Sunday, October 01, 2006

Fairing pretty well thanks...
So, the Jett Creek is getting dressed up a bit more. Got the new Windwrap Fairing installed today and it looks like this:

No it's not solid black! It has a removable soft cover that is meant to keep it from getting scratched and/or pawed by curious fingers when you're stopped. The lucite is fabulously clear but it is also very scratchable so the cover seemed like a good idea.

When you pull the cover off it looks like this:

There are only four support points -- two at the ends of a moustache shaped spreader bar that is attached to the handle-bar column, and two at the bottom that attach to little angles that have been retro-fit onto the caliper brake fittings.



The idea of working off the brake caliper mounts works fine, "but", for my money it leaves the fairing a trifle pinched at the bottom. It looks fine but it does mean that the lower side edges come closer to the pedals as they rotate than I'd really like. When you're turning you simply cannot keep pedaling or you will stub your toes into the fairing edging... and neither the fairing nor that force-on edging are up to any significant abrasion.





The last new addition was the Axiom panniers. They are empty in this photo but must be 10-12 inches wide when they are fully packed... and there are all sorts of loops and elastic lacing so you can add stuff onto stuff if you want. I suspect that if you chose your camping gear carefully... especially the tent, you could pack everything you could possibly want for a three or four day cycle trip into this set. Of course me (210 lbs.), the bike (30-35 lbs.?), and your gear (40-50lbs.?) would be pushing 300 lbs. which would definitely work better downhill than uphill!

The next (and for now last) do-dah I'm considering is a Garmin GPS unit. Toying with either a Garmin 60CSX which is a bit more map oriented, and a Garmin Edge 305 which comes more from the athletic performance tracking world (heart-rate, cadence, etc.)

Then I may actually have to break down a ride the damned thing!

Which has led me to the Alberta Randonneur site and all of that exciting ride stuff to look forward to in 2007.


Sunday, September 10, 2006

What -- No pictures?!?

No pictures on this post but they are only a click away. Came across two REALLY neat pieces of software for mapping rides.

The first is at
www.webwalking.com/googlemap.htm. [Update: an even cooler version is at http://www.gmap-pedometer.com/ that includes the ability to create an elevation profile -- the fun never stops].It allows you to find your part of the world, right down to street level, and to then mark a route you have travelled (however) and to see how long that trip was.

Then you can save that walk or ride and use a cute piece of software called "TinyURL" to store a web address (i.e. the URL) in way that isn't 4,328 characters long. The shorte version comes out like this:
http://tinyurl.com/rw3bz instead of http://www.webwalking.com/googlemap.htm?zl=5&x=-114.08306121826172&y=51.79120499625462&path=cza{HbwowT?{aCpdW?{eWcAh@~cC

Then there's Google Earth... if it's not on your computer you are missing the coolest thing I've seen in years! Load it up and you can see anywhere on earth... like you were in a magic helicopter. Can't really describe it... you just have to try it.

Gotta love the Internet!

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Do-dah, do-dah...
Penny and I had a great ride today... about 12-13 kms. south on the old, old road to Didsbury. She sure is a brick to keep at it. She rides her EZ-3 delta trike and is getting better every trip at shifting and spinning. For a gal who has never been a cyclist and who has been to hell-and-back physically over the last nine months she is a marvel!

With the back bag we can now take food and drink which makes for a very nice rest stop -- beer probably gets a little riled up by the vibrations but a good red wine ought to travel just fine! Now if I can just figure out how to design a portable, pop-up, perambulating porta-potty we'll be able to ride forever.

Put an air-horn on the bike because out on the highway a little tinkling bell seems a trifle ridiculous -- I don't think the guys in the semi-trailers can hear it. This job holds compressed air in what looks like a water bottle on the front fork and then unleashes a full 120 decibel truck-like airhorn blast when you tap the horn. Just have to remember not to use it on pedestrians; it could take a couple of years off of them.


This is the best do-dah so far.... a little Cateye Astrale 8 "cyclocomputer". It is an odometer, trip meter, time piece, and even measures cadence -- the number of rotations per minute you are pedaling. And it stores min, max, and average speed for each outing. What would an accountant be without numbers to play with?

Oh, yeah, and I switched to a wider, softer tires front and back. These Schwalbe "Big Apples" are 2" tires running lower (about 30 p.s.i.) pressure. MUCH softer ride on the chip seal roads around here and not noticeably slower in any way.


Put Axiom Bags on that are just fabulous to have -- very expandable and with the two side panniers (not on in this pic) I should be able to tour and/or even camp. Have discovered a thing called randonneur riding where folks ride "populaires" of 50 - 200 km. and then do "brevets" of 200, 400, 600 and 800 km. etc. They aren't races but each distance has a deadline for completion that translates into an average speed of about 15 kph. But that's for much later.


Adding the do-dahs onto the bike... that's half the fun! So far we have:

  • a 120 dB horn (for the guy in the SUV with his windows rolled up, blabbing on his cell phone, and looking like he hasn't seen me yet... at 120 dB he will!)
  • Axiom backrack, with bag and side pannier bags (not shown). Should be able to pack about 412 cubic feet of stuff
  • Mirror, pump. misc. bike tools and LED safety lights
  • Cateye odometer/speedometer/cadence counter... cadence counter is way cool.
  • Coming soon is a clear fairing and perhaps a Garmin Edge 305 GPS/map/altimeter

Gotta have all the do-dahs... ummmmmph!

Monday, August 21, 2006



Actually... I may not have to eat too much dust. Just got this little buggy last Saturday at the Bentley Cycle and Trading Post in greater, metropolitan downtown Bentley... it's called a Burley "Jett Creek" which you can see more about it at:

http://www.burley.com/products/recumbents/default73ce.html?p=Jett+Creek&i=0

Thursday, August 10, 2006


"Biker Girl" streaks through Imperial Estates screaming "Eat my dust"!!!