I didn't want a new bike. I just saw this in 18 bikes in Hope. I couldn't afford it, so I bought it and then thought about paying for it later. That's not the sort of thing I normally do. I was just so taken with it.
It wasn't quite like this when I bought. It was built to be a little bit more 'gnar', as modern parlance would have it. It had Pikes, 27 SRAM gears and SLX cranks.
I've stuck a new DT Swiss 140mm fork on it, 1x10 XT drivetrain (11-36 cassette) and my old Middleburns with an 36 tooth uno ring (thanks Mark), plus the faithful Roox Chaindog.
I've never had disc brakes before. These Hope Mono M4 seem pretty good. You can get yourself into and out of a lot of trouble with these.
To pay for it I sold my Fat Chance Buckshaver and my X lite Pro ti and quite a few other bits and pieces. I kept my old Spooky Bandwagon.
The Nicolai is an amazing bike, but I rather feel as though I've lost my (retro) identity. I'm all at sea with this modernity. I love riding it but I don't enjoy my riding more than I did on my old bikes - particularly the Fat. That said I would never taken five foot drop offs on the Fat.
What have I learned? Progress is illusory? Maybe. And there's a whole industry out there dedicated to tempting us to new things. I think I knew that already though.
Rich
It wasn't quite like this when I bought. It was built to be a little bit more 'gnar', as modern parlance would have it. It had Pikes, 27 SRAM gears and SLX cranks.
I've stuck a new DT Swiss 140mm fork on it, 1x10 XT drivetrain (11-36 cassette) and my old Middleburns with an 36 tooth uno ring (thanks Mark), plus the faithful Roox Chaindog.
I've never had disc brakes before. These Hope Mono M4 seem pretty good. You can get yourself into and out of a lot of trouble with these.
To pay for it I sold my Fat Chance Buckshaver and my X lite Pro ti and quite a few other bits and pieces. I kept my old Spooky Bandwagon.
The Nicolai is an amazing bike, but I rather feel as though I've lost my (retro) identity. I'm all at sea with this modernity. I love riding it but I don't enjoy my riding more than I did on my old bikes - particularly the Fat. That said I would never taken five foot drop offs on the Fat.
What have I learned? Progress is illusory? Maybe. And there's a whole industry out there dedicated to tempting us to new things. I think I knew that already though.
Rich