marge602
Retro Guru
So, the other day i recieved a bike shop summer catalogue through the post. I'd only bought one item from the shop in question, but it's always nice to have something new and bike-related to flick through occasionally. Until i happened upon this abomination, that is.
Quite apart from it being called an Eastway, which sounds like something you'd get from Sports Direct for about £80, this must be the least attractive modern road bike i've ever seen. From an engineering point of view, i can only regard cable discs on a road bike as a solution searching for a problem.
For example, look how overbuilt the tips of the forks have to be. They look like the forks on our tandem. Then, at the rear dropout area, an extra brace has had to be added to prevent the non drive side seatstay from snapping. Obviously the wheels have to be stronger and therefore heavier to be able to transfer the braking forces outwards from the hubs to the rims and tyres.
I may be coming across as a complete curmudgeon, unable to appreciate anything that isn't finely lugged and brazed out of high-quality steel, but i have more modern bikes than retros, and my flagship bike is a Giant TCR Advanced, which is about as far from lugged and brazed steel as it's possible to get.
However, this thing, for me, is a pointless step in the wrong direction. Just because discs work well on MTB's and are now UCI sanctioned for use on CX bikes doesn't make it right. Added to which, the Eastway whatever-it's-actually-called costs just shy of 2 grand. I can think of plenty of other ways to spend that.
Regards
Marge
Quite apart from it being called an Eastway, which sounds like something you'd get from Sports Direct for about £80, this must be the least attractive modern road bike i've ever seen. From an engineering point of view, i can only regard cable discs on a road bike as a solution searching for a problem.
For example, look how overbuilt the tips of the forks have to be. They look like the forks on our tandem. Then, at the rear dropout area, an extra brace has had to be added to prevent the non drive side seatstay from snapping. Obviously the wheels have to be stronger and therefore heavier to be able to transfer the braking forces outwards from the hubs to the rims and tyres.
I may be coming across as a complete curmudgeon, unable to appreciate anything that isn't finely lugged and brazed out of high-quality steel, but i have more modern bikes than retros, and my flagship bike is a Giant TCR Advanced, which is about as far from lugged and brazed steel as it's possible to get.
However, this thing, for me, is a pointless step in the wrong direction. Just because discs work well on MTB's and are now UCI sanctioned for use on CX bikes doesn't make it right. Added to which, the Eastway whatever-it's-actually-called costs just shy of 2 grand. I can think of plenty of other ways to spend that.
Regards
Marge