Home Forums Bike Forum Probably a stupid headset question..

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  • Probably a stupid headset question..
  • andrewh
    Free Member

    The 800 is here.

    [EDIT] Two new pages! I'm getting good at this. But are we actually any closer to answering the OP's question?

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Arrrrggghhhhhhhhhh

    too slow!

    andrewh
    Free Member

    43 seconds too slow.

    Bit quicker than Naok and his one minute, but still not good enough.

    JoeBones
    Free Member

    What is a headset anyway?

    andrewh
    Free Member

    One of those

    JoeBones
    Free Member

    Can you get one for a blackberry?

    andrewh
    Free Member

    Seen them for Apples, not looked for blackberry one.

    I love apple & blackberry crumble.

    Muddy@rseTony
    Free Member

    No I'm sure the orignal request was for information on Crown Rice so see here[/url]

    I'd guess Crown Rice is not very good for your headset – too much starch – unless it's used as eco friendly packaging material (I've always rated pop corn as the best). My last headset came in a cardboard box, no crown rice or popcorn for that matter.

    So what role does the Crown Seat play in solving this problem? I can understand we have a Crown (HRM) and the need for said Crown to sit down (Throne) whilst at the races but surely the royal backside does not sit in an ordinary seat?

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    My last headset came with some jelly babies – is this unusual?

    sockpuppet
    Full Member

    is that ''tom jones syndrome'' striking?

    naokfreek
    Free Member

    Dunno, whats new pussycat?

    andrewh
    Free Member

    wwaswas – Member
    My last headset came with some jelly babies – is this unusual?

    Why, why, why?

    Helios
    Free Member

    wwaswas – Member

    My last headset came with some jelly babies – is this unusual?

    My handlebars recently came with some sweeties – but it was because the nice shop were apologising for fogetting to post them for a few days…

    Never had a headset show up with sweets though… Maybe all bike components should come with free food?

    easygroove
    Free Member

    beacuse you're worth it

    bruneep
    Full Member


    😉

    naokfreek
    Free Member

    They should of course, come with steak!

    druidh
    Free Member

    Helios – Member

    My handlebars recently came with some sweeties – but it was because the nice shop were apologising for fogetting to post them for a few days…

    Never had a headset show up with sweets though… Maybe all bike components should come with free food?

    Ton once got a pair of Gore shorts and a packet of Ryvita….

    breakneckspeed
    Free Member

    I’m planning a new bike build – I thought I’d start with the crown race and work out from there – can somebody recommend a 6” all mountain crown race

    andrewh
    Free Member

    6"?! How big are your forks?

    breakneckspeed
    Free Member

    That looks about right – I like the stabilisers – how do you think it would handle woodland singletrack

    ononeorange
    Full Member

    He looks like a man who could make it to page 22 easily on that.

    breakneckspeed
    Free Member

    oh I don't know about that

    Lazgoat
    Free Member

    What on earth is the point of that machine!? Do you reckon it takes a std headset?

    breakneckspeed
    Free Member

    Bound to be 1.5"

    naokfreek
    Free Member

    It's the new john claude van dam standard.

    andrewh
    Free Member

    how do you think it would handle woodland singletrack

    Slight tendancy to chew things up a bit.

    naokfreek
    Free Member

    eErr no.

    andrewh
    Free Member

    It's really not that bad, tyres are nice and grippy, just a bit heavy for damp conditions.

    bruneep
    Full Member

    <cough>

    greasystain
    Free Member

    eh?

    ronjeremy
    Free Member

    Why jelly babies, I've never seen a baby that small, surely they should be 1:1 scale, imagine that as mid ride fuel…..

    ex-pat
    Free Member

    Excellent thread, picked a random page (15) and it was going on about celery!
    STW at it's best.
    Marvelous.

    bruneep
    Full Member

    Celery you say, more for you to chew over:

    <cut n paste>
    25 Facts About Celery

    Filed under Celery, Food Facts, Fruits and Veggies | Comments (14)

    Celery is a member of the Umbelliferae family, which also includes carrots, parsley, dill, cilantro, caraway, cumin, and the poisonous hemlock.

