Sunday 9 December 2012

Dont buy a FIAT (Fix It Again Tony)





Headlight bulb replacement on my Fiat Stilo Multiwaggon....


....no really! Headlight bulb replacement involves removing the wheel, wheel arch cowling, dropping the bumper and even loosening a bolt in the front wing. In total 18 bolts and screws in four different sizes, and all to put in a single new bulb. Now I generally like tinkering with cars and if this was in some sunny plaza in Rome outside a cafe with an espresso then it would have been an enjoyable experience, on a winters day in Aberdeen however its was a different matter.

Ciao!

Thursday 23 August 2012

Surly LHT completed!




I'll try for a more artistic picture soon but for now here are a few shots of the newly completed trucker with its Alfine 11 hub. As with any build its not actually completed; I'm considering a Brooks B17 saddle, I still need a front rack, and I may swap out the BB for a longer one to give the cranks a bit more clearance past the chain stays.



It is now a functional bike though so I am starting to put a few miles on it and see how it performs. It is heavy (mainly in the rear) so compared with my old road bike commuter it feels a bit sluggish to accelerate but it is very comfy, very smooth, and flowing to ride, with that extra weight comes a secure feeling that its a pretty indestructible machine which can tackle rough trails and carry plenty of weight if required.


Any comments gratefully received and if you have any questions I'd be happy to try and answer them. I hope this blog of the build has proved useful to someone.





More blogs will follow on performance and any problems I may encounter. I'm interested to see how the Alfine hub beds in and just how good it proves to be - I have high hopes and equally high expectations.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

This trucker needs some wheels.


I have my tin opener – pass me a can of worms from the top shelf. Yep, I am about to discuss wheels; what size, what rim, what spoke, what hub, wtf…

 Tons of clearance with the Surly LHT fork

The wheels have probably been the hardest part of the build process, mainly deciding on size; 26 inch or 700c? Not a simple decision as this has an impact on what frame I went for. I considered a Dawes Ultra Galaxy, a Planet X Kaffenback, an On One Croix De Fer, a Genesis Day One. All brands and bikes I liked the look of a lot but that would mean I went down the 700c route of wheels. But what happens if I head out on a far flung tour to places which don’t support this size of wheel?
I made the decision early on that I wanted to build a solid simple bike with components which could be repaired or replaced wherever I happened to find myself (more on my decision to use an Alfine 11 later). Using this basis I opted for 26 inch wheels; I would hope never to break a wheel on an expedition, probably not even destroy a tyre, but inner tubes I can easily see me needing to pick up. So if a place doesn’t stock 700c wheels then they are unlikely to stock 700c inner tubes. This is fairly fundamental and so made my choice to go for 26 inch wheels somewhat easier – I should now be able to replace inner tubes, tyres, and even entire wheels wherever I go.

What rims? Not as hard a choice as you might think, a few names cropped up again and again, mainly Mavic and Sun Rhyno. Sun Rhyno had great reviews as a fairly heavy but very solid and reliable touring rim which can handle rough trails and tarmac alike. Mavic 719 and 721 also had great reviews – there was some forums mentioning cracking being a problem in the Mavics but all these conversations were from way back in 2006 with this problem little mentioned in later forums so it would seem that Mavic have solved the issue. Mavics are a bit easier to get here in the UK and with lots of choice so I decided on these and shopped around for something in the width range I wanted and with good touring reputation, my shopping arount took me to the On One website however, where they happened to have a pair of Sun Rhyno Lite rims for £20 each – bargain! All thoughts of Mavic abandoned I bought the Suns.

 My Sun Rhyno Lite rims newly built by Big Al (keep reading)...

What hub? Well I had been toying with the idea of an internal gear hub for a while since a mate told me about his Rohloff Speedhub. I wasn’t about to spend that kind of cash on a hub but with Shimanos Alfine 11 there was another option. Choosing the Alfine may appear to go against my desire for a simple bike which is easy to maintain in the field but there are pros and cons to the internal gear setup and to derailiurs  alike. 

Alfine 11 - looks good, hope it does the job

The advantages for the Alfine are that it should require almost no maintenance in the field, it has a longer life than a derailleur drive chain, and I can use a single speed chain which will last longer and wear less. The disadvantages are fairly fundamental, if anything goes wrong with the hub then it can’t really be repaired in the field, but if this does happen then my thinking is I can pick up a new rear wheel, convert back to a simple derailleur setup and continue on my way. If this was a very long trip then possibly send the hub home for repair and have it mailed back out to me later on. The pros seem to outweigh the cons for my requirements and the hub already has a good reputation for reliability and longevity form people who have put a lot of mileage through them.


As for the front hub I returned to my desire for simple and maintainable so went for Shimano XT with cup and cone bearings – worldwide parts and repair-ability.


The Alfine only comes with a centrelock option for disk brakes so I also went for a centre lock front hub. Not my first choice due to availability of spares but this design seems to be taking off, it has its advantages, and if I really want to I can get an adapter to take bolt on rotors so it wasn’t a great dilemma.

