jefmcg
Guru
You could have cropped her out of the photo.if you can concentrate past my lady friend's legs,
But it's a nice composition, I'm not surprised you left it.
(and I like the picture without fancying her

You could have cropped her out of the photo.if you can concentrate past my lady friend's legs,
Oh, no, I wasn't being all "careful now". It just feels like a waste without being able @ fnaar (space left to hopefully not summon him).
I nearly went the other way and said something like "if it's small enough, you won't even realise it's in there" but restrained myself![]()
Personally, i wouldn't fancy going long distance on a bike with only 16 inch wheels.
I missed this post, but I think I agree the cheapest way to go touring on a folding bike that I would recommend would be to use a Raleigh 20 (Stowaway), I commuted on one for a few years and it was great, I would be happy to take one touring. You could go on Ebay and get a one for 50 quid and do it up, the main upgrades needed would be a good service and some modern high pressure tyres. They are really solid bikes will support the weight of all the the touring kit, simple to maintain and I think you can split them at the hinge so can pack them down to a very small size if you have the time and the need.
Having done long distance with three other Bromptons without issue as opposed to the one 20" which did develop tyre related issues - I would be interested in your reasoning.Personally, i wouldn't fancy going long distance on a bike with only 16 inch wheels. My folder has 20 inch wheels. I would go long distance on them.
Having done long distance with three other Bromptons without issue as opposed to the one 20" which did develop tyre related issues - I would be interested in your reasoning.
The only serious issue I have had due to size is mountainous descents. The small rims do heat up dangerously. The ignominy was having to walk down a mountain I had cycled up!
[T'was in Welsh Wales too]
The only serious issue I have had due to size is mountainous descents. The small rims do heat up dangerously. The ignominy was having to walk down a mountain I had cycled up!
[T'was in Welsh Wales too]
Concur with that^^^^I've always found that if you sit pretty upright on a Brompton (other folders are available) you'll not go above 25-30 mph.
A few seconds of hard braking before the hairpin gets me down to a less-scary cornering speed without cooking the rims.
I've used this technique coming down Ventoux and the Col de Mort d'Imbert, both in Provence, and involving slopes of 4-12%
It's long periods of braking that heat the rims IME. I can also confirm that Bromptons are surprisingly stable at 40 mph. Well, I had to try it. A racing crouch on a Brommie looks bloody stupid!