Showing posts with label urban cycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban cycling. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2011

You will love these: SKS Raceblade Long


The rainy season is here already, and these look just fabulous. Standard short Raceblades are IMHO the best snap-on fenders by far so I have high very hopes for these. And for the record, I've tried Crud Roadracers but really couldn't get them installed satisfactorily on any of my bikes despite hard efforts.

Seen at Eurobike, read and see more here.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

WIT Industries: The Fendor-Bendor


You know you need this, unless you prefer your ass wet and crusty. It's light, foldable, cheap and even comes in many happy colors. Available at Pristine Amsterdam

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

"The most unsuspecting cycling shoe ever"


Chrome Kursk Pro from Chrome Bags on Vimeo.

Kursk Pro SPDs, as rocked by Squid in the clip, are finally out today, HERE.

Also, Chrome released today a host of other new products and reworked bags which you might want to check out: Sherman, Buran, Falcon, Romer and Bishop wallet.

Monday, February 14, 2011

"Bike Lanes Safer Than Cycling in Streets"


This is interesting, although I personally tend to agree with the differing opinion expressed by the Bicycle Coalition in the end of the article: http://www.baycitizen.org/bikes/story/harvard-study-bike-lanes-safer-cycling/

"A study by the Harvard School of Public Health released this week shows that separated bike lanes are safer for cyclists than mixing with cars in streets, resulting in 28 percent fewer injuries.

The Harvard research was conducted during an eighth-month period in Montreal, a city with a longstanding network of separated bike lanes, and published this week in the journal Injury Prevention.

“These data suggest that the injury risk of bicycling on cycle tracks is less than bicycling in streets,” the study’s authors wrote. “The construction of cycle tracks should not be discouraged.

But there is also some dissention within the ranks of the bicycle coalition itself about separated lanes. Some avid cyclists consider such lanes too confining, and if more ordinary folks start riding bikes in the city, they’re going to get in the way.

“Experienced cyclists like to go fast,” wrote Matt Baume, “and they don't like to swerve around kids and old people and fatties and tourists.”

Monday, November 8, 2010

KRNKY World Domination Starts Now!


It was about time. KRNKY is finally ready to start shipping their goodies almost worldwide:

"Much interest towards KRNKY goods has been shown from all around the globe and you have been asking us to open our store to more and more countries. Now it’s time for USA, Canada, Japan and Australia! Shipping costs are 13€ per parcel and all international orders are shipped registered with a tracking code."

Look here for more: http://krnky.com/

(And no, they don't sell bikes, at least not yet at the moment. That's just Tuukka's Pelago prototype with a KRNKY sticker in it.)

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

KRNKY for Europe!


KRNKY is now shipping to Europe.

"We have now opened our web store to a wide selection of European countries. To celebrate this next step of going international we add a free Key Strap to all orders over 50 €. If you want it in certain color please mention it in the additional information field in the checkout form."

Get their stuff, handmade in Helsinki Finland with love and real bike messenger street tested and approved.

Monday, May 17, 2010

KRNKY Pedal Straps


The long awaited KRNKY Pedal Straps are finally out. There are tons of different versions and variations of this type of straps for flat pedals out there but these are looking good to me. Toni himself seems to be pretty confident in superiority of their particular design which took some time and testing to get just right.

Now my only problem with these is that I don't currently have a bike that would go along nicely with these. Putting flat BMX pedals on a classic track bike f**ks things up bit too much. Yeah, life is so hard...

Besides the straps Toni & Kaisa also got a new cool Double Belt Bag out, if you want to carry more stuff with you without having to resort to a bag or a backpack.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

"What the world looked like in ´93"


(Mortimer in New York, 2003.  Photo Maria Laub)

"MORTIMER, OWNER OF TRACK BIKE-SPECIFIC STORE KEIRIN BERLIN (www.keirinberlin.de), TELLS HOW IT WAS AND HOW IT IS:

I remember in ‘93 when I went to the first cycle messenger world championships (CMWC) in Berlin, i was not even allowed to start, as I had just started 2 months ago, and you had to be a bikemessenger for at least 6 months to compete, but to that story another time..., anyway back in ‘93 I heard some rumours about some guys riding without brakes, but I just thought yeah right...

