If purchasing a painted (or cheap anodised?) 26.6 seat post it will be possible to get 26.4 with sandpaper. Just take away the section needed. I was able to fit a 27.2 seat post to a friends 27.0 seat tube this way. The fit was perfect.Wilhelmus wrote: ↑22 Nov 2021, 1:06pm Thanks for doing that, especially on such a morning (unless it's somewhat warmer down there than it is up here). This morning was the first time this year that we've had to defrost the car windows. It intrigues me to see the neighbours pouring kettles of hot water over their windscreens. Long may their luck hold. We have a convector heater in the rear compartment, which we attach to an extension lead and plug in for a few minutes, whereupon the ice melts like magic while the toast is doing. Also nice for Herself to be able to drive away in a lovely warm car. But I see I'm digressing. I shall order an inexpensive 26.6 mm post from a certain online emporium and, should it be too large to fit comfortably, get a 26.4 mm one, maybe a little more expensive. Regarding the method of dividing the circumference by pi, all very well in theory, but I imagine that the slightest error, of which I'm more than capable at my age, would be disastrous. Anyway, to how many decimal places would you take pi? It reminds me uncomfortably of maths at school, at which I was a duffer.
Search found 982 matches
- 22 Nov 2021, 1:57pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
- Replies: 22
- Views: 1524
Re: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
- 21 Nov 2021, 3:36pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
- Replies: 22
- Views: 1524
Re: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
26.4mm SEATPOSTS
Common size on Reynolds 531 plain gauge frames as well as the better quality French frames with metric dimensioned tubes.
http://hilarystone.com/seatposts266264.html
Common size on Reynolds 531 plain gauge frames as well as the better quality French frames with metric dimensioned tubes.
http://hilarystone.com/seatposts266264.html
- 21 Nov 2021, 2:10pm
- Forum: Touring & Expedition
- Topic: Yorkshire lad autumn biking, hiking and camping in Nikko Nation Park, Japan
- Replies: 2
- Views: 375
Re: Yorkshire lad autumn biking, hiking and camping in Nikko Nation Park, Japan
Wonderful. Many thanks for posting these.
- 21 Nov 2021, 1:15pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
- Replies: 22
- Views: 1524
Re: Dawes Galaxy Seat Post Size?
1991 (Tony Oliver)
- 20 Nov 2021, 2:50pm
- Forum: Touring & Expedition
- Topic: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
- Replies: 124
- Views: 6915
Re: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
The smartphone is clearly an aid for hopelessly lost fretful types.
- 20 Nov 2021, 11:27am
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
- Replies: 17
- Views: 4574
Re: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
Steel chainrings last tens of thousands of miles with a minimum of maintenance. Chainrings don’t wear on train journeys. The Octalink interface will turn to mush long before a ring will need replacing. Therefore the crank arms and not the chainrings are the consumable on that chainset.
- 19 Nov 2021, 7:52pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
- Replies: 17
- Views: 4574
Re: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
£30 = £39
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Shimano-Aliv ... 635-2958-0
Could of got a brand spanking new chainset with matching rings for £30 but for Brexit. Sums it up really.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Shimano-Aliv ... 635-2958-0
Could of got a brand spanking new chainset with matching rings for £30 but for Brexit. Sums it up really.
- 19 Nov 2021, 6:57pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
- Replies: 17
- Views: 4574
Re: Shimano chainring compatibility chart - such a thing?
The complete chainset is found for less than the cost of buying the chainrings individually. Better to put the money towards a significantly lighter and improved design. What’s known as an upgrade.
- 17 Nov 2021, 6:20pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Lower gear
- Replies: 15
- Views: 906
Re: Lower gear
Here are the two set ups (assuming 35mm width 622 tyre). OP should focus on the top scale (gear inches). The 28t cassette gives a 35 inch gear. The 34t cassette gives a 29 inch gear. That’s a decent jump that will be appreciated but will remain hard work on anything other than short duration climbs. Easier hard work.
- 17 Nov 2021, 5:35pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Mudguard safety
- Replies: 54
- Views: 3022
- 17 Nov 2021, 4:51pm
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: Lower gear
- Replies: 15
- Views: 906
Re: Lower gear
Purchase the cassette and derailleur, run the chain around large front and rear. Pull the chain together and add two full links.
- 17 Nov 2021, 1:27pm
- Forum: Touring & Expedition
- Topic: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
- Replies: 124
- Views: 6915
Re: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
A responsible tour leader / organisation could start by offsetting the harmful emissions their business is responsible for.
https://sustainabletravel.org/our-work/carbon-offsets/
A typical European cycling holiday for a UK citizen would I estimate add about £10 in carbon offset fees.
https://sustainabletravel.org/our-work/ ... footprint/
https://sustainabletravel.org/our-work/carbon-offsets/
A typical European cycling holiday for a UK citizen would I estimate add about £10 in carbon offset fees.
https://sustainabletravel.org/our-work/ ... footprint/
- 16 Nov 2021, 2:57pm
- Forum: Touring & Expedition
- Topic: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
- Replies: 124
- Views: 6915
Re: Cycle touring: time to ditch the smart phone?
Towing sixteen climate unaware baby boomers on bicycles around a foreign land must be a special kind of hell.
- 16 Nov 2021, 2:42pm
- Forum: Touring & Expedition
- Topic: Europe 2021
- Replies: 935
- Views: 41696
Re: Europe 2021
‘It’s almost like grooming’: how anti-vaxxers, conspiracy theorists, and the far-right came together over COVID
https://theconversation.com/its-almost- ... vid-168383
~95% of Covid hospital wards are taken up by the unvaccinated and the vaccinated ~5% have co-morbidities.
https://theconversation.com/its-almost- ... vid-168383
~95% of Covid hospital wards are taken up by the unvaccinated and the vaccinated ~5% have co-morbidities.
- 16 Nov 2021, 12:43am
- Forum: Bikes & Bits – Technical section
- Topic: spray grease - what would you use this for?
- Replies: 19
- Views: 1088
Re: spray grease - what would you use this for?
I wouldn’t but why not test it out by putting an amount in a container and leave in the fridge overnight to see if it solidifies. Then place the container on a radiator for half an hour to see if it solidifies. The freehub greases I’m aware of all boast a pour point down to -35deg. I left a freehub body i’d serviced with Shimano freehub grease in a freezer section for a week and afterwards left overnight on a full on radiator. It spun freely afterwards on both occasions. The race teams I’m aware of prefer freehub grease over freehub oil as it withstands moisture ingress better.