining popularity but faded away is the butterfly bar. Maybe those would work.
Damn right about adventure bikes never being finished!
Me: She's done!
Me 5 months later (now): I'm not feeling these drop bars at all anymore, flat bars!
Next up is heavy duty enduro disc brakes to replace the mechanicals
With a noodle hitting a rack, I've had success in the past in changing the curve in the noodle. But as you said (about the decaleur), bending tubes is tricky. I'd be hesitant to try it on the fancy Paul noodle but go wild with a cheap regular one.
Thanks!
Probably the new,, kinetic,, sadle will be the best for this bike.
Come ride Thorn Creek Lookout with me, 5100' of elevation in 14 miles, all Forest service roads. Discs necessary.
Real nice build. I thought the hand position looked too low but different riding positions tend to vary with riders. Lately I've been experimenting with short stems and BMX bars.
Love your bike, really great effort hope it pays you back in many hours of riding pleasure. Not sold on the bars, think some drop bars will be be much better along with the Cues brifters when they come out. Top job and great video series.
Great build series! There are a lot of parts here that I've been interested in and it's cool to see someone else trying them out.
I tried a knock off aluminum Corner bar and absolutely did not like it. The hand positions felt unnatural to me and like you, I found it too far forward and low. I thought about trying a goofy stem with it like the VO Happy but a bar that has its main position set lower than the stem mount is just silly imho.
I have also set up two friends bikes with Cues and it felt solid but not the most refined. I found that the chain length had to be just right to get reliable shifting along with proper B screw adjustment. Russ from Path Less Pedaled showed that a Cues RD can be shifted with a Sword brifter which might work for you if you wanted to stick with that RD and go to drops.
I'm building up my first makeshift bikepacking rig right now which is a 1990 Trek 990 with a lugged frame, Humtulips Ridge tires, Box1 oversized V brakes with travel agents as noodles, Sword 1x10, and VO Crazy bars. Very similar to what you're doing with this bike I think so I appreciate your choices.
Andy, it’s been great following along with this series of videos. As a lifelong wrench and doing some framebuilding of my own I greatly enjoy your channel. Thanks for the great content! :)
I think you need to swap the brake with the shifter. You gotta go with the standard flat bar setup.
Nope and nope
My friend one year one bicycle. The name for the next bicycle. Taliesin. The horizontal line.
Excellent series, very interesting to see your process(es) and the unvarnished struggles so often over-looked. I love the unfinished frame... great looking and very pracitcal. I also thought it rather brave to venture into the "Cues" realm... before the introduction of brifters. Keep up the great work (this will be a tough one to follow!) Cheers from Wales. 👍👍👍
I love the whole build series, thanks for sharing. A few comments come to mind. I think you have the cable routed the wrong way around the cable clamp on the rear derailleur. Shimano 11 and 12 speed systems are very sensitive to chain length. If the chain is too long, shift quality suffers. Finally, try Tap Magic cutting fluid. It's incredible how much better it is for drilling, tapping, etc than regular oil.
The kitchen sink bars are the best of all time
Ritchey Corralitos bars, my man! I think they may suit your needs...
Sick build, very impressive.
that's corner bar for ya. cable party 🤣
This has been an excellent series of videos, very enjoyable, well done. looking forward to seeing the final project. By the way, I tried those handlebars. Also not a good look didn’t really work the way I thoight
In a very weird emphatic way i enjoy watching you struggle so much, Haha! Reminds me of myself. All the love, learned a lot from your vids and keep up the good work.
Hey BikeFarmer, I really like your videos and I'm impressed by your practical approach and also showing things that don't go perfect first try. I like the bike and the choice of components. Anyways I think you're loosing mechanical advantage when adjusting the brakes with parallel "arms" in the "open position". I recognized this when I changed to the bigger spacers on my brake pads. The smushy feel actually means good braking power. A hard feel in the lever means less power.
Keep up the good work!
