Wednesday, July 18, 2012

A Long Island Century


I recently visited the Empire State for the first time to ride a century. I’ve been a part of a small email group of vintage cycling nuts like myself for a couple of years now and when the group began planning a century tour of the eastern part of Long Island (where one group member spends his summers) I took the opportunity to see a part of the US I hadn’t yet visited and to finally meet, face to face, many of these guys with whom I’ve traded parts, sought wrenching advice and discussed the finer points of all things cycling.

I flew into JFK and traveled to Penn Station to meet up with one member where we enjoyed several Belgian beers while waiting for another to finish up his day at the office. Then three of us took a cab to the Meat Packing District and enjoyed the beers and food offerings at the Standard Hotel Biergarten before taking a rental car to our host’s home in central Long Island.














Much of Friday was spent preparing our bikes for Saturday’s ride and "talking shop" as various guys trickled in by car or train and set up tents in yard. I didn’t travel with my bike. Since our host rides the same size frames as I do he offered to loan me a bike, a Dutch made Cera 531 frame with a mixed drivetrain that just plain works. As was to be expected, all of the bikes were vintage (or at least classic) bikes with lots of character. Present were a 1972 Mercian, a 70s Wes Mason, a modified Lambert with homemade LED lights and an SX3 hub, an 853 Lemond, an early 70s Olympia, an ’83 Waterford Paramount, ’79 Peugeot PK-10, 80s Univega Gran Turismo, the 650b Bilenky Constructeur tandem built for the 2010 NAHBS and reviewed by Bicycle Quarterly in Volume 9, No. 2, among others.
Wes Mason and Lambert by sommervillebikes
Early 70s Olympia by sommervillebikes


Bilenky Constructeur tandem by sommervillebikes
Cera

Our host had thoroughly planned a 116 mile route of the eastern half of the island, taking us through small beach communities, the Hamptons, farms, wineries, historic points of interests and the like.  The terrain was relatively flat (~2,700 ft of climbing) as compared to most of the riding we do here in Louisville and the surrounding area, but it’s not “pancake” flat like you’ll find in south Florida or the like. The roads are generally in very good condition and bike lanes are plentiful.

Our route

We set out just before 6am on Saturday and traveled a few miles to a diner to fuel up. One of the riders had traveled from New Hampshire and had brought a jug of New Hampshire Grade B (darker and richer) maple syrup, which is rarely, if ever shipped out of state. That beats colored corn syrup on your flapjacks for sure. We headed east around the south shore of the island, took two ferries to navigate the eastern tip of the island and back along the north shore of the island.

photo by sommervillebikes

Dune Rd by sommervillebikes


It was a great ride, with a high in the low 90s and high humidity, to which we here are accustomed. The riding was great, but the camaraderie, conversation and new terrain and things to see made it special for me. Perhaps the most interesting part of the ride was what we referred to as The Great Portage, a 400 yard traverse of a beach to connect with another road. Ah, shoes full of sand!

photo by sommervillebikes

The Great Sand Purge by sommervillebikes

It was a great weekend for me and I’m thankful to have had the opportunity to have done it. Many thanks to our gracious host and family for the detailed planning and a fantastic ride!

photo by sommervillebikes

photo by sommervillebikes

photo by sommervillebikes


photo by sommervillebikes

photo by sommervillebikes
by Justin








Tuesday, July 3, 2012

"Product Testing" Brake Levers Odyssey & TRP

I ride several bikes with riser handlebars. I like to chop off a little of the length at the ends of the bars.  The handlebar, grips, and brake levers all come together to form the cockpit area to make clean looking bike. I like two brands of brake levers... Odyssey & TRP, both in the BMX style.  They are small, nice looking.  Both levers work great, with a nod to Odyssey for braking force applied. TRP levers are super slick and  nicely polished. Odyssey uses replaceable brass bushings and includes an extra set of bushings. TRP uses sealed bearings, a forged bracket, and a lever. The levers are available for right and left configuration. So the next time you are setting-up your Fixie or Super Sweet Single speed take a look at these brake levers. Thanks for checking in... see you on road.

by Perry 

Friday, June 29, 2012

Ian & Natalies first anniversary

Ian and Natalie decided to give each other new bicycles for their first anniversary.  They did their homework through extensive research and shopping.  Natalie knew as much about Public Bikes as we did from her research.  They visited several of the bike shops in the Highlands and tried out numerous bikes.  Ian chose a Purefix single speed and Natalie a 7 speed Public Bike.  She found the quality and style of her Public Bike to be just what she was looking for.  Add the free lifetime tune ups at VCB,  free rack & basket plus Perry's service oriented sales approach and their search was over.   
Happy anniversary Ian and Natalie!  
We look forward to taking care of your bikes for many years..

