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Shaun H

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Posts posted by Shaun H

  1. I'll be running 1x10 with a guide for racing enduro next year but the rest of the time I'll be on 2x10. Having the smaller ring is just nice on casual rides and makes it more enjoyable overall. But I want the chain security for racing as a dropped chain or mishift is a lot of time lost in a stage so I'm willing to slog it up the hills in the transitions with a single ring up front.

  2. interesting fact, a Mondraker Foxy was perhaps the worst bike I have ridden and possibly the bike I've had the most rear punctures with. Setup probably had a lot to do with it, but the back wheel just didn't seem to want to get up and over rocks......does that bike have much of a rearward axle path?

    Haven't ridden a Foxy but as far as I know they all follow similar axle paths. Did you make sure the propedal was off? It's not a feeling I can say I've ever experienced... As for punctures, I've never rimmed out hard enough to notice even running 20psi on rocky stuff. But then I run either tubeless with goo or UST (and I will NEVER go back).

  3. Just make sure you have sound reasoning for going into engineering. As others have mentioned they won't expect an in depth knowledge from someone taking a foundation course, but they will expect you to have some passion about it so they know you will complete the course.

  4. i'm really considering a genius as you get 120mm and 185mm of travel on the rear, i like the idea of flipping between a range of movement as my terrain changes etc,,

    I personally think the Genius is too steep to be real fun on DHs. I can't give a completely fair opinion as the one I raced a gravity enduro on was 1 or more sizes too small for me but the front seemed to hang up a lot more on obstacles than my Dune.

    As for recomendations I was completely happy with my Mondraker Dune and as such was absolutely devestated when I crashed hard into a ditch front wheel first in the Alps and destroyed my front triangle. Fortunately the brand support is excellent and Silverfish the importer are seeing if they can sort something out for me despite crash damage not being covered under warranty. After riding it I find when I get on single pivot bikes I really miss the rear being active under pedaling and braking, single pivot designs seem to lock up a little.

    For more general advice - try to look past frame sizes and pay attention to the top tube length as this, IMO, the biggest factor in the "fit" of a bike. If you are riding serious DH/steeps then go for a head angle 67deg or slacker. Test ride everything you can get your hands on.

  5. Sounds like a nasty testing accident for Maria de Villota at Duxford. Hope she's ok and I guess it's too soon for certain sex driver's abilities isn't it...

    That's a little unreasonable since none of the details of the crash have come out yet.

    Anyway, the poor woman has lost an eye, I hope that's the worst of it, awful accident.

  6. I've just been called up as well, and because of where I live (central London) it's a pretty major court where they mainly get high profile cases, should be pretty interesting!

    That said, I think I'll feel a bit uncomfortable in that situation because I'm not the biggest fan of the law/this system (tin foil hats!), seems pretty hypocritical to be judging sitting there judging someone else while I break it in my own little ways. I just reaally hope it's not for something stupidly minor and nit picky, or anything like cannabis/graffiti etc.

    I believe its the role of the jury not to apply the law word for word as such but to decide whether that person "deserves" a guilty verdict, so you can apply your own morals to the case. After all, if we were just laying down the law as its written we'd have no need for a jury anyway...

  7. Don't want to hijack the thread so sorry about this! The cost for cardboard per desk comes to about £30, the more cardboard I buy the cheaper. The other cost is pva glue for the glued version, which isn't really expensive, I've found some shops to have them for a few quid for a few litres. But then I obviously won't sell it for just the cost of materials, need moneys for my time on each one but I'll be happy for £50 per desk since it's hand made. I've sold one to my friends sister for £70 believe it or not. But obviously if I have some sort of machine production line, each desk will be way cheaper.

    Back on topic!

    Once VAT and tax and middle men come in I'd expect the product will need to be selling for around £70 for you to make a good profit yourself.

    As for myself:

    I did carried on from school in to Sixth Form (maths, physics, chemistry, economics) and then, although noone ever sat down and explained what sort of path I needed to take to do what I like (inventing stuff etc), I realised a Mechanical Engineering degree would place me well for the future. So I did that at Aston University with a year's placement at a coatings company in Leamington which taught me a lot about the working world. I've had a brief dabble with making my own components and I've really enjoyed it but it takes up a lot of time and all the stuff I get excited about normally requires big investment. May pick it back up when I have more spare cash... I graduated last July but not before savagely breaking my ankle mountain biking. Fortunately an aerospace company saw fit to employ a (temporary) cripple and I was lucky enough to get on their graduate scheme. I'm currently moving around the different departments; I've just come from test engineering where they bash the parts with hydraulics for thousands and thousands of cycles and I'm now in the materials lab, I'll eventually take up a Design Engineer role. At the end of August I'm getting placed in Paris for 3 months and I'm really really excited about that, the company is providing me with 2 one on one tutored French lessons every week (and the instructor has a tidy bum (A) ) so I hope my fluency comes along a bit. Recently been headhunted for another company's "future leadership programme" but their product isn't particularly exciting so unless the rest of the job is appealing and/or the money is amazing I may turn it down, but at the very least it's a massive ego boost having that happen so early in my career!

