Forum menu
Understanding the R...
 

Understanding the Roadie mindset.

Posts: 3094
Full Member
 

We’ll set up a helpline..


 
Posted : 21/11/2023 2:23 pm
Posts: 4810
Full Member
 

I have a habit of riding with my hands on the flats on my ‘curly’ barred bikes, I have to consciously remind myself to keep my brakes covered when in a close group.

Another habit I have is to linger in a gear even when it would be better to change down one or two. Just laziness really

Cant help but feel these things are connected.


 
Posted : 21/11/2023 2:59 pm
Posts: 1178
Full Member
 

What about those that sit in for ages then eventually take a turn, go mental cos they’re well rested, break the group up then end up back at the back trying to recover. ****ts.🙄

Just let them ride off the front. They'll feel a bit silly riding alone 20 m up the road.


 
Posted : 21/11/2023 3:04 pm
Posts: 17331
Full Member
 

Another habit I have is to linger in a gear even when it would be better to change down one or two. Just laziness really

Not always. Many of my group rides are on a fixed wheel. I can't coast or surge, and the group tends to be smoother as a result. Surging on the front is often just enthusiasm. If in one line, go further on the front, not faster! That way everyone gets a workout. If in two lines, just enjoy the flow and stop thrashing 😀 Or sit 20m off the front and look silly.


 
Posted : 21/11/2023 4:30 pm
Posts: 7867
Free Member
 

We’ll set up a helpline..

'Hello Helpline. Have you tried under the sofa?' 🙃


 
Posted : 21/11/2023 4:33 pm
Posts: 5400
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I’m looking at my shifters and the hoods, and the towers on them are very tall.

There’s no way that the hoods are sliding over them with the levers in place. Warm water, lube, whatever, they just aren’t going to fit.

Then I found this and I’m not feeling so bad after all.


 
Posted : 24/11/2023 4:22 pm
Posts: 4235
Free Member
 

I have to consciously remind myself to keep my brakes covered when in a close group.

In a close group it's the guys who are covering their brakes that would tend to worry me, if I didn't know them.


 
Posted : 24/11/2023 5:10 pm
Posts: 1780
Free Member
 

@Kramer if you decide to go for another shifter I have a pair of force 1x hyd on eBay currently that were on a cx bike and so are cheap (for hydraulic shifters)


 
Posted : 24/11/2023 5:18 pm
Posts: 5400
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@shedbrewed thanks I’ll keep that in mind if I can’t get the current one working again.


 
Posted : 24/11/2023 5:20 pm
Posts: 26890
Full Member
 

the trick is to find a group that you trust completely

Not an easy trick, there's usually one or two I will avoid following the wheel of.

GPS has killed group rides, back in the day if a knobber went off the front after sitting in the ride leader would just take the next left or right untill they got the idea! Now everyone has the route so has no fear of going off the front.... Or back for that matter.

The group ride knobber I really get annoyed with is the rider who goes off the back, so I sit up and wait, they can see me looking back and matching my pace to their to get them in my wheel to take them back and then they just sprint past me and blow up again. FFS I was not dropped I slowed to help you!! Or you collect them and gently up the pace and start to take them back, you pace them for a few km's get to about 20m off the back and they sprint off your wheel to close the last bit leaving you struggling. FFS if you had energy you could have ****ing helped!!


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 8:55 am
Posts: 14768
Full Member
 

This thread is only further enforcing my belief that road riding is utter bobbins


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 9:39 am
Posts: 20663
Full Member
 

GPS has killed group rides, back in the day if a knobber went off the front after sitting in the ride leader would just take the next left or right untill they got the idea! Now everyone has the route so has no fear of going off the front…. Or back for that matter.

Oh no, it's an unwritten rule that there will be at least 3 fractionally different routes - someone's GPS will have recalculated, 3 people will have loaded the wrong route, one person will have reversed the route by accident, there'll be a couple of variations where the ride leader changed it 12hrs before the ride and there'll be 2 people who haven't loaded any route because they'll expect everyone else will have it...

Half the people won't be looking at the GPS anyway and will be astonished when everyone starts braking/turning.

But everyone will spend half the ride tinkering with the bloody thing to get it syncing to their power meters and other sensors.


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 10:33 am
Posts: 13291
Free Member
 

This thread is only further enforcing my belief that road riding is utter bobbins.

Only if you are doing it wrong,refuse to spend the time learning new skills,or are just unlucky to live in an area with shite roads. 😉 🤣


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 11:41 am
Posts: 14768
Full Member
 

Only if you are doing it wrong,refuse to spend the time learning new skills,or are just unlucky to live in an area with shite roads

The refusal to learn new skills is akin to my refusal to play golf. I'm not wasting my time learning to do something that has zero appeal

Derbyshire and the Peak have some roads that seem attractive to roadies.

Fortunately, it also has amazing trails. 


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 11:48 am
Posts: 13291
Free Member
 

Derbyshire and the Peak have some roads that seem attractive to roadies

Aye,some cracking roads around there,shame that a lot of times it's rammed with traffic,it would be offroad riding down there for me.

Glad I live in an under populated,road riding paradise. 👍 😆


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 12:11 pm
Posts: 17331
Full Member
 

Nice group of nine this morning. Ran like clockwork. What’s not to like? Tomorrow is final velodrome accreditation. Lots of rules there too but basically LOOK before you move. It’s really just about safety. It’s a potentially dangerous pursuit. My clubmate died next to me when he hit a pothole. You need some rules. But that feeling of flying along in a well drilled group with no egos is sublime. It’s what I ride club rides for.


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 12:48 pm
 mert
Posts: 4049
Free Member
 

I hope that all of you who are having such fun at my expense are going to be there for me next Sunday evening when I’m on my knees and weeping surrounded by tiny screws and bits of shifter…

Useful advice:-
Dismantle it in the biggest clear food bag that you can. It'll catch ALL the springs and widgets. And you can get your hands inside.

Ditch your watch, rings and long sleeves, you'll only snag something and flick in on the floor (i once found a pawl spring inside the cuff of my hoodie, the only weird thing is that i hadn't been fiddling with pawls that day).

Do it on a large tray on the kitchen table (stuff can't roll off, lots of light).

If your other half complains, get a more understanding better half...


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 1:15 pm
Posts: 5400
Free Member
Topic starter
 

@mert thanks for the constructive advice. 🙂

I actually did a bit of firkling about yesterday and the seat for the gear cable barrel end has cracked meaning that it pulls through and then comes loose when under tension, so a new shifter is needed, for which I am waiting on payday.

The upside being, I already know what’s involved in replacing the shifter now.

In the meantime it’s riding reasonably well in third from top with the top limit screw wound completely in, and my commute is (mostly) flat.


 
Posted : 25/11/2023 1:23 pm
Page 3 / 3