Showing posts with label surly pacer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surly pacer. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2008

New Surly Pacer!!

Picked up the new velo today, and all I can say is I love this thing already. It feels maybe a tad heavier than the Ciocc, but I'll take that to get the great (tire) clearance this bike seems to have.


Fresh from the shop, without a seat, pedals, and lighting system; all essential elements of a transportation vehicle:

Components are:
* Campy Veloce Compact Cranks (50x34)
* Shimano Ultegra derailleurs
* Shimano Dura-Ace downtube shifters (only the best!)
* Shimano brake levers
* Shimano long-reach brakes (to fit nice fenders)
* Nitto seatpost
* Easton EA50 stem
* Ritchey "WCS" handlebars
* Mavic Open Pro wheels, with Dura Ace rear hub, Shimano 3N71 dynohub in front




My Brooks Swift:

Surly Pacer Meets Seattle. It spun up Yesler nicely, as well as Queen Anne Ave! (mostly thanks to the 34x27 gear)

So far I like the bike a lot, although I'll probably chop part of the steering tube off. While it feels really comfortable to have the saddle that high, it just feels weird for some reason..

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

New Velo On The Horizon!

The Ciocc is great, but the lack of real fenders are going to be tough this winter. (The Miyata has just-about full fenders, but only fits 25's with them, and just feels clunky when riding it.. I might make it a fixed gear again).


So... with some dough ready to be spent, and some ideas in mind, I went window-shopping (on the web). Indy Fab? Great bikes, but I don't have time and/or patience to wait for them to build one up. Not to mention went I went to a bike shop out on the peninsula to inquire about one, all I got to show for it was a shiny IF catalog, and a "yeah those are great bikes." I guess their IF guy was out that day.. oh well, I guess it just wasn't meant to be, at least not yet.

There's Rivendell of course, but personally those seem like a lot of money for what sounds like a heavy frame. While they do have great style in the bikes they produce, I'm not quite ready to take the boutique-dive just yet. And of course there's Co-ho bikes, Pereira, etc. And Davidson downtown. I can envision a custom rando bike on the horizon eventually, but I want a new bike NOW! I don't have the patience to wait for a spiffy custom frame. 

As a side-note, I thought about throwing my love of steel out the window, and buying a Crumpton Carbon Randonneur bike. It's $11,000. I thought about it for about five seconds, then decided to wait until I'm at least 50 for that one. I could buy lots of bikes for that price! A more "reasonable" custom rando bike would be in the $4-5k range, but even then I don't want to wait for this bike.

Not to mention, Jan Heine's 600k coming up in September. That's not that far away, time is ticking!

So I e-mailed Lloyd at Velo Bike Shop, and inquired about a Surly Pacer. I had narrowed down the choices to the Pacer or the Salsa Casseroll, like what Robert has. But in the end the more classic look of the Pacer's top tube is what swayed me, as they appear to weigh roughly the same.

It will be my Randonee/Commute/Rain/Fun/Critical Mass Machine, my do-it-all rig. My main requirement for the bike was that it fit full fenders, with wider tires. The Pacer advertises 28's with fenders, 32's without - that should be just fine! (I've been riding on 25's lately, and can actually feel a slight different on rough roads; the 28's should feel even better)

I'm thinking a handlebar bag, and of course a dynohub, most likely a fancy SON model. Maybe even downtube shifters. Can't wait!