Showing posts with label best mountain bike frame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best mountain bike frame. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

mountain tour bike

Colorado fires force evacuations, tour re-route

Published June 13, 2013

BLACK FOREST, CO (BRAIN) — Three wildfires along Colorado's Front Range so far appear to have had no direct effect on the bicycle industry or retailers, although — in a repeat of last year's June fires — the final stage of the week-long Ride the Rockies tour is expected to be re-routed due to fire and smoke danger. Some employees at SRAM's facility in Colorado Springs have been evacuated from their homes due to fire danger.

The fires also are endangering mountain biking trails, causing cyclists across the region to curtail riding and training because of the smoke, and putting many residents on edge.

Pro racer and longtime Colorado Springs resident Michael Creed is organizing an auction of bike gear to benefit victims of the fire.

Fires are burning near Cañon City (southwest of Colorado Springs), Black Forest (north of Colorado Springs, on the east side of 1-25) and on the west side of Rocky Mountain National Park. 

The Cañon City fire has Ride the Rockies organizers planning a re-route for Friday's ride, which originally was planned to go from Salida to Cañon City, over the iconic Royal Gorge Bridge on U.S. 50. That route would pass directly through the fire zone, and organizers told The Denver Post they are negotiating a new route with state safety officials. The Post said "only the finish in Cañon City (was) certain."

Last year, the tour's final stage was planned to pass more or less directly through the High Park fire on its way to a finish in Fort Collins. It was re-routed but still finished in Fort Collins. Ride the Rockies, held for 28 years with a different route each year, has about 2,000 riders.

The Black Forest fire has already consumed 15,000 acres and several hundred homes and was reported at 20 percent contained Thursday morning. Several area state parks with mountain bike trails have likely suffered some fire damage.

The closest bike retailer to the Black Forest fire is Ascent Cycling, on Stetson Hills Boulevard. The store has been unaffected by the fire so far, said co-owner Patrick Cross Thursday.

"As of right now people have  been pretty normal, although I know of some racers and friends of the shop who are displaced from their homes right now," Cross said.

The store is organizing a food donation drive to benefit victims of the fire at a mountain bike race the store is sponsoring this weekend, he said.

Rotor Bike Components' U.S. offices are just south and west of the Black Forest fire, Rotor's Amber Chambers told BRAIN Thursday. So far the office is outside the evacuation area.

"It's just very smoky here now, a total haze," Chambers said. Rotor moved to the area just weeks before last year's Waldo Canyon fire broke out. Last year the company was ordered to evacuate its facility but it was not damaged. Chambers said one of the company's sponsored racers, Fernando Rivera, has been ordered to evacuate his home because of the fire.

Several employees of SRAM's facility in Colorado Springs, which is very near Rotor, have been evacuated from their homes, said John Dawson, SRAM's MTB sports marketing manager.

"Right now we have multiple employees evacuated from the areas affected," Dawson said. "Haven’t heard of anyone losing their house yet, but it’s still a serious fire.

"Air conditions are really bad with visible smoke hanging like fog this morning around the office and vicinity. Hopefully the winds will calm down today and allow the firefighters to get it under control.

The fire in Rocky Mountain National Park is the smallest of the three at about 600 acres, but was zero percent contained Thursday morning. All park roads and facilities are open but many hiking trails in the park are closed.

Carmichael Training Systems headquarters are in Colorado Springs, far south of the fire, and no staff or coaches have lost homes, the company said Thursday on its Facebook page.

"We are fine and continuing to work with athletes, and we've opened our facility at Highway 24 and 21st Street to any local endurance athletes who are looking for a place to train indoors due to road closures and air quality," CTS said.

Pro racer and longtime Colorado Springs resident Michael Creed is organizing an auction of bike gear to benefit victims of the fire. A similar effort last year raised $35,000 for victims of the Waldo Canyon fire. Creed, racing at the Nature Valley Grand Prix in Minnesota this week, announced on Twitter Thursday that he would re-launch the auction. Lance Armstrong was among those who replied via Twitter that he would participate. Creed told BRAIN that donors can contact him at Mdcreed81@gmail.com or (719)232-4842.

speed mountain bike

Pros and Cons of a Single Speed Mountain Bike

Many people would probably say that there aren’t any pros to riding a single speed mountain bike.  But that’s where they’re wrong!  There are many pros to riding a single speed mountain bike, and here’s a few that I would say are considerable.

PROS:

  • Cost:  Usually single speed bikes will be cheaper than a similar bike with gears.  This is due to the huge decrease in hardware required for a single speed mountain bike (SSMB).  A multi-geared mountain bike would typically have two derailleurs, two shifters on the handle bars, and more cogs and sprockets for the additional gears.  None of that hardware is required on a SSMB. Which leads into the next pro of riding a SSMB.
  • Weight:  Without all the typical hardware of a multi-geared mountain bike, your overall bike weight will be considerably lighter.
  • Efficiency:  A single speed mountain bike has the chain going directly back from the front sprocket to the rear sprocket.  This means that there is no possible bend in the chain from front to back like there typically is with a multi-gear bike.
  • Maintenance:  Because there are less functioning parts on the bike, there are less parts to take care of and maintain.  This means that there is a lower possibility of something breaking while riding out on trails, and less work to be done off trails.
  • Concentration:  You can concentrate more on the path ahead of you than shifting, and planning downshifts for hills etc.
  •  Cleaner Look:  The look of your bike will be cleaner and simpler.  There are no shifters on the handlebars, and no derailleurs in the front or back.

CONS:

  • Pedaling Efficiency:  The bike is not very efficient outside of its gearing range.  For example the gear ratio might make it hard to pedal up hills, or it may not be a high enough gear ratio to accelerate down hills.

Seems like there are a lot more Pros than Cons.

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