Well ..i finally got a single speed. A Bianchi just like my Wife's. Her's is a S.A.S.S. Fully rigid and steel. Mine is a W.U.S.S. a hard tail and aluminum. It's white,got a rock shox REBA team for a fork( air and coil spring) a 32/16 ratio at the moment and crappy grips. The tires are very skinny compared to what i'm used to. 2.4's are coming real soon.
So today was the first ride on a trail. Heck..it was my first ride on a SS. And with Mech disc's, plus i've not ridden a hardtail since last winter so that was wild. I usually ride a hardtail (a 98 gary fisher hoo koo e koo) in the winter so the mud stays out of the pivot's and bearings on my enduro. V brakes in the mud and rain is exciting. Anyway....today my Wife Marla and went to Growlers Gulch which is in SW Washington. From the car it's a steep 1/2 mile gravel road climb to the first trail. The Terminator is a twisty,turning ,root strewn trail which doubles back on it self so many times you think your actually going somewhere. When you come out on the road your not too far from where you started. A well made trail for sure.Oh ya..the bike. It excelerates really well with that grear ratio until the hill get's me. I rode relly well (surprisingly) and tried to attack the hills early. I statred really having a good time when i came around a corner to an up hill section with a log across it. oops! That was about as close as i came to eating today. The geomotry is quite different than my normal bike(bikes) so it took a while to get comfortable. I was wacking the pedals frequently so the bb must be lower than i'm used to. The next 2 trail's (Beauty and the Beast & Belly of the Beast) have some climbing and rolling decending sections but are relatively smooth. Marla really liked that as she can't sit much on the really tech trails. I found that if i pedaled out of the corners i could make it up the next climb. I'm sure there are lot's of SS techniques i'll be learning in the next few hundred ride's. We rode the Creek trail which had lot's of rocks. More than i remember actually. I guess riding a 5" travel trail bike makes you soft and lazy. I had forgotten how much i liked riding a hardtail bouncing through the rocks. We rode a few more trails and then called it a day. I did better than i thought i woud. I figured i would be really worked but it was'nt too bad,and i made quite a few tech climbs. Maybe i have a future in singlespeeding. We'll see..............
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Great to see you on an SS Hack! I sure am hooked on it.
I've found that 32:17 (with 175mm cranks) is a nice combo for all but the steepest mountains here in the SW. That's about 49 gear inches.
There's been a few times on some longer, steep climbs that I wished I'd put on 32:18, but hey, what's an SS epic without pushing the bike a little.
Hope to see you in NM soon.
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