jimilee
Well-known member
Oh very nice!View attachment 82158
Picked this up used. Just have to replace the brake pads, replace the cassette, and I'm off to the races!
Oh very nice!View attachment 82158
Picked this up used. Just have to replace the brake pads, replace the cassette, and I'm off to the races!
View attachment 82158
Picked this up used. Just have to replace the brake pads, replace the cassette, and I'm off to the races!
Came with aerobars too which I removed since I can not achieve a stable position. Maybe the beer helped?Thoughtful of the previous owner to mount one holder for coffee and another for beer![]()
That looks like an absurdly small cassette on the back.View attachment 82158
Picked this up used. Just have to replace the brake pads, replace the cassette, and I'm off to the races!
It's all about ... balance.Came with aerobars too which I removed since I can not achieve a stable position. Maybe the beer helped?
It runs real fast and is a pain to get up steep hills. The problem is there is some leaning back and forth when the wheel turns because the cassette was not actually made for the wheel. That said, it does not affect gear changes.That looks like an absurdly small cassette on the back.
I'm a recreational rider at best. I love how drops feel on the handlebar currently.Quite the rise on the short stem, you may need to swap that out for something better suited to the riding-without-aerobars approach.
Very cool! Love the graphics!
Nice work! Did you use the EL34 or did you go the KT66 route (I believe the Mojo transformer has taps for both)Just finished a Mojotone JTM45 kit build last week. My third amp build after building a StewMac Tweed Deluxe and a Mojotone Princeton Reverb a few years ago
View attachment 81973
You're out there riding with wind in your face — that's all that matters....
I'm a recreational rider at best. I love how drops feel on the handlebar currently.
What model year is it? Old school Trek and the Dura-Ace 7800 crank is telling me... 2004? 2006? Probably an 11-23 or 11-25 cassette which were very common in those days. Made for pro racers, definitely a pain on climbs, lol. Probably featherwight though! Nice score.That looks like an absurdly small cassette on the back.
PREACH. Seeing people riding around with their knees hitting them in the chin is infuriating. You could be having a much more enjoyable experience!!...and get a fitting (saddle-height/ride-position/etc) — your knees will thank you. Too many occasional riders are running their saddle too low, which makes the muscles work harder because the mechanical advantage of leg-leverage isn't being taken and therefore lactic acid builds up more quickly and it's harder on the joints and ... Your knees will thank you.
2007 I believe and it's a 11-25. It's not too bad on the hills. The worst is having to come to a stop and to start again because of a red lights. A couple of lights are on hills too.What model year is it? Old school Trek and the Dura-Ace 7800 crank is telling me... 2004? 2006? Probably an 11-23 or 11-25 cassette which were very common in those days. Made for pro racers, definitely a pain on climbs, lol. Probably featherwight though! Nice score.
I picked up a 2013 model Felt F5 a few years ago that weighs ~18lb with a very not-optimized-for-weight-savings component set (courtesy of the sub-1kg frame weight) that is a cool ride and an absolute rocketship, but currently considering flipping it as the geometry is feeling a bit too aggressive for me, even after several cockpit modifications (the frame is also a 56 and I suspect I should be on a 54).
PREACH. Seeing people riding around with their knees hitting them in the chin is infuriating. You could be having a much more enjoyable experience!!
Will do! The frame is a 54, I'm 5' 10" and I have the saddle set so when the pedal is at the bottom of the crank my leg is fully extended. I saw my niece on a bike the other day and her seat was way too low, it made me wince....and get a fitting (saddle-height/ride-position/etc) — your knees will thank you. Too many occasional riders are running their saddle too low, which makes the muscles work harder because the mechanical advantage of leg-leverage isn't being taken and therefore lactic acid builds up more quickly and it's harder on the joints and ... Your knees will thank you.
Im thinking of anodizing the walls on this one for a different look.@steviejr92 oh my god dude.