Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Performance Bicycle Opens in Winter Park

Performance Bicycles in Winter Park
Performance Bicycle has opened a new store in Winter Park at 351 North Orlando Avenue (highway 17/92), just across the street from Chaimberlins.   I visited the store this week, and it is quite large.  The friendly and helpful staff were patient while I browsed the merchandise and the store was busy selling a customer a new mountain bike and with assembling new bicycles in the fully stocked maintenance shop.   The parking lot has plenty of shade, and you can bicycle in the neighborhood behind the store to test drive bikes.
Kenneth is the new store manager with plenty of passion for bicycling.   The Grand Opening of the new store is this weekend, Friday - Sunday May 5-7.  $20 gift cards are available to those waiting in line before the store opens at 9 AM Friday, Saturday, and on Sunday.  Watch your mail for a store flyer with a 15% off coupon.
Winter Park is one of 5 new Florida locations for Performance.  They have stores open in Boca Raton, Ft. Lauderdale, and Tampa.  A Jacksonville store opens soon.
Since moving to Colorado in 1993, I have been shopping for bicycles and parts at Performance Bicycle stores along the front range.  I liked their parts, learned about their stock, and could always find what I was looking for, usually at a price below what the local bicycle stores sold the same part for.  I am glad to see them in the Florida market.

Friday, April 26, 2013

A look at the Windsor Tourist

Next from my short list of touring bicycles is the Windsor Tourist.  While each bicycle I have listed has a feature or two that makes it stand out, this one's feature is that it is inexpensive.  Actually, this bicycle is a steal, is made of ChroMoly steel and is said to be the same bicycle as the Fuji Touring bicycle.  This bicycle is priced at $599 at BikesDirect.com, at the link above.
The Windsor Tourist, a good touring bike at a great price!
I have read online where Bikes Direct bought the rights to the old Windsor bicycle name and setup a deal with the manufacturing company that builds the Fuji Touring, to buy at a discount any leftover frames from the production run.  That deal may also include the components as they have also been similar to Fuji in the past.  Bike Direct then sells the bike online with little markup.  What you get is a nicely made custom butted, TIG welded, ChroMoly frame, with a rear rack and decent parts, with all the attachment points you need for touring.  It comes painted in only one color, green.  The bikes are smartly built in small, small-medium, medium, medium-large and large sizes to fit a variety of riders.  The bike does use an older quill-style headset, but otherwise includes modern Shimano Tiagra/Deore 27 speed components.  It comes with 700 x 32 c tires and ships free in the U.S.  You do have some assembly to do when the bicycle arrives so be sure to ship it home first, before you ship it to a touring starting point.  Extra spokes (to attach on the wheel stay) are not included.
Of all the links online about this bicycle, the one thread I would be concerned with is the weak rear wheel build.  Many riders have experienced spoke failure.  The wheels seem to be machine-built and you could possibly need a wheel builder to re-stress and re-tighten the spokes.  I say "possibly" because I only know what I have read online.
Here is a link to a site where 3 riders on a tour together (2 Grads and a Dad on Tour) all bought this same bicycle and then rode across America fully loaded.  I read all the posts, and with a few exceptions, these bicycles were awesome!
Keeping the bicycle price low really attracts me to this touring bike.  It would leave money in the account for some panniers, bike clothing and gear.  My Centurion Pro Tour 15 in the 1980's had a similar frame with slightly shorter wheel stays, than say a Trek 520, just like this bicycle does.  It toured fine.  The machine-built wheels rode well with only one spoke failure in over 10,000 miles of fully loaded touring.
Part of what I now do is ultralight backpacking, which means my camping gear weighs about 10 pounds before water, food and fuel.  That's less than a quarter of the weight it was when I carried my older gear on the bicycle touring trips back in the late 1980's and early 1990's.  While then I fully filled 4 Rhode Gear panniers, I now plan to use front panniers on the rear rack, with the sleeping pad on top of the rack, with a handlebar bag on the front.  The handlebar bag is for a rain jacket, my cell phone, camera and a few light weight items, and won't ever be full.  One pannier will carry most of the camping gear with bike clothing, groceries and cooking gear in the other pannier, with some open room in both bags.  Bike tools will occupy a small frame bag.  A matched set of 4 full-sized touring bags could cost me over $400 dollars.  I'm estimating about $150 for the small pannier pair and $90 dollars for the handlebar bag, or less than $240-$250 to outfit the bicycle, plus an odometer, water bottles & frames, and some fenders.  I already own a frame pack for tools and a flashing red tail light.
It will be some time before I can buy a new bicycle, so I'll continue to review the other touring bicycles I listed in my previous post.  In the meantime, get out and ride!

