Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 


Interviews on 101bike.com
This Month
May 2006
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
Bike Shows
Stores
View Article  Thanks TTC for a great and easy bikeride!

Going to work I usually catch a ride down to King street and then take the streetcar to the West. While driving to Davisville we noticed it was extremely busy and yes -  the TTC was on strike.

I decided to go back home and take the Bike. Even though there was a lot of exhaustion it was great ride down. With all the cars practically standing still you could almost say they made a bike lane.

30 km/hr down Oriole Parkway...WITH THE BIKE!!

Another good read: Cyclist of the City Unite! in the Toronto Star. Click here.

View Article  Toronto based Cervélo delivers the bike

Sunday Ivan Basso won the Giro d'Italia on bicycles that are assembled/made in Toronto by Cervélo.

A fantastic achievement for the athlete and also the manufacturer of these wonderful bikes. Congrats!

Not only did Ivan win the Giro, he also set the record for most wins on different bikes with stage wins on a R3 (stage 16 & 20), P3C (TTT) and SLC (stage 8)

  R3

 

P3

 

Soloist Carbon

View Article  Cross the border to buy a bike???

Ever since I moved to Canada the Canadian Dollar (CAD) has gone up like crazy. A lot of Canadians I heard are now crossing the border to shop in the USA.

It's about 1.1 Canadian to 1 US Dollar (USD).or 0.9 the other way around.

So looking at buying a bike in the USA looks interesting / cheaper.  I was browsing some websites and comparing prices. A Trek Pilot 1.0 would cost in Canada Approx CAD $950 and in the US approx. USD $700.

Anyone experience doing this? Advice?

 

View Article  Specialized Sequoia or Trek Piliot 1.0?

I am currently looking into 2 bikes which seem to have had good reviews and are also priced under CAD 1000.

The Specialized Sequoia or

the Trek Pilot 1.0.?

 

Does anyone have expereince with any of these bikes?

Or a better alternative?

Let me know: 101bike@gmail.com

 

 

View Article  It is going to be a road bike.

Today I woke up and decided it's going to be a road bike. Sometimes it just hits you and you decide after all the information you gathered and things you have seen the past few months. 

Since I had a few hours for myself this afternoon I went out and strolled down Yonge street to SportingLife store and the Sportswap.

Ok so I went to 2 stores each having amazing bikes such as Cervelo, Trek and Specialized. It seem that I will go for a bike with a compact frame simply because it is more comfortable and people say it put less strain on my back.

Now it's coming down to brand and budget.

My budget is at this point not more than $1000. It can be either a used or new bike. I am probably going for a 58 cm frame, but want to also ride a 60 cm if possible sometime soon.

So, for the next few weeks I will start 'bargain' hunting. Please feel free to send me suggestions what to get and where to buy it. If anyone has a bike left he or she wants to get rid of....

Sponsoring deals, donations etc are welcome too.... :)

 

Cheers,

Mathijs 101bike

 

One thing missing....

View Article  Bicycle Seats

 

View Article  Riding a Roadbike Pt. 2 - detail pictures of the Norco

For the enthousiasts, here are some detailed pictures of the Norco CDR 101bike.com rode.

 

View Article  Riding a Roadbike pt. 1

This weekend I finally got down to some serious riding! I went to the Cyclepath on Sunday and picked up my super-de-lux Norco CDR. Took the subway down Yonge street (lazy bones) to meet up my colleague and his girlfriend.

We rode down to the CNE, which is the exhibition center here in Toronto. We did I believe approx. 15 rounds. It is very good riding down there, great asphalt and very quiet on the cars on Sunday. There was a lot of wind which meant automatically a good workout.

The bike handles very nice and after a few rounds I became more confident, even though I was not riding with the shoes you can clip on. The shifting of the gears did however not always go too smooth, but that is probably because it was a two year old rental bike.

Take a look at the bike in some detail here:

(More detailed pictures tomorrow)

 

It was great and I will soon ride again!

 

View Article  Saddles pt 3.

Saddles:

"What is good" is very subjective.  Shaping is important for some
riders, while width is the big issue for others, and padding thickness
(or the lack of it) is the important thing for still more.  

I find that I most easily adapt to a new seat whose rear area is
reasonably flat, whose center has a cutout, whose nose is slightly
below the level of the flat area, and whose padding is minimal but not
absent.  But this doesn't describe all of my saddles; there is
variation in the designs which is hard to account for.  I think the
real answer is that you know you've found a good saddle when you get
off the bike after more than 20 miles and have no problem with the
idea of getting back on again."

Durable...but comfortable?

View Article  Saddle pt. 2 : Short term confort and long term comfort

There's short-term comfort and there's long-term saddle comfort.

Soft feels more comfortable for the demo ride, but long term, your sit bones
sink in to the hard part and the rest of the saddle is left pressing on your
perineum - where it shouldn't press.

If you only ride the bike to the news stand on Sunday mornings; soft is more
comfortable....

As the Comfy Chair????

 

View Article  Saddles, some insights pt. 1
From a Commenter on my posting at groups.google.com:
 
After reading Sheldon brown's thoughts on this over and over, I went
out and found myself an old but useable Selle Italia Flite.  It's stiff
and hard, but after getting over the minor saddle soreness, I found it
so much easier to ride on then the big, bouncy gel thing I was using
before.  And, my circulation in my crotch isn't cut off, which it was
before.
 
I'd say that you should look for something that's not all cushiony.
Sounds odd, but if you feel your sit bones (in the lower end of your
butt, BEHIND your groin) getting sore, then that's a good sign.  If you
feel any numbness below, you either have a bad saddle, or it's adjusted
poorly.  A lot of people adjust their saddles so they're tilted, and I
think this is a bad idea.  I had a saddle that was only a couple of
degrees forward, and I was getting sore wrists and palms, and losing
some feeling in my crotch.  I also actually think that the harder the
saddle is, the quicker you get over the initial soreness.  In the past,
I'd be in incredible discomfort from saddle soreness, but now, I barely
feel anything like it when I haven't ridden for a while.
 
You'd be surprised at how small and hard the thing can be, as long as
it supports you at those bony contact points, rather than in the soft
tissue between your legs.
 
I'd really recommend trying out one of the classic Italian saddles
(Selle Royale, Selle Italia, Selle San Marco, Vettas are nice, too), or
a Brooks, if you want to drop the dough.  They're all a bit pricey, but
I'd take a beat up, used one of these than a brand new
gel-comfot-plush-thing-a-majig-seat anyday.  

View Article  Saddles: What's up?

This week I would like to focus a little on saddles. To me a very personal choice. Even though there are great designs out there is it true that form goes over function here?

I mean I understand the Aerodynamics side to it, but man it is not comfortable, is it?

   

Tell 101BIKE.COM your saddle (purchase & ride) experience.