With all the components for the wheels bought I had to think about building, I wasn’t going to try this myself and I wanted a good job doing so I was willing to spend the cash on a good wheelbuilder. I’m based in Aberdeen where we seem to have fairly few bike shops, Alpine Bikes and Edinburgh Cycles being the big two. I was certainly not going to let Alpine Bikes near my wheels – sorry Alpine but when I dropped off my MTB wheel for repair the work done was shoddy at best (cassette not tightened, new spokes not done up, wheel not balanced), so I wont be using you guys again. Edinburgh Bikes on the other hand have been great, knowledgeable staff and very very helpful, I ordered the Surly frame through them and they have been great – even fitting the headset for free. So Edinburgh were my choice of wheelbuilders until I was told in hushed tones about ‘Big Al’ just out of Glasgow, a wheelbuilder of some repute, such repute in fact that he seems to have taken on mystical properties amongst his following and is seen as something of a wheelbuilding deity – this was my man. I could feel it. Luckily I was passing through Glasgow that week so I called in and dropped off all the bits, he even did a full rebuild on my MTB wheel (so badly done by Alpine bikes) while I waited. I was supplied with coffee thick enough to stand your spoon up in (he seems to drink a lot of this) and supplied with a cadburys chocolate roll in case I was hungry! As he rebuilt the MTB wheel there was constant bike based chat and lots of information to help me with my project, while I looked around his workshop – wheels are piled so high in every corner that some of the lower ones must be antiques if they haven’t already been compressed into coal from the growing weight of new wheels being added above, he then decided that the bearings were a little rough on my wheel and so the hub got a full strip down and service too.
  
Rear dropouts of the Disk Trucker

Given the chaotic nature of his workshop I was fully expecting it to be a couple of weeks before my wheels were ready but within just two days Al called to say ‘laddie, yer wheels er reddy’, when I arrived he went on to explain that I had double butted on the rear with tandem spokes on one side to compensate for the strain of the disk brake, single butted on the front…(beyond this I got lost in the technicalities of his art), apparently I’d had a choice of silver or black spokes – as long as I chose silver, he doesn’t use black ones as for reasons unknown these seem to break more often than silver ones. A theory was postulated in the ensuing conversation about the black ones being baked after the coating was applied and in doing so annealing the metal thus making it more brittle – a sound theory which I am happy to accept – the silver spokes look the part and my new wheels look great. Al even offers a 200 mile tune up to his wheels to get them back in perfect true once they have bedded in.
Thanks Big Al – brilliant service, great banter, and more coffee than you can shake a mug at. Check out his store here; http://www.wheelcraft.net/

Thursday 19 July 2012

Why the Surly Disk Trucker?


There were a few aspects that I knew right away that I wanted in a touring bike. Firstly it had to be designed for touring – this may sound like a daft comment to bother making but a friend was insistent that I would be better off with a mountain bike frame. ‘When you get somewhere cool you’ll be able to drop the panniers and go offroad!’. Maybe so but for the remaining 95% of the time when I will be cycling road or trail with a loaded bike I don’t want to be wishing I had something which was better designed for touring.
Other requirements were;
A steel frame – simple tried and tested material with good longevity and repairable in the field if you really really need to.
Disk brakes (Mechanical) – Why disks? Simple I like to stop when I need to. Also I won’t wear out the rims, and if a rim does go massively out of true it won’t affect the brakes. It is harder to source parts and pads but the pads are so light and small it will be nothing to travel with several spare sets.
26 inch wheels – I’ll discuss this more in my next post but basically it comes down to worldwide availability of spares (inner tubes, tyres, and rims). 26 inch should be available pretty much everywhere there are bikes but 700c may not. There is some discussion about which type is stronger, I don’t see this as an issue, the actual size difference is pretty dam small, I cannot see this making any impact on strength, lots of folk get hung up on the small size difference somehow having a great bearing on strength, by that argument penny farthing bikes should have folded as soon as a rider got aboard – but they didn’t.
Finally, I was very taken by the Shimano Alfine 11. This shouldn’t have an impact on my frame choice but it was something to consider.

