Stooge Cycles - who...
 

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[Closed] Stooge Cycles - who's interested? (slack 29er content)

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I live in the wrong part of the country 🙁
Essex is mind numbingly flat.

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 10:53 am
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Where is that miran?

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 12:33 pm
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ska-49 - Member

I live in the wrong part of the country
Essex is mind numbingly flat.


I'd really, honestly, seriously consider moving. Even allowing for all the hardships involved, living within cycling distance of hills and great trails is life-changing.

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 12:36 pm
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He wouldn't have all those Essex Girls then though 🙂

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 12:45 pm
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Amen @Alex.

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 1:31 pm
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@bonesetter: Slovenia, at the end of Soca Valley

 
Posted : 26/11/2014 2:02 pm
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I appreciate the engineering reasons for it but from the point of view of set up and adjustment, the site of the rear brake calliper is the work of a malevolent evil genius.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 10:55 am
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I appreciate the engineering reasons for it but from the point of view of set up and adjustment, the site of the rear brake calliper is the work of a malevolent evil genius.

Ha ha, love it. I have no retort. You need good ball socket allen keys, and a 180 rotor and then it's fine(r).

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 4:34 pm
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It's just about doable with a straight hex key and crossed fingers. 180mm rotor on the rear? Shudder.

I finally (I've been sick for a while) managed to get a first build out the door and around a few metres of backwoods singletrack. It does feel like a bike that wants to go fast. But it'll take me a while to get used to lack of brake dive before I can ride it with any competence.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 4:53 pm
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Pics or it didn't happen Matt 😉

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 5:21 pm
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I question myself if it happened.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 5:27 pm
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😆

Which colour did you go for?

Apologies in advance if I missed this somewhere in the thread.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 5:31 pm
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I've got the blue as the purple's sold out now.

Both colours are lovely IMO, but blue's just as well as I ride a lot with Cheezpleez so 2 purples would have been a bit his'n'hers.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 5:51 pm
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You up and running now Mattjg

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 6:49 pm
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More or less, done a shakedown 10 minute ride. Gearing's a bit heavy, may back off on that a bit, and I can't find my nice reserve stem.

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 6:51 pm
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Quote from @cheezpleez at the pub "no point locking it, no one's going to nick a shopping bike".

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 6:56 pm
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I have a 160 on the back but the had to use a Hope adapter rather than the Formula one. The result is an imperfectly positioned brake that squeals. Now I get told to put a 180 there

 
Posted : 30/11/2014 10:54 pm
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XT calliper with Shimano mount - 160mm rotor: a little fiddly to set up but works fine on a first test.

 
Posted : 01/12/2014 8:47 am
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in all seriousness, a 160 is fine and what it's designed for, i just got into the habit of bigger brakes. Park Tools make a 5mm allen key that's angled on the head, means you can get to the bolts a lot easier. They're about £7 and well worth owning. funnily enough i once tried to fit a Formula brake, it was real pain.

 
Posted : 01/12/2014 4:21 pm
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I didn't find fitting the rear brake problematic. In fact I didn't even notice until you made that point! I must of been lucky- Exo's on 160mm rotors.

Fitting my Rabbit hole with Maxxis Chronicle front wheel this week- look forward to my first ride. 😀

 
Posted : 01/12/2014 4:34 pm
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Had my first ride with a Chronicle/Dually combo at the weekend. I was impressed. It coped with very wet Surrey hills slop with no problems at all - loads of grip and quite a bit more cush than a 2.4. I'd tried a Knard on a Crest before which was OK in the dry but lethal in the damp and I was always a bit nervous of pushing it hard due to the narrow rim.

 
Posted : 01/12/2014 6:38 pm
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Today I rode a purple and a blue Stooge back to back down the same notoriously slippery chalky, off-camber, rooty trail. I can confirm that purple Stooges are faster*.

* If fitted with a Chronicle.

 
Posted : 07/12/2014 6:35 pm
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Glad to hear it, still waiting for my Chronicle though 😥

 
Posted : 07/12/2014 6:40 pm
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Cheezpleez has it .....Purples are def faster ...

 
Posted : 07/12/2014 7:17 pm
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So Cheez and I went riding - his purple fat fronted, my blue regular (2.3 Purgatory on a Crest).

We rode the same trail back to back with a bike switch, I gotta say I'm pretty sold on the fat front. This is a greasy, rooty, off camber North Downs trail, if ever there was a test for grip this is it. (We wouldn't usually go there this time of year). On the FF purple the rear was fish tailing all over the place, because I was riding it harder, but the front just keeps going so eventually the rear has no option but to follow.

No other significant difference in build, both SS, short stem wide bars, we're about the same fit.