Vic

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Vic's Sunday Morning LBC Ride




Summer is in full swing, sunny skies, warm temps. On this beautiful morning 56 riders showed-up for a 25 mile outing. We traveled city streets to Butchertown, and went out River Rd. (The Ohio river was looking especially inviting today.  It looked like a huge lake all calm and smooth.)  Next we went up Lime Kiln and down Glenview back to River Rd.   From there we went up Indian Hills to St. Matthews, through Seneca & Cherokee Parks to the Highlands, and back to Vic's Classic Bikes.  A good time was had by all.  If you have the time on a Sunday morning it's a standing  invitation... Come ride with us!
by Perry

Friday, June 22, 2012

"Product Testing" Finish Line Ceramic Wet Chain Lube

For lubing bicycle chains over the years I have used practically everything under the sun.  Three in one oil comes to mind early on, engine motor oil, WD-40, Tri-Flow, many different spray lubricates, wet and dry graphite the list is long. Searching for a really good quality product to lube bicycle chains is relatively easy now a days. Most of my riding is done on the streets "black top" not gravel, not dirt trails. I like quiet running chains be it single or multi-speed drive train. Wet lubes seems to be the way I choose to go. In the last 3 or 4 years ceramic this...ceramic that...has been the buzz. So I thought here is a product with the latest greatest stuff in it... well since sliced bread. Finish Line Ceramic WET Bicycle Chain Lube so I got some and gave it a try (after reading about this product I couldn't resist). Here's the really good part,  it's GREAT STUFF! flows on smooth doesn't clog up (no need to shake the bottle), penetrates into rollers well, gives you a super quiet running chain, waterproof stays on the chain, doesn't sling all over the place so its not messy. It lasts for a good long while. No annoying fragrances or dyes. It's white clean looking right? Well it turns black pretty quick, this products works extremely well as advertised. Any how... that's my story and I'm sticking to it. Thanks for stopping by. 
Perry

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=yXwexH0tjRM#!



 

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Schwinn Peloton 58cm $650.


Cinelli bar & stem, Suntour Superbe Pro shifters, derailleurs, Sugino 75 crankset 53-42 chainrings, 7 speed cassette, Rolls saddle, Tange headset, Royal Grand Compe brakes calipers & brake levers, Frameset lugged, Columbus tubing, tubular (sew-ups) tires, araya hoops, Suntour Superbe Pro hubs
Comes with 90 DAY UNCONDITIONAL WARRANTY & UNLIMITED LIFETIME TUNE UP

 http://www.vicsclassicbikes.com/

by Perry

Monday, June 18, 2012

PURE FIX Cycles "Fixie"


                                                 "GET YOUR FIX ON"


                                   PURE FIX Cycles 
                                             Vic's newest line
                                              sizes: 50cm  54cm  58cm
                                       Multitude of Colors       
                                                 Standard features include:
                           flip flop hub (fixed & freewheel) 
                           gearing 44 x 16 = 74.25 gear inches
                          50mm deep dish wheels, 28mm tires 
                                               front brake
                                     MSRP  $325.00 American 

by Perry

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Vic's Anniversary Ride 2nd Annual


                              Father's Day June 17th 2012 

Forty-Seven riders strong rode this Louisville Bicycle Club ride today out of Vic's Classic Bikes on the 2nd Anniversary of Vic's Classic Bikes in this location.  This is a regular Sunday morning ride feel free to try it out. Vic's wife Laura treated us to a food fair... fruit bowl, yogurt, coffee, juice, milk,  and doughnuts. Wonderful fuel for cyclists after a great ride.  Thanks to all the riders for coming out!  Special thanks to Vic and Laura for a really good time.
by Perry

Friday, June 15, 2012

PUBLIC Bikes


Yes! PUBLIC Bikes are in the store ready to ride, we've had two shipments. The first ones went flying out the door! These are the PUBLIC Bikes C7 models,  Mens and Women's in stock $595. Come by, check these sweet machines out!!! Classic European city bikes designed for today's urban environment.
Special Limited time offer:
Free Color matched Rear Rack w/ Spring Clip a $60 value with bike purchase. 

by Perry



"Product Testing" Finish Line Ceramic Grease

Working around the shop overhauling bottom brackets, wheel bearings, headsets, lubing stems, pedals threads, seat posts, and  bolts threads. I could name a few more but why!!! Requires one to apply grease to these parts. This is like re-living childhood... getting to play with a substance (grease) that ends up everywhere, where you intend for it to go and every place in between. After years of experience handling and working with  various brands, multitudes of colors grease is not the same. The feedback in your fingers of what is good in the way of grease (the way in feels... tackiness, sticky, thick or thin, smooth texture, stringy). Life is an ongoing process... so are new cycling products today its grease. Synthetic grease with teflon-infused ceramic nano-bits, what's not to love? The color is white it has a nice clean look. The feel is right! This product works with steel or ceramic bearings that's a plus. Time will tell how good it really is. I need to go clean-up... thanks for checking in.
by Perry

 http://www.finishlineusa.com/products/ceramic_grease.htm