Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Something odd

I saw something odd on the way home yesterday. It didn't really blow my mind like the first time I saw this, but having observed this odd behaviour for the second time, I felt compelled to comment.

So what is this totally odd behaviour? Are you ready? I saw someone reading a book while riding their bike. This one was a school girl on her way home on a bike path, but the first one I saw was someone riding on an on-road cycle lane during peak hour traffic. In both cases they were weaving all over the place, much, much worse than someone talking on the phone while driving.

For those of you wondering what the latest developments are since my last post, here they are:

I have done a total of 340 km so far across the last 4 weeks. Between public holidays and driving in once a week, I have only ridden in 2 or 3 times a week. This week coming up will be my first full week since I got the bike on the road. The only problem is that I don't think that the rear free wheel will handle it.

It has been making clicking and clunking noises that have been getting worse and worse. I finally got to talk to the guy at the bike shop about it and he basically said that all free wheels do it and the cheaper ones do it the most. The problem is that because it has to ride stationary while the wheel turns that it isn't always perfectly square with the wheel depending on its relative position when it starts turning. I guess the one that ships with the motor is super-cheap and therefore crap.

The next problem is that in mountain bikes the screw-on free wheels, of which mine is the type, are the cheap ones. The better, more expensive ones slide on, so I don't even have an option of going to a more expensive free wheel. I'm sure I could find one better than this one, but the hassle will be finding one the same width as the 5 speed one I have now. I do have an alternative though....

Have I mentioned how little I change gears? In fact in my last 3 or 4 trips I haven't changed gears once. It just isn't necessary. Even on the biggest hill I don't feel compelled to change. The main time I would need the gears would be during some sort of malfunction or flat battery. But we don't include pedals on our cars in case we run out of petrol, so I think I should opt for optimal conditions during commuting and risk hard work in the case of malfunctions. This means I can go for a single gear on the back. Doing this means I can get a high-end rear free wheel which screws on. Why? Because they are made for high end BMX bikes and have the same fitting. Even a cheap one of these is only $10, so if I spend $40 I still think this is cheap.

This has an added side benefit of reducing the amount of space taken up on that side of the drop-out, which will mean I will have to put some spacers on the other side and this means that the rear wheel will be more centred again.

I'll let you know how it goes.

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