Also, you don't need to screw the pump head on super tight. Core capture is usually the result of overtightening the head.
I pulled my micro drive HV out on a ride last summer with someone who had never used one. He was blown away by how much faster and easier it was than a normal mini pump.
It's one of my favorites.
The mountain bike industry is thick with people who will defend dumb designs with nominal upsides and multiple obvious downsides. (See also: centerlock rotors, shimano brakes).
Everything is nice about the lezynes aside from the head though. Someone could make their millions selling aftermarket heads that don't suck.
I have a silca chuck on my lezyne pump because i very quickly realized that threading it on and off to add air was annoying bullshit. I suppose a rant could be that the chuck cost the same as the whole pump. Also the hose barb adapter is a separate part.
I do as well. That's not the issue here.
As I said earlier they are adding trails with inaccurate info - mainly Wilderness trails that they are labelling as open to bikes - like San Gorgonio. The charter bus load of Korean hikers will cheer you on but you'll get flogged by the overzealous volunteer wilderness ranger. I've encountered bikers and especially e-bikers using incorrect descriptions like this as to justify riding where they are not allowed. Not good when TF staff have info readily available to mark the trails correctly.
Here's the Firebreak example. I was doing a ride nearby last weekend and poked my head up this "trail". You can see people have walked up it a bit in a few spots - maybe hunters or people just looking for somewhere to take a shit. But it's a legit fire break, there is no trail here. If you don't believe me take a road trip and try to walk it. There are firebreaks like this all over Socal mountains. This particular one is short and doesn't go anywhere that will get you in trouble, but some of them drop into deep canyons. I've seen a few "trails" added that could really get people in trouble looking for a route that doesn't exist. And these aren't simply trails that used to exist and became overgrown.
Trail conditions is a different issue. On the web version trails can display the statement "No description has been added yet for this trail" and it is easy to see whether or not any condition reports, comments, photos or ridelogs have been added. On the app, the "No description" statement does not appear and you will only see reports, photos or ridelogs if you have cell service. So a trail could have those but you're SOL if you don't have service. It would make things a lot clearer for Trailforks to auto-populate a description (that shows up on the app) clearly stating "This trail has no activity. Conditions are unknown" or "The last recorded activity for this trail was MM/YY" if it's been over a year or so. The last 5 or so condition reports and ridelogs should be included in the Region updates so you can access them offline as well. At least then you can make better decisions about riding the trail or not. At the end of the day this is a good reason to leave adding trails to the locals. Individuals who add trails are going to add a description most of the time. When TF Admins add something, it should get have to get approved by the local admin just like when regular users add something - to verify the info added is ok.
I think you're wrong. Check out the two examples above and look who they were added by. User profile has a tag that says "Map Team" and she's listed as an admin for Canada, USA and California.
The other one I've seen a bunch is "Todd" from Pleasant Grove, Utah. "Trailforks Global Admin" His profile says he's added 28,000 trails. That is some serious dedication if you're not being paid for it.
https://www.amazon.com/Granite-Juicy...a-758759430921
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Crank puller threads, little bit on both sides. I may try and old cover and just try to force it in as a semi tap. If that doesn’t work, hacksaw to the square taper I guess. Have a new pair of crank arms to go with this BB if I can save it.
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Hot tip for you guys that encounter a square taper Crankarm that needs to come off with no possibility of a crank puller…just take out the bolt and go for some urban riding with a few curb drops, wheelies, etc.
It will come off eventually, I guarantee you of that.
Forum Cross Pollinator, gratuitously strident
Follow up. Assumed wife’s tire was losing air because I somehow fucked up the tape. I use 1” Tessa type tape from Amazon because I can get 60yd for like $8 bucks. Works for me because I can’t stomach $5/wheel, especially when I’m not perfect and redo a lot of tape jobs. But my overlapping double wrap dose make it a little more vulnerable to fucking up while installing a tight tire.
Anyway, I get in there and see nothing but perfect beautiful intact tape! Fuck me!
Cosh Core valve looks like it’s stuffed way the fuck in there, which makes me think it must be making a good deal. Regardless, I swap it with a new valve and BOOM, the leaks are gone! Holds pressure for hours. All this because the rubber grommet/plug has deteriorated!
About to head to bed, I decide to hose the fucker down with soapy water so I can sleep better.
Air is actually coming out around the core, whether it’s screwed in or not. Can’t catch a break with this shit! FML.
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However many are in a shit ton.
You try a new valve core?
They actually make extra-long cores that might have more purchase.
Forum Cross Pollinator, gratuitously strident
I wanted to go to a smaller chain ring on my 5.5 Yeti so I got the Race face affect crank arm off the spindle by holding the bike off the ground and taping on the spindle with a ball peen, it didn't take much and I managed to do it solo
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
How is Trailforks data (climbing/descending, not mileage) so far off from reality? For both the individual Ride Logs and the trail data itself, the vertical is typically off by anywhere from 20-50% if you compare it to the Strava data. We rode a trail yesterday where TF claimed 7' of climbing, and it was easily 200'+. I've seen individual rides where TF claimed 5000' of climbing on a route, only to see the actual climbing be closer to 3000'. They have to know by now it's fucked.
Usually TF over reports compared to strava. Strava only logs a vertical change if it's greater than 30'. TF logs any vertical change that's greater than 6" (I believe).
So TF will show vert on a flat trail with jumps in it, whereas strava will not. I find that the rollier the ride is, the greater the discrepancy between the two apps. If it's just one long, steady climb to a long steady descent, they'll usually be pretty close.
Both strava and trailforks also build elevation profiles based on their maps. Their map says that your GPS data point at point X on the map has an elevation of Y. String all the data points together and you have your elevation profile. I've noticed in a few places locally that trailforks' topography is off a bit. The map thinks I'm off the side of a ridge when I'm actually standing on top of it. The lat and long are correct, but the topographic profile of the ridge is wrong on their map.
Does anyone have valve core torque specs?
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