Not really at present Colin, there's nothing tickling my imagination ... although, on my way to the post office, I was thinking that a Crust Scapegoat might be nice but then on my way back, I decided against itNot even curious to try something?

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Not really at present Colin, there's nothing tickling my imagination ... although, on my way to the post office, I was thinking that a Crust Scapegoat might be nice but then on my way back, I decided against itNot even curious to try something?
Doesn't matter if money is no object - unless it's actually irreplaceable/sentimental.Ray Young wrote:Be nice to have anything you wanted but I'd be constantly worrying about leaving it places no matter how secure.
But would it really? Wouldn't it remove some of the pleasure of attaining something?Be nice to have anything you wanted
Where do I sign up?Jamesh wrote: If I can have a tractor on demo for 4 months..
RIP wrote:I'm going along with the 'time' angle. Really, each new shiny bauble takes less time to pall than the previous one. I pick up the odd bit now and then but faaaarrrrrrrr and away TIME is the best currency I've ever spent. For example, 11 year old BP machine, does the job, and the pleasure is in the doing not the having... I'd have as much fun BP'ing on an old Raleigh shopper. (Hmm... <thinks> .. I wonder if anyone has a photo of one of those for BP.......)
Ti fat bike frame, adventure geo, takes 4.8", have a rack for it, Hope rear hub, SON front, Supernova light, 80 mm carbon rims, carbon bars but not Jones', SRAM GX drivetrain, Turbine cranks.whitestone wrote:Custom ti fat bike frame, adventure rather than trail geometry, Suitable for 5" tyres, plus detachable rear rack. Onyx rear hub, SON dynamo front hub, 100mm carbon rims, carbon Jones loop bars, SRAM Eagle 1x12 drivetrain, not sure what brakes.
Very much so. That's by far the main motivation that gets me behind my sewing machine etc. for self-made bike bags, quilts, shelters, rucksacks and modifying clothing. I don't like sewing at all, but (designing and) using MYOG is fun enough, to justify the effort.RIP wrote:does anybody else get that thing where whatever you buy there's always something, however small, despite however long you think you've spent evaluating it before purchasing it, that's ever so slightly wrong or disappointing about it but you only notice afterwards?
If you have a friend who sells them and used to race them himself, you may not be wanting one. The black rubber - for complicated reasons I simply can't call it's name - in the seatstay has a very short lifespan and looses it's inital properties fast, leaving you with a knocking and loose sensation.In Reverse wrote:I'd quite like a hot air balloon.
And one of those nice BMC carbon softails with a Lauf fork on it.
I’ve just fitted an EESilk suspension post, only 50g more than a Thompson and very comfy. That and carbon woodchippers and the Fargo is near perfect, perhaps I don’t need that dream bike.Alpinum wrote:In Reverse wrote: Just run a thin seat postmore comfort when riding seated, less faff.
Twenty years ago my ex and I had a Dawes Double Edge fitted with a suspension fork and suspension seatpost on the rear. Best £800 I ever spent for the best off road fun ever. It really balanced out our differences in fitness. It was however unusable offroad until I fitted the sus fork as obviously there is no way you can lift the front end.restlessshawn wrote:Lightweight tandem gravel bike, this would be utterly pointless as my wife refuses to try a tandem