Dawes Nomad - A 26inch wheel possibility

Planet X Kaffenback - Second favorite 

So with my requirements clear I went shopping and very quickly ran into the Surly Disk Trucker, it ticks all the boxes – literally the only negative I could come up with was that it has vertical rear dropouts and so I would have to run a chain tensioner if I use an Alfine hub – a pretty minor issue really, but not wanting to buy the first frame that I came across I shopped around, read reviews, blogs, and forums. There was the Planet X Kaffenback, this is probably my second choice bike, almost perfect even having replaceable rear dropouts so I could convert to horizontal dropouts and run an Alfine hub without a chain tensioner, but it only comes in 700c wheels. The Genesis Day One and Croix De Fer also look great, as do the On One Pompetamine and Pompino, Dawes Ultra Galaxy (rather extravagant name though don’t you think?), and Trek 520 - all great looking bikes but all take a 700c wheel. The Thorn Raven Enduro was briefly considered but far too expensive for my budget and built far more around trail touring with its MTB style frame and front suspension, so the Dawes Nomad perhaps? - 26 inch wheels yes, disk brakes no. So back to the Surly Disk Trucker - it seems to be everything I am after and even taking wheel size out of consideration it appears to be the only frame out of the ones I have mentioned here that is truly designed for touring (with the exception of the Dawes and Thorn) the others are road bike frames with some adaption and modification to suit touring. The Surly sells itself as a touring frame with its long chain stays creating a long wheel base for more stability which also puts the rear panniers further back to keep them away from the pedals, it has a lower bottom bracket to increase stability further, accepts wide tyre sizes (fatties fit fine according to the sales pitch) so I can use big tyres for a comfy ride or for off-road use, and finally its loaded with braze-ons; there is a place for your pump, spare spokes, three water bottles, and more importantly, decent and thought out attachment points for front and rear racks. I have yet to find fault with the specifications of this frame which in my opinion make it the ideal all round tourer, Long Haul Trucker; the name really does say it all!

Monday 9 July 2012

Surly Disk Trucker - Exploded View

I have a bedroom scattered with pretty much all the parts to build a fully functional bike so it looks like it is about time to pull my finger out and start putting it all together. First though I cant help myself but lay all the bits out and take a picture, as unless I get hit by a bus its unlikely to look like this again. (and what else are beds for?)


Also, I got a comment on my last posting from Robert Wells who is another individual of dubious sanity, embarking on the rubble strewn path of building his own Surly Trucker. Check out his progress here;
http://www.wellsimages.com/blog/2012/6/new-bike-surly-you-jest

And here's the science bit - slightly geeky bit too. I have been keeping track of exactly what I have been buying, where from, and how much. Since I haven't been rushing to build and finish the bike I've had the luxury to shop around and get some items a bit cheaper than I might have done on the high street. A lot of components came from the On One website as they have had some good sales on and the German bike-discount website has some great deals when the euro is down!
As you can see I have gone for an Alfine hub - I'll do a separate short posting on the wheels later as I think an entire book could be written on the choices to be made and the pros & cons of each set-up, clearly I'll be wrong in the choices I have made and there will be hoards of people telling me I should have one for carbon fiber rims with two spokes per wheel.
If you do have any questions or comments I would be very happy to hear them.


Item
Component Name
Cost
Source
Frame + Forks
Surly disk trucker 54cm
£375.00
Edinburgh cycles
Hub Gear
Alfine 11
£266.00
Front Hub
Shimano XT centre lock
£27.00
On One
Rims
Sun-Ringle Rhyno
£40.00
On One
Spokes

Inc.in build costs
-
Wheel Building
Wheelcraft
£45.00
http://www.wheelcraft.net/
Chain
KMC S1
£4.99
On One
Chain tensioner
On One Doofer
£14.99
On One
Front Cog
On One
£50.00
On One
Crank Arms
On One
On One
Pedals



Bottom Bracket
Shimano UN55 68x113mm
£15.00
On One
Gear Shifters
Versa 11
£149.99
On One
Brake Leavers
Brakes
Avid BB7 - Road
£89.00
Rotors
Shimano LX
£8.00
On One
Seat
Genesis
£0.00
Had it already
Seat Post
On One Twelfty 27.2mm
£10.00
ebay - second hand
Headset
FSA Orbit XL II
£19.99
On One
Handle Bars
On One Midge
£19.99
On One
Riser



Spacers



Tyres
Schwalbe marathon plus 26x1.35
£25.70
ebay - second hand
Tubes
Schwalbe
-
Came with tyres

Monday 11 June 2012

Surly Long Haul Trucker - Construction Begins

I am now in the early stages of building a touring bike based around a Surly Disk Trucker frame with a Shimano Alfine 11 geared hub. With the start of my bike build I have also decided to revisit my blog and record progress for all to see. Why? Well I have taken a lot of advice from other bloggers and so I would like to give something back - also I want to show off what I hope will be my snazzy new wheels. When I am finished it should look something like this (colour may vary);


 
There has been an awful lot of agonizing on my part about what I am building, it might seem a simple project but deciding on what I want out of the bike had a massive impact on what I was to build (obviously!). What frame - MTB or road? Wheels - 700c or 26''? Long tours or fast & light. The list of choices and questions was seemingly endless. I'll try to make my blogs fairly snappy and as interesting as possible but on occasion I can see already that I am going to have to get long winded and technical, but hopefully this will also prove to be informative to anyone else on the long road to building a touring bike. 


That's all for now but soon I'll blog some pictures of the build, lists of parts used, and why I have made the choices I have. I'll also tell you where I got everything and how much I paid.