12.30.2011

still.....

Still not much going on, its the end of the calender year and trying to spend time with the family.  New Year coming, and hopefully a change in fortunes.  Other than that, no big news, and no exciting stories.  Have a great holiday and stay safe.

12.25.2011

happy holiday

To one and all, no matter what your religious affiliation is, Merry Christmas.  The meaning of this specific holiday is holy to a group of religions, but the idea of Peace, Love, Happiness, and Family is universal to all groups of people.  Some make it about the materialistic things, some make it about "joy" they feel from the holiday, only to forget about it days later.  I'm spending it with my family - my wife and two kids, my parents, mother-in-law, and my wife's great grandfather. The kids will be spoiled with gifts - grandparents do that sort of thing, but I'm trying to make it much more than that to them.  Its hard, but I'm trying to instill the ideas that by caring for your fellow man, no matter who they are or where they are from, everyday, is the greatest thing you can give another being.  And knowing that, and teaching others, is the greatest gift you can give your parents.


12.22.2011

not much

Not much happening, not riding that much, and - while still waiting for my matt chester - not much else going on.  Holidays upon us, never really excited for them, although with younger kids, it is always a fun time.  Starting to plan some stuff for 2012, but without the aforementioned mc, some plans are still just thoughts - rather get the bike before I cement those plans.  Might also do something I haven't done in a great while, go on a backpacking trip!  Just a short couple of ones, but hiking is something I miss, being around bikes always makes me forget about traveling "long" distances on foot with everything on ones back.

More to come....

12.16.2011

soma tradesman



Here it is, my brand new complete (mostly) Soma Tradesman Cylcle Truck.  If you have been following the complete bike build, it has taken a while, and although there are a few more minor things to be done, it is for all purposes, done. 


Wondering what parts are on it?  Here you go:

Tradesman frame and fork
Cane Creek 100 headset
Front wheel: Shimano Alfine 36 hole laced 3 cross to Sun Ringle Envy rim, w/Schwalbe Marathon tire
Rear wheel: Shimano XT 36 hole laced 3 cross to Sun Ringle EQ31, w/ Schwalbe Marathon Tour Plus tire
Race Face Ride crank, 170mm length, 32x22 teeth rings with outer ring replaced with a BBG bashguard
Avid BB& front and rear disc brakes, 160mm rotors
Thomson Elite seatpost, with a Selle Anatomica saddle
Profile Design Boa stem with Easton EA30 handlebar
Suntour Power Ratchet thumbshifters, both set to friction to pull an Acera rear derailleur and LX front
Avid Speed Dial 7 brake levers
Sram 830 8 speed cassette, 11-32 teeth, 850 chain
Portland Design Works Speed Metal grips, Barista coffee mug holder, brass bell
Plescher double kickstand
Civia Halsted fenders
Planet Bike Blaze Dynamo front light (not shone PDW Radbot 100 rear light)

Total  weight 45 pounds.

Some things left to do, get some real pedals, a rear rack, and a front basket or one of these bags.  And figure out a way to carry my repair kit. Oh yeah,  and a way to tell my wife that I have this bike, and I haven't sold this one.

More.......

12.13.2011

fenders and dynamo lighting

Fenders went on with basically no problems, standard set up.  Had to bend a stay around the front disc caliper:


The fenders are Civia Halsted Fenders, which is designed to go on their short wheel based baker style cargo truck bike.  The Halsted was one that was originally on my list last year for a new cargo bike, I ultimately bought something different, but the style of bike never got lost to me.

 
Not super excited with the fender line on the front wheel, I'll have to play around with it some more.  Civia says that the fender will ft up to a 2" wide tire, that could lead to some experiments later down the road.  I'll have full pictures of the fenders later in the week, when the bike as a whole is revealed.

The light I went with up front to be powered by the dynamo is the Blaze Dynamo from Planet Bike.  Light hook up with the Alfine was easy, put the


Two wires in the wiring harness, fold them over and snap everything together.  I'm going to have to either switch to another harness, or cover in some electrical tape I had to try twice, and the silicone inside the holes got used up.  The wire snaked up the fork leg,  around the front rack supports:


Wrapped to the other side to where I mounted the light head on the boom on the other side:


With zipties holding everything on and tight.  The mount for right now is an old reflector mount, with a Paul Components light mount called the Gino bolted on for the Blaze's bracket to mount to. 



