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...and I might as well add my famous "chamois cream" speech. 1. WEAR BIKE SHORTS WITH THE PADDING IN THEM
2. USE A TON A TON A TON OF CHAMOIS CREAM. Mix 1 tub vaseline, 1 tube neosporin and 1 tube anti boil cream. and slather about three to four fingers worth on the inside of your bike short padding (called a chamois pad) before you slip em on for the ride.
while you uncomfortably waddle around your apartment making an "eww" face, take pride in knowing you are now a hardcore cyclist.
(oh and youll be comfortable in the saddle and prevent yourself from getting saddle sores too)
...and I might as well add my famous "chamois cream" speech. 1. WEAR BIKE SHORTS WITH THE PADDING IN THEM
2. USE A TON A TON A TON OF CHAMOIS CREAM. Mix 1 tub vaseline, 1 tube neosporin and 1 tube anti boil cream. and slather about three to four fingers worth on the inside of your bike short padding (called a chamois pad) before you slip em on for the ride.
while you uncomfortably waddle around your apartment making an "eww" face, take pride in knowing you are now a hardcore cyclist.
(oh and youll be comfortable in the saddle and prevent yourself from getting saddle sores too)
I used Chris Cream (woah) last time, and I've used it since! I highly recommend it!! Where's all the 1.0 guys over here, sheeesh?
I'm most likely gonna stay over night if anyone wants to throw down and crash in my room.
Where are all the 1.0 guys? Well, this one (as well as Brett) will be on the way to Iowa. Bummed that I gotta miss 2.0, because it sounds like it's going to be even better than 1.0. Unfortunately, I'll be busy getting ready to get severely sunburned in Iowa (seriously - not leaving the state without sunblock).
Have fun Josh, and enjoy the fried pickles.
DonRay A.K.A. Zesty said:I used Chris Cream (woah) last time, and I've used it since! I highly recommend it!! Where's all the 1.0 guys over here, sheeesh?
I'm most likely gonna stay over night if anyone wants to throw down and crash in my room.
Yeah man, I am pissed I couldn't scare up ragrbrai plansthis year (I thought I would be in italy right now teaching, which fell through because of the dumb economy)
so good luck at ragrbrai, I'm jealous!
Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:Where are all the 1.0 guys? Well, this one (as well as Brett) will be on the way to Iowa. Bummed that I gotta miss 2.0, because it sounds like it's going to be even better than 1.0. Unfortunately, I'll be busy getting ready to get severely sunburned in Iowa (seriously - not leaving the state without sunblock).
Have fun Josh, and enjoy the fried pickles.
DonRay A.K.A. Zesty said:I used Chris Cream (woah) last time, and I've used it since! I highly recommend it!! Where's all the 1.0 guys over here, sheeesh?
I'm most likely gonna stay over night if anyone wants to throw down and crash in my room.
Hey, Chris. Open road with no significant head wind and with pacing in mind, I'm at 14-15 mph. No road bike for this dude, hybrid only. We're pretty close on our estimates. Roadies will finish in about 6 and I'll be rolling in probably around 8 hours. I got you on the starting time. 7 AM it is.
Chris said:While being on the bike for 9 hours is super impressive and hardcore in its own right, what's your average capable speed? (in other words your onbike speed during a commute in downtown chicago might be 10 mph, but what about when you have wide open roads? I am assuming you're on a road bike with "drop" handlebars?)
Keep in mind there will be no traffic almost the whole way. I feel like a good average speed for moderately fit cyclists on road bikes not including stops is 15-16 mph. the trip should take 6-8 hours.
730 PM is last train outta milwaukee, but I am not comfortable starting the ride any earlier than 7 am (first, let's be honest for most folks that drink even 7 am is a stretch, and second, in my experience even if we tell people 630 7 is when most show up)
Brian Kennedy said:Okay, so I have downtown Milwaukee pegged at 86 miles from the start point. At my typical rolling speed (I always estimate 6 min/mile on my commute but our route may be less congested), I calculate it will take me 8h 36m to reach Milwaukee with no stops. So, with stops, that puts me in Milwaukee between 4pm and 5pm. I see the last couple of Hiawatha runs on the 18th are at 5:45pm & 7:35pm. Are we all pretty much looking at catching the 7:35pm train do you think? I want to use my Amtrak Rewards, so I have to book ahead of time. Pain in the butt, but it will be free so what the heck. How do all of my assumptions sound?
Just a note (this is based on my knowledge of bicycling science/book knowledge, i have not ridden an atb or hybrid on a long trip personally)
The difference between a road/racing bike and a hybrid, cruiser etc (particularly when you can't get in a more aerodynamic posiiton than fully upright) is SIGNIFICANT.
Maybe when I get home to my reference books I'll post the details but you're looking at probably a 4 mph difference for the same energy output.
Interesting, if you do this on a hybrid that would be awesome and give a ton of useful information! If you have a friend etc maybe the two of you could set out an hour or two earlier with the route map and I could be available by phone for emergencies/directions, which would give you more time to have fun in milwaukee?
hmm, cool!
What Evan said. The difference is not really riding position/aerodynamics-- it's having a lighter, more resilient frame that doesn't leave you fatigued from road shock, and maybe a little less weight and less rolling resistance. There's not really that much difference aerodynamically between riding on the hoods of a road bike (nobody's gonna do 100 miles in the drops) and using a flat h-bar on a hybrid.
Anywho, the main advantage to roadbikes for non-race distance riding are the drop bars, which offer multiple hand and body positions.
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