Fat front or not, this is a fun bike.

 
Posted : 07/12/2014 8:20 pm
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Just for fun I put a 2.35 Hans Dampf up front on a Flow.

It's like pushing a brick around - uphill and down - and there is little benefit from the rigid bike point of view. Don't do it.

 
Posted : 11/12/2014 3:50 pm
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Just for fun I put a 2.35 Hans Dampf up front on a Flow.

It's like pushing a brick around - uphill and down - and there is little benefit from the rigid bike point of view. Don't do it.

Nooooooo

I've just bought two of these tyres to run on the fronts of two rigid 29ers ..... One on a Flow rim the other a Dually.

Sad face.

 
Posted : 11/12/2014 9:24 pm
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I ran a 2.35 Hans Dampf Trailstar on the front of my Charge Cooker Rigid last winter and it was great, also on a Stan's Flow rim set up tubeless at around 24psi. Perfect for the woodland singletrack round our way; rolled pretty well bad grips like a limpet.

I'd still be using it but I've sold the bike and moved onto 29+ now.

 
Posted : 11/12/2014 9:33 pm
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They're certainly quite grippy - getting the damn things moving from stationary is a substantial effort, they're blooming' stuck to the floor.

@LMTTM you'll be good, I'm probably being soft.

 
Posted : 12/12/2014 7:09 am
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LOL ...Mattjg 😆

That was coming from on On-One Chunky Monkey which was much draggier so it may just be all relative.

 
Posted : 12/12/2014 8:06 am
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For sure, I think they're a bit lighter than a Monkey.

 
Posted : 12/12/2014 9:00 am
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Got the 50mm carbon Nextie rim built up now. Lighter than the Flow Ex it replaced.
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 11:21 am
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Could you take a photo of the rear wheel clearance? What rear tyre are you running?

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 12:07 pm
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Those that have replaced CMs with Chronicles, how do they compare? Rolling, grip etc.

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 1:22 pm
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Ska, the 2nd rim was faulty so have to wait for a warranty replacement.

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 1:37 pm
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are they the jungle fox rims?

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 1:41 pm
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are they the jungle fox rims?

Yes

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 2:24 pm
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looks fab, I'm gonna have to get some!

How was the service from nextie?

How is the junglefox tubeless ability?

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 2:33 pm
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I'll get back to you on the tubeless as there's a tube in there just now but I'm going to set it up tubeless for a ride tomorrow. Brian at Nextie has been good to deal with, they're making me a replacement to ship asap. Bit gutting though as I'd laced the wheel and was tensioning it when I noticed the fault and had to strip it and rebuild the front hub onto the other rim. These things happen though.

 
Posted : 17/12/2014 3:08 pm
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What was the fault that you found? I imagine that it'll go up tubeless pretty easily. My rabbit hole & Chronicle went up without issue.

 
Posted : 18/12/2014 9:14 am
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There was a ridge of additional material next to a spoke hole preventing the nipple from seating properly.
Got it set up tubeless last night. Took a few goes with a compressor as the tyre was quite loose, but has been rock solid overnight. An additional layer of Stans tape would probably make next time easier.

 
Posted : 18/12/2014 9:54 am
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Great! thanks for the update.

 
Posted : 18/12/2014 9:57 am
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my brothers, ignore the slippy seat angle and the unconventional non-drive side pic,

[URL= http://i1272.photobucket.com/albums/y394/dansipods2/ScreenShot2014-12-29at232957_zpsdf1dbfca.pn g" target="_blank">http://i1272.photobucket.com/albums/y394/dansipods2/ScreenShot2014-12-29at232957_zpsdf1dbfca.pn g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

 
Posted : 29/12/2014 11:35 pm
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[URL= http://i1272.photobucket.com/albums/y394/dansipods2/ScreenShot2014-12-29at235817_zps2f515088.pn g" target="_blank">http://i1272.photobucket.com/albums/y394/dansipods2/ScreenShot2014-12-29at235817_zps2f515088.pn g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

 
Posted : 30/12/2014 12:00 am
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Ignored

 
Posted : 30/12/2014 6:16 am
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Stooge enjoying the snow in Slovenia
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 30/12/2014 6:52 am
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my brothers, ignore the slippy seat angle and the unconventional non-drive side pic,

What about the brake hoses? 🙂

 
Posted : 30/12/2014 8:06 am
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haha yer, i spoke to him about that, he first fixed it, took it to the LBS and they didn't trim the hoses when they set to all up,

needs sorting

 
Posted : 30/12/2014 9:19 am
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[img] [/img]

Got the rear 50mm Nextie wheel built up now. Gives great volume to a 2.25 Ardent.