Bad picture, the bike is at an angle in the workstand so that the handlebars don't swing around and knock the crap out of me, but a side view of the light and the mount.


I still need to figure out a rear rack for the bike, and I have a kickstand on its way.  Next up, those little things and a full picture of the Soma Tradesman!

12.12.2011

gear changers


You saw the shifters, now the derailleurs.  The 8 speeds in the rear are a Sram 830 cassette, 11-32 being switched through the cogs with a Shimano Acera derailleur.  Not exciting, but when dealing with a friction shifter, the quality is not of great concern.


 The crank is a Race Face Ride, and the front derailleur is an old LX I've had laying around unused for about 6 years or so now, not much shifting going on with my bikes, especially front derailleurs. 


The crank came with a 44-32-22 gear range, I took off the big chainring and put on the BBG bashguard.  I very rarely use the big chainring at all, and this helps protect from "rookie ring".
You can see how big the chainring bashguard is from this picture, I had this one laying around the workbench.  In the smallest cog on the cassette in the back, and in the 32 tooth chainring, there is a little bit of rubbing, I'll switch it out when I have some extra money.

Fenders and light next.....

12.11.2011

h-bar

Originally, I was going to use my ol' favorite upright bar, the Rivendell Albatross, but:


I came up with an issue that I wasn't expecting. the housing had to be super long not to put any sharp kinks in the cables.  This lead to big loops hanging out in front of the handlebar/headtube, which would interfere with any sort of load being strapped on to it.  So I rummaged through the employee parts bin at the shop and found an old Easton EA30 bar with a mid-sort of rise.  Not much sweep, but will get the grips up high.  Bar bolted on, along with the shifters, brake levers, and grips and I got this:

Old school Suntour friction thumb shifters (rear 8 speed in friction mode), my well used and bent up Avid Speed Dial 7 brake levers, and some Speed Metal grips in red from Portland Design Works (although they will probably get switched out for the winter).  Everything nice and durable, and highly reliable for the long run, and for a bike that is going to be used, alot.


Pretty clean routing, the less "looped" cables are for the shifters, and the two bigger loops are for the brakes, and those get zip tied:


to the headtube.  The cables are routed through the space between the headtube, downtube, and the booms that extend to the front rack.

Drive train next, with fenders and front light after that....

12.09.2011

cargo tires

Wheels are of course built, and tires received, some Schwalbes.

For the front:


Marathon Plus in a 20"x1.75 (47x406) comes with a reflective stripe for viability.  I was worried that the tire would be too thin for the rim but everything ended up working great.


Damn nice looking wheel with that tire on it.  Not that it matters, but front dynamo hub with 160mm rotor, tube and tire weighs 4.98 pounds.


The rear tire is a Marathon Plus Tour with Smartguard in a 26"x1.75" (47x559), also with the reflective strip.  The tire mounted up a little easier on than the one on the front, and it turns out it is a little knobbier than I thought it was going to be.  Would make an amazing tire for a gravel rider or a long distance touring bike on mixed terrain - like a Long Haul Trucker or Co-Motion Pangea.


Wheel weight for tube, tire, rotor, and wheel - 5.6 pounds, will be more of course with the cassette.  Not light but again, overkill is better on a cargo bike.


Next up, the handlebar situation.  I had to change it up a bit because of cable routing issues, pictures tomorrow!

12.07.2011

discs for cargo

Decided to go with the Avid BB7 discs for the bike.  I actually think that the BB5s were going to be plenty, but might as well go with the nicer ones on some sweet wheels.  Overkill is sometimes best. 

Front Alfine Dynamo hub is equipped with a Centerlock disc interface.  The BB7s come with a 6 bolt pattern.  So I had to get one of these:


To use the disc rotor.  On the hub, the rubber shield comes off


And that exposes the splines for the Centerlock or adapter


And the rotor and adapter get forced on with the help of a rubber mallet and tighten down with a cassette lockring tool.


The front and rear brake calipers go on pretty much as any other bike, the front needs the standard 160mm front adapter:


And the rear goes on the chainstay with the newer 20mm IS adapter, which is different from the 160 mm adapter I used for the front brake.  The brake that went on the rear must be the "newer" model.



Like I mentioned, on the chainstay, to make mounting a rear rack and fenders easier.