    As for advice for the OP my sentiments echo some of what has already been said. You claim that you're pretty sure on university but nothing after that, I'd say don't even consider a degree unless you're certain it will allow you to get in to a career you know you want. Its an expensive (although I'd say ignore the recent hike in fees, unless you earn megabucks you'll pay back a similar amount to those of us who got in before) and lengthy experience and not one you should go through with if you have serious doubts.

  8. Yah its with the giant I have a problem.

    I have been making adjustments and doing the local circuit I do normally and it just isn't working out tidy beans.

    Maybe I am just expecting too much from the bike.

    Also the shock has started pissing oil now so I have swapped it out for a coil spring at the cost of 0.3" of travel ride is transformed, I just hope the shock is still in Warranty.

    Perhaps it's been broken all along and only now showing it visually?

  9. "You are not allowed to access this URL "

    :unsure: Could someone PM me when the site is working again? Paid for my ticket already!

    Looking forward to this, whether or not my ankle will be trials ready could be an issue but won't stop it being a good time I'm sure

  10. Would just like to point out that in my experience the (expensive) zinc coated versions of the Sram chains don't seem to prevent corrosion significantly longer than the uncoated ones. Ensuring its clean, GT85/WD40'd after washing and lubed is hugely more effective. No experience with other makes but I've heard good things about KMC chains.

  11. If anyone hasn't seen Drive, it's the best goddamn film from last year.

    Just watched Drive. Very good film, recommended (Y)

    Greetings knows the score though, Drive is an awesome film!

    +1 wouldn't quite do this justice!

  12. There's several pills availalbe. The first type my missus was on sent her f**king loopy, changed after a couple of months and she's been on it since with no ill effects. Might be a hard conversation if no one else has mentioned it to her? Mine was ok with it as other people had pointed it out a couple of times.

  13. When you pressurize helium it becomes colder, incredibly so (opening a gas valve to full will freeze the pvc piping attached to the end and the nozzle will ice over). Helium loses bouancy when cool and as such you have both dense helium and cold factoring into it's lack of bouancy.

    A gas actually does the opposite when you pressurise it. The equation PV=nRT dictates this. When you open the valve on a bottle the helium is being depressurised, hence the cold, ice, etc, etc

    • Like 1
  14. If you were weighing it in a vacuum then you would be correct (if we ignore all the ascociated impossibilities of a baloon in a vacuum that is). The problem you have is that you are weighing something that is actually in a fluid (air). All the sweets and the bag have a density that is far in excess of the air so their buoyancy (or lack there of) is negligible in this situation however the helium is less dense than the surrounding air and therefore floats in it and would actually reduce the weight of the bag. You could say technically the bag does "weigh" more in terms of mass. It would take slighly more energy to accelerate it horizontally for instance. But since the helium is lighter than the surrounding air it will try to float up and therefore the scale would show a slightly lower measured weight.

    An easier example might be an underwater scale with a small piece of concrete and a large log. Now the log could be heavier than any man could lift, yet the underwater scale will never be able to measure it's weight as it will float up in the water whereas the dense concrete can be placed on the scales and weighed (although the weight shown would be less the displaced water weight).

    I hope that's understandable, I'm very tired and have had several pints tonight!

  15. Apologies if you really are going to use your trials bike to cycle to work ( :S ) but if not then its cases like this which is exactly why the government is apparently about to make the cycle2work scheme a lot more expensive to use. This has come about after those responsible for funding the scheme (government officials I guess?) wised up on the amount of people that would buy a bike for the weekend/their mum/daughter/cousin/to sell on for profit and would continue driving to work. It means those of us who do make the effort to cycle to work most days may now lose out if these changes get put forward. Just for people's information I guess, not sure many are aware of this news yet and not meant as a poke at the OP.

  16. Why do people continue to debate whether Vettel can overtake, I get that the pundits keep talking about it to keep interest but to me its now blatantly obvious that Vettel is a balls to the wall overtaker whenever its neccesary.

  17. It also has its perks.. believe or not ...f**king not so often is good because you can "talk" a lot about what your going to do when you see eachother and in turn you make them f**king filth. My now fiance is pure filth its awesome I had plenty of time to mould her in to what i wanted with a bit of distance involved.

    I think I may have "accidentally" done the same. :shifty: I went to uni in Brum whilst my missus studied at home in Cheltenham, saw eachother max fortnightly, it worked fine for 4 years and now I'm working and living in Cheltenham. Mind you, I came back at Christmas/Easter/Summer holidays so it might be a bit more difficult if you don't share a hometown

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