 
Posted : 11/01/2015 8:40 pm
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Link to rims please. Did you build them yourself?

 
Posted : 12/01/2015 7:57 am
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I built them and they were fine to work with. Rims are [url= http://www.nextie-bike.com/fat-bike/29-inch-wheels-50mm/carbon-fiber-fatbikes-29inch-rim-50mm-width-tubeless-ready-double-wall-jungle-fox-nxt50jf ]here[/url]. Service was good, and they dealt with a warranty issue very smoothly.

 
Posted : 12/01/2015 9:09 am
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Thanks.

 
Posted : 12/01/2015 9:38 am
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What's the EBB clamp bolt torque setting?

Cheers

 
Posted : 20/01/2015 11:51 am
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Not very tight for the bolts - 4nm, which without a torque wrench, is not much more than hand tight. Don't crank it, all that will happen is that the BB shell will flex.
- Jonestown, a.k.a. Mr Stooge, pg.15

 
Posted : 20/01/2015 12:15 pm
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THanks cokie - 4nm

Locktite too?

 
Posted : 20/01/2015 12:26 pm
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I didn't bother. I've done 7 months of riding, mostly in mud, without bother and adjusting it is easy.

 
Posted : 20/01/2015 1:38 pm
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Latest Stooge incarnation - thought I would try her single speed

This is my third and ABSOLUTELY FINAL TIME IN MY LIFE EVER I am going to try ss

Why oh why in god's holy name does anyone really [i]want[/i] to do this

Misery

Anyway, looks nice with Middleburn RS-8's. Gives the Stooge a retro look

[img] [/img]

.

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:02 am
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Misery and suffering is precisely why people ride SS 😉

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:07 am
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[i]Why oh why in god's holy name does anyone really want to do this

Misery[/i]

It depends where you ride but I felt that after the first few rides.

After a while it clicked though and although I don't ride SS all the time now it is a different type of riding experience I enjoy from time to time.

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:11 am
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[i]Misery and suffering is precisely why people ride SS [/i]

Some folk just want to make life harder for themselves 🙂

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:40 am
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I love my Stooge as an SS bike! There is no way I'd want gears on it.
I've been thinking about changing a few of my other builds to SS now.

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:46 am
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Why buy a frame with an ebb in the first place if your not going to go SS ?

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 8:55 am
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I might put gears back on after doing puffer SS and this happening on Lap 15

[URL= http://i800.photobucket.com/albums/yy285/kbrembo/IMAG1562_zpsjiy2k06c.jp g" target="_blank">http://i800.photobucket.com/albums/yy285/kbrembo/IMAG1562_zpsjiy2k06c.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 9:07 am
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[i]Why buy a frame with an ebb in the first place if your not going to go SS[/i]

you can choose effective seat stay length and alter the BB height a bit too?

Kbrembo - did you roar in acknowledgement of your own puissance?

 
Posted : 23/01/2015 9:10 am
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Got the opportunity to swap my purple for a SS specific blue one and went for it. I'm liking the blue more all the time.
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 26/01/2015 8:28 pm
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Me too and liked it quite allot to start with.

Why buy a frame with an ebb in the first place if your not going to go SS ?

Because its a great frame and the eccentric BB means you can monkey around with the BB position a bit. Plus it makes for a fairly stiff BB area which turns out to be a very good thing.

 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:12 pm
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*Spam alert* My Middleburn SS set-up is FS

 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:16 pm
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SS kit only or bike??

 
Posted : 26/01/2015 9:20 pm
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What's the difference between the SS only and the others ...just 3 holes behind qr ?

 
Posted : 26/01/2015 10:48 pm
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Less cable guides

 
Posted : 27/01/2015 6:59 am
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Clink - Member
SS kit only or bike??

Nooooooo - kit only 🙂

RS-8 Cranks, Uno ring etc

 
Posted : 27/01/2015 9:11 am
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Kbrembo - chapeau

🙂

 
Posted : 27/01/2015 9:44 am
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I ride mine SS because, despite living right next to some great trails, I have young kids - so a bike that can go back in the shed whatever its state is a major bonus. 🙂

 
Posted : 31/01/2015 7:15 pm
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So... any sign of the red special edition?

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 2:28 pm
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i'll let you know in about 3 weeks, Honorable George.

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 4:27 pm
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Is there any more exciting news coming Andy 😈 ?!

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 4:41 pm
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jonestown - Member
i'll let you know in about 3 weeks, Honorable George.

🙂

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 5:06 pm
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Is there any more exciting news coming Andy ?!

❓ 🙂

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 6:12 pm
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If anyone wants to sell me a purple for the wife...?

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 6:14 pm
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Spring is on its way...

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 02/02/2015 7:11 pm
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