Archive | October, 2009

Jeremy Powers Interview

 
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An interview I did with Jeremy just before day three of the UCI3 Cincinnati Cyclocross Festival. He won all three days.

Podcast 10/08/09

 
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In this latest podcast you will hear me try to describe this video- which is kind of silly, since, well- here it is.

Also in this podcast we sort of preview Paris-Tours, but not really & promise to talk about the Tour of Lombardy in the next podcast & mention two teams making room for BMC. Locally, UCI cyclocross comes to Cincinnati this weekend, John G race cx in Louisville, John K doesn’t try to be a hero in the last road race of the season. In Listener Feedback FRR doesn’t miss this podcast, cummerbunds, are they really like bar tape?, updated Specialized ride, what to do about on the bike relief?, barbarians bombing bike path- should I be ashamed? overpackaging? & we defend out integrity of unbiased podcasting excellence even if we still have to discharge the static every so often.

UPDATED: Tested – Kenda Small Block Eight CX Tires

TESTED: Kenda Small Block Eight, clinchers with tubes
CONDITIONS: Muddy to dry, off road and pavement
SIZE: 700×35
MSRP: $39.99
WEBSITE: Kenda www.kendausa.com
RATING: Surprised. Not a hula popper.

    SB 8’s, the Hula Popper of tires?

hulapopper Sometimes I think that fishing lure manufactures and designers are trying to catch the fisherman rather than the fish. When I see a lure that looks like a fish I usually impulse buy, use it without much success, then it sits in the bottom of my tackle box – $7 wasted. The Kenda Small Block Eights are entirely the opposite. On looks alone, I would’ve never purchased a pair of these. They did not “hook” me when I saw them. However, after riding them for three weeks I am sold.

07sb8 Ben at Kenda was kind enough to send a few pairs of cx clinchers my way. My first reaction after opening the box and inspecting the SB 8’s was, “oh, grass tires.” The small waffle tread (small blocks) is more aggressive than a file tread, but less so than a “mud” tire. I mounted them to a pair of Ksyrium Elite’s and off I went.

Twice per week for the next three weeks I rode with Mikey out to the Gun Club venue (OVCX.com race #9), did some laps, then rode home. The ride out and back is on a bike path. Mikey’s vintage Michelin Muds (and his sarcastic yammering) drowned out the minimal tread on pavement noise. At 35 psi, they were cushy on road. The Gun Club course has gravel, grass, sand, mud, and hardpack. Over the three weeks, we rode on a completely dry course, wet/muddy/rainy, plus everything in between. I thought that Mikey would kill me in the mud with his bright green French beast of a tire. He didn’t. The SB 8’s gave me decent traction, a fat ride, and plenty of sidewall grip. kendaside The profile of the tire is round and tread goes far down onto the sidewall. I did turf it once when the front wheel washed out on a fast, muddy downhill to uphill turn. Mikey may have crashed too had he been going as fast as I was. I did have some rear wheel spin when seated and climbing on wet muddy grass, but this was the only time.

CONCLUSIONS
This is a tire that can take you through 75% of what you throw at it. These and pair of mudder tires would get you through a season. The tires I tested were 700×35’s, however, the width measures the same as Mikey’s 700×32 Michelins. Unless you want a narrower tire, go with the 35’s.
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John K’s thought on the Small Block Eights 700cx32:

I try to be objective about things.  I think some brands represent quality & some do not.  We have talked Quality ad nauseum on the podcast, I could talk about it even more, that’s how much I care about it.  We’ve talked about how you know it when you see it, it is easy to see, hard to define… something else that is hard, is to allow something to break out of prejudices previously held.  As much as I tried, I didn’t want to be clouded by my earlier experiences of Kenda tires.  From my bike shop experience, I remember these are the tires normally found on entry level hybrids & mountain bikes that aren’t meant to see the trail.  They had wire beads, lots of weight & generally were the low dollar replacement tire for someone that just wanted something to roll on, not something that someone who fancies themselves a fancy pants connoiseur would put on their fancy carbon fiber, feathery light, space age material cyclocross bike- oh the thought of such things!  Really?

OK, so my first experience maybe upheld my prejudices.  After unfolding them from their plastic merchandizing placard, I tried putting them on my aged Campagnolo Protons.  I have had these wheels for about 7 years & have mounted & removed most brands of tires from them- I have expectations that certain brands will be harder to mount than others- but never have I had a tire as difficult as these.  So tight are these tires on that rim that once the bead of the first side was over the lip of the rim, it made a solid *thwap!* as the bead held tight to the bed of the rim where the eyelets reside.  Next step, insert the tube & now the second bead goes on, just as tight.  Whew!  glad that is over.  As I said, I expect some rubber with these wheels to be tight- these are the tightest.

Next up, on the bike.  I race on my tubulars, so was using these as my week day training wheels.  Most training rides for me consist of riding the road to a nearby park or greenway where there is a mix of grass, hard pack dirt, gravel and some loose trails.

My first & last impressions are how well these tires roll.  I mean, really nicely, low resistance, even at 30 psi  & cushy to boot.  In the conditions I have been usig them, I have not lacked grip or traction.  Because of the typical application for these, I have started going to a higher pressure, around 40 psi, since there is so much smooth riding down to the area where I train.  Even with that, these tires are a comfy ride.  Maybe the cause is the height of rubber for each tightly spaced block that allows some of the edge to be taken off the bumps?  I am not sure, but I have been very pleasantly surpsied.

Admittedly, cyclcocross in North Carolina has been dry, hard packed & grass, I have yet to experience the mud fest that are typical in other parts of the country, here.  Most of what I hear about these tires is lack of traction in the mud, but I have yet to really experience that with these tires in my limited mud use.  My application of these tires has been limited to small areas of mud followed by fast hard packed areas, so the tread quickly cleaned itself and behaved as it had in every other condition- very well.

Aside from the tire mounting to the Campy rims, these tires did something that is difficult to do, change my mind about the equipment I would consider.  So impressed with the ride of these tires, I will consider running them with the Stan’s No- Tube set up on fast dry courses.  When compared to other tires I have used in the same conditions, Vittorias, Ritcheys, Michelins & Tufos these stack up very favorbly due to their ease of rolling & comfort with little downside.

When cross was a discipline dominated by make shift, dodgy, 23#, retrofitted, Rub Goldberg fabricated road & touring bikes- I would have said this would be a good tire.  In today’s world of specialty, carbon fiber frames, forks, brakes & wheels… I would still say this is a tire worth consideration, especially in drier applications.

Rollin’ on my scraper bike

Yet another bicycle-inspired music video from a long and storied lineage: age_of_chance_kiss
Age of Chance’s “Kiss”
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Queen’s “Bicycle Race”

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Kraftwerk’s nod to the 100th anniversary of le Tour special album “tour de france”

What is it about the bicycle that inspires such artistic expression. Ernest Hemingway wrote, “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” He also wrote about 6 day races. resized_200x133_pelotonLast year in Cincinnati, a modern dance piece titled “Peloton” was reprised for the annual Choreographers Without Companies Concert. Indeed, and as you will see in this latest video by the Trunk Boiz, the bicycle is not just a mode of transportation or a means to a sport. It can be your creative outlet.