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#51
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On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 08:42:29 -0800, Bill Baka wrote:
On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 15:29:26 +0000, Just zis Guy, you know? wrote: Bill Baka wrote: How about a little challenge here. Everyone, me included, buy a speedometer for their bikes and see what is the absolute top speed they can get up to. What? You don't have a computer? ;-) Temporary money shortage, and I want to find one that I can download data into my computer, and 4 bikes now, so maybe a wireless that I can move from bike to bike. Pshaw. Get the $10 thing at walmart. I works as well as any of them (honest) and you can buy one for each bike cheaper than a bike store unit and three extra mounting kits. Ron 48.8mph one way, 25mph average for one circuit of a track (just short of 1/2 mile, I think, and on a windy day). That was on my current everyday commuter bike. The best average speed I've achieved for a week's commuting was just shy of 20mph, and I have average over 20mph there and back on my old commute. That was I think on the old bike. I've also done 41 miles in a minute or two under 2h, no appreciable wind. Sometimes I think if I trained, maybe I could go fast, but I don't really have the motivation. 25 MPH average for 1/2 mile sounds about right, then stop and pant. 48.8 MPH? That seems a bit high and I would think you would be RPM'ed out at that speed. What was the gearing? Bill Baka |
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#52
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On Mon, 15 Nov 2004 16:50:53 -0500, Ronsonic wrote:
Here's a few random thoughts on my motivation - I'm 49 and recently gave up a long career as an accomplished chain-smoker. Not for health reasons or anything, just that the wheezing noise got annoying. Between age, inactivity, previous physical insults, etc, I was having some very severe pains and aches. If I ride at least twice a week, I'm not in pain. If I ride three times a week the rides don't hurt either. If I ride more than that, the rides are fun. Now here's the thing, there's no way I'd be out there riding like this if it were just to meet some minimum exercise requirement. Remember, I smoked for decades and quit because it was interfering with other aspects of my life, not because "it is bad for me." Screw that. If the only down side to smoking were that I"d die sooner, I'd still be puffing. It's the wheezing and out of breath for the rest of my life thing that bothers me. There are things more fun than smoking that I prefered to do - one of them is ride a bike. SNIP Wheezing and being out of breath are health problems. Death is the point where your worries are over. I watched it all happen to my grandfather, and as he spent his final days in the hospital barely able to breathe with an oxygen mask he begged us for a cigarette. :-( Ben |
#53
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On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 12:00:01 -0500, Ronsonic wrote:
For me, the smoking was costing me too many other options (like riding hard and well) and woulda taken out the motor before the wheels and doors fell off. I hope your grandfather enjoyed his life as much as I'm enjoying mine. As for wanting a smoke on ones deathbed, I'll ask for one too. Sheesh, that'd be exactly the time to not worry about it. Yeah, well, we all want to die aged 98 shot by a jealous husband, but if you do smoke that oxygen tent and its associated painful endgame is likely to come a lot sooner. Not that I've ever been tempted. I'm asthmatic, and cigarette smoke screws me up badly. I get really annoyed when people light up as the train stops because they want to get in a nicotine fix in the brief walk from suburban to underground services. Guy -- May contain traces of irony. Contents liable to settle after posting. http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk 88% of helmet statistics are made up, 65% of them at Washington University |
#54
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On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 03:48:29 GMT, Ben Kaufman
wrote: On Mon, 15 Nov 2004 16:50:53 -0500, Ronsonic wrote: Here's a few random thoughts on my motivation - I'm 49 and recently gave up a long career as an accomplished chain-smoker. Not for health reasons or anything, just that the wheezing noise got annoying. Wheezing and being out of breath are health problems. Ya think? Maybe it's a symptom or something. Death is the point where your worries are over. I watched it all happen to my grandfather, and as he spent his final days in the hospital barely able to breathe with an oxygen mask he begged us for a cigarette. :-( Death is the point where your worries are over. And if you meet it with pink perfect lungs you missed an opportunity to enjoy another smoke. If all the joints are good, ya shoulda played harder. If the liver's perfect you passed up too many cocktails. I wanna go out like the Blues Brothers' car. For me, the smoking was costing me too many other options (like riding hard and well) and woulda taken out the motor before the wheels and doors fell off. I hope your grandfather enjoyed his life as much as I'm enjoying mine. As for wanting a smoke on ones deathbed, I'll ask for one too. Sheesh, that'd be exactly the time to not worry about it. Ron |
#55
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On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 12:00:01 -0500, Ronsonic unknown wrote:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 03:48:29 GMT, Ben Kaufman wrote: Death is the point where your worries are over. And if you meet it with pink perfect lungs you missed an opportunity to enjoy another smoke. If all the joints are good, ya shoulda played harder. If the liver's perfect you passed up too many cocktails. I wanna go out like the Blues Brothers' car. Ron I can meet death with perfect pink lungs except for my wifes leftovers. My joints are all good even after sports injuries because I use them. I quit drinking cold turkey at 54 and 2 years later my liver is that of a teenager. I never get sick and ride almost every day. Food poisoning in 1986, same week as the Challenger blew up. Flu once in 1978. Food poisoning from old leftovers in 1977. Nothing since except a few hangovers that convinced me to quit drinking. And yeah, I like adrenalin rushes like bungee jumping, sky diving, rock climbing, 50 MPH downhills on a bike, 150+ on a good motorcycle. Live right and you will have fun longer. Bill (not always politically correct) Baka |
#56
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On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 09:35:11 -0800, Bill Baka wrote:
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 12:00:01 -0500, Ronsonic unknown wrote: On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 03:48:29 GMT, Ben Kaufman wrote: Death is the point where your worries are over. And if you meet it with pink perfect lungs you missed an opportunity to enjoy another smoke. If all the joints are good, ya shoulda played harder. If the liver's perfect you passed up too many cocktails. I wanna go out like the Blues Brothers' car. Ron I can meet death with perfect pink lungs except for my wifes leftovers. My joints are all good even after sports injuries because I use them. I quit drinking cold turkey at 54 and 2 years later my liver is that of a teenager. I never get sick and ride almost every day. Food poisoning in 1986, same week as the Challenger blew up. Flu once in 1978. Food poisoning from old leftovers in 1977. Nothing since except a few hangovers that convinced me to quit drinking. And yeah, I like adrenalin rushes like bungee jumping, sky diving, rock climbing, 50 MPH downhills on a bike, 150+ on a good motorcycle. Live right and you will have fun longer. There ya go, have fun longer. Bill (not always politically correct) Baka Enjoy. Ron |
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