Thank you for this cool content❤
in the sort of alt bar space, I've used upside down velo orange granola bars, and upside down albatross bars; you get a sort of forward hook and a lot less drop than you've got there I think.
I sort of think for me, it may be that or narrow drop bars. Haven't had the best luck with wide drops.
Red shift stem will work well on the hoods, wont do much on the drops as the stem is a comfort / fatigue reducing componant.
Those kitchen sink bars will be way nicer when you get some levers for the cues.
Had a similar issue so i got rid if the corner bar and used a 22mm dia pit bike bar with some nice back sweep ( removed the bolt on cross brace) i rolled the bars back untill slightly dipped and put some SQ labs inner bar end up where the hoods would be.
Ran a 90 mm bontrager stem with a 22 to 26mm shim for the pit bike bars.
Fixed the height issue and got those 3 hand positions for less than half the price of the surly corner bar and no need to change out my levers and shifters 👍
This is straight up bike pr0n and I love it.
I would have flipped those bars over. Changing it to more of a cruising position.
That is definitely one sick bike 🤘🏻
There is a Mark on the derailer,for the B/p scr.;)
I think it’s more of a dropout issue. I also never checked the hanger. I rode it all weekend and it did just fine. It was just a little squirrelly on the stand. I’ll futz with it a bit more as I add fenders, build wheels, replace dropouts, etc
Always Good Stuff 👍
Nice work!
If three zipties don't hold that R Der housing, a brazed cable guide never woulda. xD
Hey BF, love the series. Will you add a list of the retail parts you've used in the description?
I'd say we have a winner, killer bike. Love those bars. Everything, all the parts look built for that frame. Off-road tyres looks modern on this old looking bike. That seat looks the part. Fantastic selection on the parts. I really wish I could afford your time and knowledge and commission a frame for me. That would be too good for who's it for. As a consolation prize, I ride with that same cues system on my own bike. They're very good and I don't care that they are on the heavy side as long as they shift every single time and they do.
nice build
It turned out quite well. Now it's a beta version, let's see how it behaves during the user acceptance tests, then we'll see the fixes and the 1.0 release. I'm curious to see if and how you'll modify the frame, or if you'll go for a new frame, based on the experience from this one. We shall see. Meanwhile, kudos!
If you look around Europe for a long trials stem that handlebar might work.
The Adventure Touring bike I just built has the range of 38x11 to 24x46. Crazy wide range just like yours. I really only use a few when riding around town, but I expect when I load it up for touring the easier gears will come in handy more
This has been a brilliant series of vids dude warts and all excellent my friend I’ve really enjoyed following the journey.. well done man it’s turned out super nice.. look forward to seeing what you think of the rides on it.. Pete 🚴🏻👍
It’s awesome
I lifted these bars right up and might try the can creek ends. If its 135mm O L D rear big is touchy no clue why should work with 10 speed
You may not want to go here, but the upper head lug is designed to give you the option of cutting it shorter. Take your hack saw and guide and cut it down to length, thenream and face it and Bob’s your uncle.
Sir I regret to inform you at the 1-minute Mark your forks are in upside down. 😂
I have a redshift stem on my gravel bike. Can confirm, they make good stuff.
Flip the bars over and you’ll get some rise on them
Loving this series. Have you tried the Surly Moloko bars?
You forgot the spinachi bars. 😂
Where’s the adventure ride this weekend? Bike Farmer FONDO?
so what bag is that though?
Why not bring the rack up a bit? Also, wouldn’t the bag prevent your front brake noodle from rubbing ?
Can you take the front wheel off without having to remove the front bike bag rack?
re coated cables and lined housings... older generations of those, was definitely DO NOT LUBE as oil would cause the coatings to swell up and jam.
I have been wanting corner bars since I bought my Moloko bars last year. Decided I was going to use them on my next build but I'm torn between those and the Ritchey Buzzard bars now.... Let us know your long term opinion on them. Love the bike.