A few years later in SF at the CMWC in ‘96, there was a trackbike only race, aaaah now I understand, those bikes that they use on the velodrome, damn it how cool is that...!???

So, in 97´ Barcelona Kevin from NYC organized the first skid competition of the CMWC, it smelt like rubber... we were all stoked, but still thought those guys must be crazy...

In ‘98 I left Berlin, first to London to messenger over there, after the ECMC in Graz I went to NYC and took my bike up to Montreal to the NACCC´s (North American Cycle Courier Champs) from there I went to Toronto, to stay with my Dutch friends Kamaal and Xander.  In summer ‘98 it was a big trend to go fixed in Toronto.  Keith from the courier cavern found a bunch of Coppi trackframes and started selling them to his messenger friends, some montreal connection. I had no money to get one, as I just “moved“ to North America...

After Toronto I went to Washington DC to the CMWC and also worked there a few months.  I really like DC, but I had NYC on my mind...

So I jumped on the chinatown bus, got a job at velocity on east 14th and stayed with James Bolger, who told and taught me everything about trackbikes.  Slacker Tim, Fast Eddie and Kevin also convinced me to get a bike...

When I went to Berlin for 3 weeks in September ‘98 I called an old friend who used to be a racer, he got me a bike for 50 German Marks (around 25 euro´s) it was a 1980´s East German Diamant trackbike with Campy cranks, Cinelli bars and stem and Renak hubs from east germany.  I went back to NYC and rebuilt the hubs with clinchers.  Still not 100% convinced I told james that I would just go to the park and try it on the weekend, he replied I should just go and work a day...it is easy, I will see.  So I did and I was hooked, that was October 98´!  I never had a frontbrake on my bike, nor did I ever think about it... NYC was cool “back in the days“ once you saw someone riding a trackbike he greeted you.  It was a very cool underground scene.  I remember the oldschool rastas who also worked at velocity. Timberland boots, flat pedals and big gear, and no attitude.  Yeah yeah, the good ol´ days...

In 2001 I went to Tokyo to ride my Cannondale trackbike thru´ asia.  In Tokyo there was only one guy who had a trackbike, but he was a dispatcher.

Nobody wanted to go to Keirin races, but I went and I loved it... I rode from Tokyo to Osaka, took a ferry to Shanghai, rode from there to Shanghai, down the coast to Hong Kong, over to Vietnam to Hanoi, down route one on the coast to Saigon, over to Cambodia to Phnom Penh, took a boat (too warm to ride) up to Siem Reap, and from there I went to Bangkok... all with around 20kg´s of luggage and no brakes, just fixed, with a flip flop hub, that i never turned around, as i had to take the whole rack off, too difficult.  It was an experience that I don´t want to miss and that I want to do again... one day!  So, anyone telling me that I am crazy or people are crazy who rides track bikes on the street, should try doing something like that on any bike, same same...

I went back to nyc after 9/11 worked in NYC till 2003 then opened the shop in Berlin in 2004, we were like a handful of people riding trackbikes.

We went to kyotoloco in May 2004 when the keirin frames where still available for 5000-10000 yen and almost no one was riding them on the street.

In 2005 I went to NYC for the CMWC and to work again as a bikemessenger.

The trackbike thing took off, everybody was riding fixedgear, mostly conversions or cheap complete bikes. Non-messengers started racing us to the next light and Williamsburg was full of people just walking down bedford ave with girlfriend on the left, bike on the right...when I came back to Berlin, more and more people got into it, but we never expected that it would go crazy like this.

I personally think that the fixed gear bike will stay, it is not just a trend. the bikes are so beautiful and simple, so anyone who likes bikes will get one, just to have one, or to see it as a piece of art for the wall..."

Via Cinelli True Story

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

'Chained' Trailer // Turku Representing !!!


No-Slowmo teaser from Pyry Lepistö on Vimeo.

Boys from the second city of Finland going all MASH on us. Nice, although I'd like to see someone really bomb down those hills we know they got there...

Tuesday, March 16, 2010