
Rubber tyres of an ikon or Crossmark variety are also good
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Ian wrote:@ianfitz - I meant relatively speaking for anyone
Rubber tyres of an ikon or Crossmark variety are also good
I think it depends what you're hoping to do. If you can manage 10km/h then you should be able to complete it in (roughly) 20 hours, so if you're after 'black' that leaves 4 hours for stops/faffing ... doesn't that sound easy?Also is the general consensus to ride with bivvy kit but plan on minimal breaks or do folk plan a strategic rest somewhere? Or is this (more likely!) a personal choice?
Think that pretty much answers my questions!s8tannorm wrote:remember, Death or Glory :D
I think just after 10.00pm Sunday night is the latest, so that's 36 hours to cover 200km or 5.5km/h or 3.6mph ... so it should actually be possible to walk it non stop in a similar timeStu, just out of interest what are the slowest times that people return the next day? I just want to make sure I've not bitten of more than I can chew.
This all seems strangely familiar.evilgoat wrote:My first bb200. Was planning to go last year but my daughter was born the weekend before.
I recall Ian worked it out to something approaching, rather a lotDoes anyone know the total ascent for the route?
If you had a sat nav and didn't know the area, would it be easy to follow? Outside riding, this is the other thing to worry about :? I managed to almost get lost following the WHW...but I was kinda relying on the signs most of the wayZippy wrote:How difficult is the navigation? Including the night nav bit...
That's exactly what I was thinking tooScotRoutes wrote:Dammit. I was hoping that I'd just generally feign non-interest in this but there's something nagging away at me, especially so when I see that this is the last time on that route.
If you're using a gps then you should be fine. There are a few vague bits but they're only really an issue if you find yourself there in the dark ... something that'll be much easier to avoid this year.If you had a sat nav and didn't know the area, would it be easy to follow? Outside riding, this is the other thing to worry about
You, me and ...?s8tannorm wrote:I think it's far to say that there's possibly only 3 people I can think of with enough 'local knowledge' to allow them to know the entire route
Strava tends to under record things by about 10%, so 5000m is a good estimate.s8tannorm wrote:I recall Ian worked it out to something approaching, rather a lotDoes anyone know the total ascent for the route?5000m springs to mind but I could be talking rubbish.
FWIW The 1st time I tried it with 'well marked up 50K maps' (the sort of think I'd happily use to get from A to B off road in most places and with nav/mapreading skills usually regarded as 'good') I got lost in fog at Strata Florida and ended up in a Tregaron pub some hours laters8tannorm wrote:If you had a sat nav and didn't know the area, would it be easy to follow? Outside riding, this is the other thing to worry about