Saturday, April 20, 2013

The Surly Long Haul Trucker

An excellent touring bicycle, the Surly Long Haul Trucker's number one design feature that sets it apart from the other touring bikes is it's larger diameter, and thicker Chromoly Surly 4130 tubing.  The thicker and larger diameter tubing provides extra strength for load carrying, increased road vibration damping, and provides a stiffer, but still resiliant ride.  The frame is TIG welded without using frame lugs except in the fork crown.
Surly Long Haul Trucker
A note on the Surly website warns owners from installing kickstands, as they can crush the bottom stay tubing by being either over tightened or if left too loose.  Details on this and other Surly bicycle "Spews" are located here.
Depending on the size frame you need you will have to accept either 26" wheels (in 42 - 62 cm sizes) or 700c wheels (in 56-64 cm sizes).   As a 50 - 52 cm rider, that leaves me with 26" wheels, not the 700 c wheels I prefer for road touring.  For the taller riders however, Surly offers a 64 cm frame size in a production model, which is awesome!
As a company, Surly came to the market later than most other bicycle touring manufacturers, allowing them to take advantage of some newer frame design ideas, materials and production processes.  The Surly LHT has every rack and fender braze-on you could expect, can accept wide tires and its component package is nice, but it is not overly spec'd price-wise.  
The Surly Long Haul Trucker is an excellent touring bicycle, designed for someone who plans to tour a long, long time.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Rivendell Bicycle Group Atlantis

Last time we discussed bicycles, and I mentioned some brand names we would review.  We'll start at the end of my list, with the Rivendell Bicycle Works Atlantis.  Even the company name sounds wonderful, like a secluded and safe mountain sanctuary with magical elves casting spells on bicycle lugs and tubes.  OK, the elves only live in New Zealand, but the magic of the lugs and tubes are there, foremost in how the frame responds to the road.

Rivendell Bicycle Works Atlantis.
These bicycles are sold pretty much any way you want them, starting at "somewhere around $3600" with a really nice set of parts.  The bare frame, fork and headset will cost you $2300.   It comes in one color, "creamy greenish blue".  For an additional $350 you can get any color you want that they approve.  As for parts, you could discuss this brake pad versus that gear set all day and never get on the road.  I'll assume these people really understand bicycle touring and they will set me up nicely.
Atlantis with flat handlebars.
Photos show bikes available with traditional dropped handlebars, and with upright bars, and with panniers, loaded for touring.  Reviews were mostly 5 Stars, with just about everyone saying this has become their go-to bike.  Others say they don't ride their older bikes anymore.  Some had even used this bicycle for loaded off-road tours.  You can't have better press than that!
Atlantis shown in this photo with fenders, racks, basket and panniers.
I have never ridden an Atlantis, but I have ridden a Bridgestone MB-1 mountain bicycle, owned by a friend in Colorado.  He bought that bike in 1994 and is still riding it.  At the time I wanted a Bridgestone RB-T, a predecessor of the Atlantis.  While these are very different bikes, the design element of the companies are very similar.  What I like about Rivendell is that they are the only ones making these bicycles and accessories, and they have kept to that same idea consistently for over 15 years.  I do like the option to not support a racing-ready mindset just to win a race every year.  And I like the long-frame steel bicycle design and the bomb-proof parts.
A real head badge!
I still pull out my 1994 Bridgestone catalog occasionally and re-read the fine articles about steel, aluminum and titanium manufacturing processes, wool jerseys, Nokona leather baseball gloves, beeswax: nature's loctite and my favorite, how to ride a bike forever.  I don't own any other bicycle catalogs.  Then I go online and read similar stories about a small bicycle company called Rivendell.   It looks like the Rivendell Atlantis really could be that bicycle that would last me forever.