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Paladin1 wrote:I have been planning on building a BOB (Bug Out Bike) for awhile now and today I scored an old Hardrock off craigslist.
The goal is to make it a bomb-proof PAW bike.
I was a roadie many moons ago and put in many miles, century rides, etc. so I know my way around a bike.
BUT this is the first Mtn. bike I've ever had and I've been out of the game for some time so I need a little advice.
It has a decent cro-mo frame from what I can tell, probably heavy by today's standards I'm sure. But I thought that might be a good thing for it's intended use. I got the smallest frame I thought I could use, from my days on the bike I know smaller means stiffer.
It has some bosses right under the down tube above the brake bosses? Is that for a fender or panniers? There are also double eyelets right above the rear dropout that almost have to be for fenders or panniers?
The component gruppo is all low end stuff, Front fork is a RockShox Jett00, then Shimano Acera, and Weinmann rims.
I've never had a suspension fork and it dives quite a bit when I hit the brakes. I turned the adjuster knobs, but they don't seem to affect any preload or rebound so I'm guessing there worn out.
Since I would like to load this sucker with as much gear as possible, should I switch to a non-suspension fork? Any suggestions?
Then the Shimano group, I don't want Dura-Ace/Campy level stuff, just basic workhorse level. Any suggestions on that?
Then, of course, wheels. Since I'm not looking for speed as much as weight capacity, are these wheels good enough? Can I have them trued up, throw what ever decent tires that are out there on it and call it good?
I think I'd like to load the bike and avoid a trailer, what are my options?
For the sake of discussion, I weld and fabricate, so making brackets and welding them on is no problem.
I tried to watch the one guys video, but I just couldn't take his slow ass presentation style, it was killing me to watch it, just painfull. So he may know his shit, but I'm just not strong enough to watch all that.![]()
Help.
doitnstyle1 wrote:I think grey man is also key here. My bike is badly spray painted looks like crap but rides very well and is reliable. No one messes with it because it looks like a cheapy bike that is not worth reselling not even to the crackheads.
doitnstyle1 wrote:Another good deterrent is a cable lock with armor links surrounding the cable. it will not allow cable cutters to cut through, and too large and unruly for breaching with bolt cutters. Obviously the saying "only as strong as the weakest link" applies here . Usually either the lock or the chain/cable.




JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

congochris wrote:The catch and slidehammer was another idea I had. I may go that route before destroying an impact socket. Broke as I am, even a HF impact socket purchase is more than I can truly spare.
I did try cutting it with a hacksaw. Unfortunately with 13 or so inches of tube inside.. it.. didn't work. I hesitate to mention I got so frustrated I cut a sawzall blade short enough to fit in the pole and used a dewalt recip saw since the floppy ass hacksaw blade was useless. And at one point a cold chisel... ahem. I may have lightly dented the steel pole. I figure I'll just heat it with a torch and tap it back into shape, since it's not that deformed. I'm damn well going to get my $35.50's worth out of this damn frame!
Wouldn't it be great if all wars could be fought just by the assholes who started them?
-The Postman

JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

Tater Raider wrote:redcrow wrote:I'm 6'4" and right now I'm 350 pounds. The few bikes I can find the info lists a max load of 190lbs,
most companies just don't publish that info.
The weak link on bicycles as far as weight goes is the wheel and axles. Contact your LBS and see if they can make you some hardcore, heavy duty wheels. Last time I checked they run $75-$100 at my LBS. If you want to learn to lace wheels you can turn it into a DIY project and build your own.

JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

jamoni wrote:At Goodwill today, I found an old ladies' ten speed for $25. 26" steel wheels, built like a tank. Guess what's going to replace my bent up aluminum wheel(s)?
JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

JoergS wrote:Realistically, I think I can launch a nine pound chain saw at 50 fps from a shoulder mounted rubber powered bazooka...
squinty wrote:I reserve the right to yell "Dookyhole!" - or it's Hebrew equivalent if such a thing exists - whilst dispensing a barrage of palm strikes at my opponent.

Jeriah wrote:Tater Raider wrote:redcrow wrote:I'm 6'4" and right now I'm 350 pounds. The few bikes I can find the info lists a max load of 190lbs,
most companies just don't publish that info.
The weak link on bicycles as far as weight goes is the wheel and axles. Contact your LBS and see if they can make you some hardcore, heavy duty wheels. Last time I checked they run $75-$100 at my LBS. If you want to learn to lace wheels you can turn it into a DIY project and build your own.
In my experience this is 100% correct, and to be even more specific, I found that it was the spokes that were the weakest part of the wheel. I went on a long ride, prob. weighed about 250lbs myself but...wait a minute...I weigh 270 now and my bike handles me fine, so you're either looking at flimsy bikes, or they lowball their capacity a LOT for liability reasons...anyway, with a crate and panniers full of camping stuff, I broke a lot of spokes on that trip.
So, my advice would be, like Tater said, get stronger wheels. More spokes, thicker spokes, or crazy blade-like spoke-fin-things. Talk the the shop, tell 'em your sitch, and they'll help you out.
Wouldn't it be great if all wars could be fought just by the assholes who started them?
-The Postman

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