There's not much else for me to do....
- Cable length. Cables that are too long or too short piss me off.
- Saddle tilt. 0º is the proper tilt.
- Tip of the brake lever is about 2mm above the plane drawn from the bottom of the bars.
- Tiny (or no) spacers above or below the stem
- No squeaks or rattles. If they exist they must be found and banished.
- General cleanliness of the bike. I hate month-old dried worms on my buddies' bikes and crusted up dirt that they never wash.
- No frayed cable ends. Ever.
I'm pretty anal about my bike stuff and I'm a fairly decent wrench. I spend a pretty solid amount of time getting a bike to its final configuration. The only time I leave too much cable is if there will be a bar and/or stem change imminent, which is exactly the case with my Pacenti.
On my bike, I'm usually most particular about not getting knocked off my bike.
brake lever angle on mtb handlebars. 45 deg from horizontal is about right. if it's less than 30 deg, bikes just look wrong.
Everything, but in particular:
- Pump pegs
- Saddle tilt
- Quiet drivetrain (don't miss the SRAM cassette/chain combo on my old Ridley)
- Matching bottle cages
- A well stocked saddle bag
- Wheels with matching rims, rim strips, spokes & nipples, hubs, tubes, and tires
I care mostly about fit - it has to be perfect.
And a quiet drive-train, but mine is usually dirty (sorry Gary) from generous applications of Chain-L and lots a dirt roads.
Oh, and I always clean my tires, but hardly ever clean my bike.
Everything.......but perfectly true wheels.
Mike
a quiet bike
a good crema on my espresso at the stop
a cold hoppy beverage when i get home
the rest is simply my obsessing
Steve Hampsten
www.hampsten.blogspot.com
“Maybe chairs shouldn’t be comfortable. At some point, you want your guests to leave.”
I can't abide curmudgeons.
my name is Matt
I would totally mess with both of you guys. I shared a workspace once with a guy who would align all the slots on every wood screw on his pieces (this requires testing and/or filing lots of screws…). I’d secretly move them randomly 5-10 degrees every now and then.
Stem top cap...it musn't be misaligned. If it has a logo or such it cannot be crooked.
The mountains are calling and I must go.
- John Muir
The name is Guy Fazzio
the bike isn't the bike. the details are the bike.
Regal.
Nitto 176.
Campagnolo 10s.
Velox bar plugs.
Tires with no colors other than black and gum.
Thumbs up for Giro shoes on Time pedals. I'm using the Giro Prolight shoes on RXS as well as the even older Impact pedals. Nothing else will do. Other details -
- Perfectly positioned contact points
- I must have round bars
- really great brakes and levers set up perfectly
Every bike I touch:
Shifter to bar transition - Especially when double wrapping or using really thin tape, this can take some finesse.
Shifters must be absolutely level - Look around and you'll see that shifters are rarely lined up.
Cable length - Not too much in front and not too little in back
Quiet - I should only be able to hear the pawls, the rollers, and the tires.
My bikes:
Brakes - I'm finicky not only about the setup, but I'm also picky about the equipment. I can't stand flimsy brakes or unpredictable pads. Could be my motor sports background, but I won't compromise the power or feel of my brakes.
Tire pressure - This obsession is even worse on dirt. I don't pre-ride the course to warm up, but to dial my tire pressure for the crucial sections.
It all starts with clean.
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