Next up, tires mounted up and an exciting shot of the handlebar and brake and shift levers, maybe even some cables and housing run.

12.06.2011

dreadnought

I've been using the rear lights from Portland Design Works since they came out 3 years ago or so.  Past employees of Planet Bikes, they know how to make great product that last and work really well.  A few weeks ago, I received their premier front light - the Cosmic Dreadnought 110.


Here it is on the front of the cruiser, sets up nice with different thickness of handlebars.  All you have to do is:


Here is the bracket, it has a thumbscrew to fine tune the snugness on the bar, to change the mount to one of three diameters of the bars you:


Find the screw on the top of the mount, and unscrew it all the way out,


remove the top plate of the mount,


and choose what notch the bottom section (the part with the thumbscrew) of the mount goes into.  The one in the front (to the left in the picture) of the mount is for 22.2mm, the middle for 26.0mm and the farthest one (to the right) back is for 31.8mm.   Then reverse the steps until it is all back together.  Simple.

Now for brightness.  I have a commute that is pretty mellow.  From work, I start off on a busy street, dive into a little development, back onto a busy street, and then into the Metropark System, out of the park onto a busy street and finish on some little neighborhood streets.  Ambient lighting goes from tons of light, to none, back to streetlights.  On the busy streets, I use the strobe feature, so the damn cars are more likely to see me.  On high, the light looks like this on the back of a white door. 


In real life,I set my light so that the brightest ball hits about 15 feet or so in front of me.  This gives me a sheath of brightness that I don't "outrun" on the path.  With the light on "High", the light also allows me to see the distance all the way back to my front tire.  Light really bright in the middle of the beam.

On low beam:


The light isn't as intense, but for riding on side streets, or on a bike path that doesn't need a super intense beam, it works perfectly.  The light isn't as bright as it was on "High" in the middle, but more diffused throughout the ball of brightness.  I use this light for the majority of my commute, but I also don't like a super bright light while riding in the park or on streets.  I find that it works the best for me.

Burn times are pretty close to what is listed on Portland Design's website, I've had to change out my batteries once (getting close to the second time), and I switch up between the modes pretty often.  I guess that I got about 20 hours or so during multi-modes.  Next is to try rechargeable batteries to see how well the brightness and burn times shell out.

So, in a nutshell, this light is really nice, and I've been really happy with it.  Short of a rechargeable system or a dynamo hub, this light is the nicest I have used.

12.05.2011

wheels, built up

Wheels are all built up, Steve did an awesome job.  Front wheel:



And now the rear wheel:

12.04.2011

headset

Headtube length: 13 inches

 NOT going to work with standard headset press, thought about just hammering the freakin' thing in, but a Cane Creek 100 is not the thing to go at with a piece of wood and a hammer.  Hardware store to get some All-Thread and some bolts.

The top in


And both top and bottom in:


All set to go, fork on and ready for wheels!  Which are done and talked about tomorrow.

12.02.2011

cargo wheels

So, as I alluded to before, my new cargo bike, the Soma Tradesman is here, and it needs some wheels.  The  front and rear are two different sizes, 20" front/26" rear, and both are disc specific - that front wheel is NOT a stock wheel, so some have to be built.  Originally, I was going to have some Deore get laced up to Sun CR-18, 32 hole, and then I found a shop in Minnesota, Calhoun Cycles, that had some 36 hole wheels in stock, for about the same price I could get a set built up for.  Now, remember that I like sweet wheels.  So, where those going to be good enough?

Steve, one of the mechanics at the shop I work at, said he would build me up a pair of wheels, so parts were ordered:


The little one is a Sun Ringle Envy - 36 hole, single eyeleted, welded joint BMX rim, and the large is a Sun
Ringle Equalizer EQ31 also 36 hole, eyeleted, welded 26" rim.  Both super strong and probably burlier than need be.   These will be laced 3 cross to:


Alfine Dynamo front hub, for the ability to always have me some lights up front, and for the back:


XT rear 6 bolt hub.  The front will need a stupid little adapter for the disc rotor, the rear of coarse won't.  Brakes haven't been decided yet, either Avid BB5s or BB7s.  Tires will be some Schwalbe Marathons.

Steve should have these lace up for me some time this weekend, so I'll get some of those pictures up as well as pictures of the awesome jury rigging that has to be done to get the headset pressed into the frame.