    King Tut's tomb contained a shroud adorned with garlands of wild celery, olive leaves, willow, lotus petals, and cornflowers.

    In The Iliad by Homer, the horses of Myrmidons graze on lotus and wild celery (selinon as the Greeks called it).

    In the Odyssey by Homer, meadows of violet and wild celery surround Calypso's cave.

    Hippocrates described celery as a nerve soother.

    As far back as ancient Rome, celery was considered an aphrodisiac. Today, scientists know that celery contains androsterone, a pheromone released by men's sweat glands that attracts females.

    A recipe uncovered in Pompeii for a celery dessert called for roasting chopped celery in an oven and serving it with honey and ground pepper.

    Aulus Cornelius Celsus, writing around 30 AD, wrote about the use of celery seeds to relieve pain.

    The first recorded mention of celery in France was in 1623.

    18th century French courtesan Madame de Pompadour, mistress of Louis XV, ate celery soup and truffles in an effort to adopt a "heating diet" so she would be less frigid and more attractive to the king. It is also said that she fed the king celery soup to fan the fires of his passion.

    Famed Italian lover Casanova made sure to include lots of celery in his diet to keep up his stamina.

    It takes just one ounce of celery seeds to produce an acre of celery.

    Celery was first introduced to America in 1856 when a Scotsman named George Taylor brought celery to Kalamazoo, Michigan.

    By 1872, Dutch farmers were transforming acres of Kalamazoo mucklands into celery fields.

    Kalamazoo began promoting itself as the "Celery City" and became known around the country for the "strange" vegetable.

    The town of Celeryville, Ohio was settled by celery farmers from Kalamazoo, Michigan who began growing the vegetable there.

    There is a celery museum in Portage, Michigan called the Celery Flats Interpretive Center.

    Today, California is the nation's top celery producer. Michigan ranks fourth.

    The 1897 Sears Catalog featured a nerve tonic made from celery and described celery as a "great nerve builder."

    One stalk of celery contains about 10 calories. Some contend that it contains "negative calories," meaning that one spends more calories digesting it than are consumed when it eating it, which supposedly helps with weight loss.

    The Fifth Doctor on the BBC show Doctor Who, played by Peter Davison, wore a stalk of celery on his lapel.

    Celery, onions, and carrots make up the "holy trinity," known as the "mirepoix," of French cuisine. These three vegetables are used together as the base for many French dishes, including sauces, stews, soups, and stocks.

    Celery, onions, and bell peppers are considered the "holy trinity" of Louisiana Creole and Cajun cuisine.

    People who are allergic to celery are often also allergic to mugwort pollen. Celery root contains more allergen than the stalk and is therefore more dangerous for people allergic to celery.

    After a patron at the Pump Room at Chicago's Ambassador East Hotel decided to stir his Bloody Mary with a stalk of celery, the idea caught on and celery became permanently linked with the drink.

    HeathenWoods
    Free Member

    The Fifth Doctor on the BBC show Doctor Who, played by Peter Davison, wore a stalk of celery on his lapel.

    That was quite important. Can't remember why though.

    iamsporticus
    Free Member

    The Fifth Doctor on the BBC show Doctor Who, played by Peter Davison, wore a stalk of celery on his lapel.
    That was quite important. Can't remember why though.

    The celery would turn purple in the presence of certain gases in the "Praxis" range to which he was allergic

    boxelder
    Full Member

    The Fifth Doctor on the BBC show Doctor Who, played by Peter Davison, wore a stalk of celery on his lapel.
    That was quite important. Can't remember why though.

    The celery would turn purple in the presence of certain gases in the "Praxis" range to which he was allergic

    Please assure us that you made that up.

    ratadog
    Full Member

    Sadly, probably not. i stopped watching Dr Who when my parents sold the sofa.

    ratadog
    Full Member

    Mind you, I just never got the point of the programme and as I got older thought it was complete tosh. Bracketed in that category with Star Trek. Probably owe my current living to them however as my dad used to put one of them on when it was time for me to go and do my homework.

    ratadog
    Full Member

    That's two fanatical fan groups offended in one post.

    ratadog
    Full Member

    I am just dragging this out to number 22 obviously.

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