I am curious as to what year your bike was made... or what brand. or any other interesting info, or what you like about it. Me: (aprox.) 1985 Peugeot. My reflectors match my paint job (original), I like that.
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What kind of seat post is that? It looks bent to give additional setback. I've never had one like that.
Duppie said:My newest project, finished this week. A Rawland Nordavinden. I built up the entire bike myself, save for some help from John and Nora at Uptown.
Took her for a first spin this afternoon and she is a joy to ride, light, snappy, with predictable steering. Except for some adjustment to the handlebars and brake levers, everything seemed to be working fine.
Great looking build Duppie!
You might want to bring the FD down on the seat tube so it sits a little closer to the chainring. I believe ythe spec is between 1-2mm clearance between the derailleur arm and the outer chainring. (Disregard, if it's just the camera angle making the gap appear larger than it really is)
nice!
Duppie said:
My newest project, finished this week. A Rawland Nordavinden. I built up the entire bike myself, save for some help from John and Nora at Uptown.
Took her for a first spin this afternoon and she is a joy to ride, light, snappy, with predictable steering. Except for some adjustment to the handlebars and brake levers, everything seemed to be working fine.
Um, yes. Now that's what I call a bicycle. Pretty much everything about it is totally rad. I have those brake levers. Most comfortable for drops I've ever tried. They don't work well for mustache bars though, unfortunately. I love the fork. I like a fork with a rake to it, and this one has lovely lines.
Robert Underwood said:
nice!
Duppie said:My newest project, finished this week. A Rawland Nordavinden. I built up the entire bike myself, save for some help from John and Nora at Uptown.
Took her for a first spin this afternoon and she is a joy to ride, light, snappy, with predictable steering. Except for some adjustment to the handlebars and brake levers, everything seemed to be working fine.
The frame rides really nice; lively yet stable. It's a fun, fun ride. This is kind of a road bike in disguise. I bought a 59cm frame instead of my standard 57cm, in order to offset the reach since this was purpose-built with the swept back bars. So, the curves of the Albatross bars have about the same reach (but with less drop) as the hoods on my cross bike.
Lots of thoughtful touches on the bike make it a great commuter. Fender mounting was a breeze with no need for spacers or adapters. I routed the dyno wire internally through the fork. I'll probably change the crank to a double (or at least buy new chainrings) as I get it dialed in.
I bought some DaVinci brake cable splitters made for traveling bikes with plans to be able to quickly change between cruiser bars and drops for longer rides - that's an ongoing project.
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