mattbob
Mattbob
mattbob

yeah, a 29lb road bike. Absolute garbage.

Yeah, you can’t question the value of those kitchen aid mixers. Although, I have seen one of the newer ones have a gearbox go because of plastic gears.

hahaha, the last chicago cutlery knife I had literally snapped in half when pushing down on some garlic to crush it. I currently use a set of Wusthof... not even in the same league.

oh gosh, that road bike they compare against is junk. a 29 lb road bike!! I have a 35 year old steel road bike that is lighter than that!

Just a quick FYI, these “better options” seem to be written by people who don’t know what they are talking about. For example, I checked out the mountain bikes, because I know mountain bikes. For the cheaper option, they suggested a 45 lb bike with rim brakes as comparable to a decent diamondback bike with disk

Thanks for answering! Definitely going to try the Rock n Roll lube. The Bearing I was cleaning recently that I had issue with was the bottom bearing of my headset. It is a caged bearing that is held in with a little plastic ring, not sealed. It was just a pain to get everything out of the cage and bearings. Do you re

Nice, I get avoiding rags for a lot of things. They are kind of a pain to clean a bunch of them if they are covered with oil. For your MTB work, what lube do you usually go with? I ran wax for a long time, but it started to not be enough as rides got longer, but it’s hard to find non-wax lubes that shed dirt. I use

sigh.... Wax lubes don’t last long enough for long dirty rides. I use teflon based dry lube. Dirty rags are only used for initial wipe downs, then you go with the actual cleaner and a clean rag. Its a mountain bike, it’s going to go through mud from time to time, and there is usually already dirt in the moving parts

That’s a hell of a bag, it puts my bike toolbox to shame. The only thing I would add is a bag of rags. I tend to use several rags of varying degrees of dirtyness while I work on my bikes. This seems like a kit for a roadie though, so maybe not so much need to clean out bearings and mud so often.

lol, trucks passing trucks on I-94... I know that feel....

That’s a solid setup. My internet commenter instincts want me to find something wrong, but I would totally use that exact setup, even the spare contacts are a great idea for long rides. What do you do for hydration? Do you use any ride tracking gadgets?

I’m sure some people think Velcro shoes are really cool too. Sorry for the salt, I just feel like an old man today.

Get back to me in 10 years about that.

I bought a belt about ten years ago, and a basic non-flashy, every-day-wearable buckle about ten years ago. At this point I totally forget the brand of either, it was so long ago. I have worn it almost every day since. Getting a belt, and a good looking buckle is a good investment. I specify a buckle, because a real

What is the difference in tooling costs/time?

Don’t most fried things usually have carbs? Like breading and such? The mixture of fat and carbs in say, cheese sticks would be pretty hard to argue for.

Agreed. Also, your lifestyle and activity level play a huge role. Eating a cliff bar as a snack, is terrible for a person who is sedentary, but could be what a person who is active needs. I think it would eb easier to start at the other end and define what definitely isn’t healthy. I’ll start, anything fried is almost

you should probably make the score/folds at multiples of 16 inches, because studs are normally spaced 16" on center. That way there is something behind that break in the drywall when you put it up.... Unless you have walls that have 12" stud spacing.

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(I realize someone posted a gif, but the whole video needs to be watched)