Dear Guest,
Please register or login. Content don't create itself!
Thank you
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
DarrenCT
richard,
what changes have you made to your frames in the last 5 or so years?
physically - 1) the head badge, intro-ed about 4 years ago, is in it third iteration. 2) the pegorichie tubing, which was just barely born then, is so much further evolved i wouldn't know where to start. 3) the lower head lug's tool was revised to change the shoreline about 2-3 years ago. 4) the rs bb shell was just a dream 5 years ago but now used by me and also sold worldwide (without the rs cutout) to scores of other effbuilders. 5) and many hand-made details have evolved and/or reached a balance point between ease of manufacture and their decorative elements that they bring to the frame. i'm sure there's a lot more, but i am swallowing a smuttynose and watching jerseylicious, so try back later.
metaphysically - everything flows much more instinctively now compared to then. i am very comfortable coming to the bench and letting my muscle memory and intuition take over. i rarely think (or over think) about the operations or processes anymore. well, i am aware of the hand-eye stuff and am confident in my coordination and skill sets. but the work opens up for me with much less effort now than ever before. it took a long time to reach this comfort level, but i am there now. if the word arrogant could possibly have positive connotations, i'd say it's valid to call me arrogant about my place in all this now. when there was a time i'd regularly second guess myself and my choices, i freely admitted it. these days (compared to five years ago) i am in the place i wanted to be atmo.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
e-RICHIE
i'm sure there's a lot more, but i am swallowing a smuttynose and watching jerseylicious, so try back later.
.
we've moved on to rocky horror now so if you want me it better be important atmo.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
e-RICHIE
metaphysically - everything flows much more instinctively now compared to then. i am very comfortable coming to the bench and letting my muscle memory and intuition take over. i rarely think (or over think) about the operations or processes anymore. well, i am aware of the hand-eye stuff and am confident in my coordination and skill sets. but the work opens up for me with much less effort now than ever before. it took a long time to reach this comfort level, but i am there now. if the word arrogant could possibly have positive connotations, i'd say it's valid to call me arrogant about my place in all this now. when there was a time i'd regularly second guess myself and my choices, i freely admitted it. these days (compared to five years ago) i am in the place i wanted to be atmo.
ok this is very interesting to me.
the feel thing and the not thinking thing....
as many of you guys know, im a tennis pro/coach. when im working on a particular stroke, i concentrate on feel and rarely get into details or go by "what the book says". when your playing tennis, you can't possible thinking about steps 1,2 3, etc. you just remember the feeling and everything happens naturally. sorta like sex...
richard-- i think your on top something here thats rarely been discussed. everyone talks about the steps, or the look, but rarely the feel. after countless hours, there is no thinking, only feel -- and when you're in "the zone" everything is perfect.
hrmph!
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
DarrenCT
.
richard-- i think your on top something here thats rarely been discussed. everyone talks about the steps, or the look, but rarely the feel. after countless hours, there is no thinking, only feel -- and when you're in "the zone" everything is perfect.
hrmph!
the funny (sic) thing about it is i have always done it this way; i just wasn't as comfortable about it in my own skin as i am now.
never any slide rules, no fit formulas, no metallurgy or engineering training.
in my case i believe coming into the trade unwittingly kept me sheltered from the many (or several) demons others deal with atmo.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
-
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
this is some real neat shite bro darren and richie atmo ---- really neat....
2 legumes in like pods..
ronnie
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
richard-
discuss how the factors below relate to experience and knowledge.
or
place a % on each of these....
a. reading books / researching
b. hours on the bench
c. racing / testing
d. continuing education
e. failing and learning
f. ?
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
e-RICHIE
we've moved on to rocky horror now so if you want me it better be important atmo.
35th Anniversary! Hey, I remember doing the Time Warp...
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
i'm an ISFP atmo and there are no calculations.
Originally Posted by
DarrenCT
richard-
discuss how the factors below relate to experience and knowledge.
or
place a % on each of these....
a. reading books / researching
b. hours on the bench
c. racing / testing
d. continuing education
e. failing and learning
f. ?
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
josh dillon bringing saxy back atmo -
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Hey Richard, give us a report on the Cole carbon wheels your team is riding this year? Who's using them, which model is it, are they holding up, the whole shebang.
Craig
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
Craig Ryan
Hey Richard, give us a report on the Cole carbon wheels your team is riding this year? Who's using them, which model is it, are they holding up, the whole shebang.
Craig
here are the cliffs notes atmo -
some of us are racing T-38s straight out of the catalog, and some of us (me...) are on a revised pair (i.e. prototype) of them that have a 23mm width
across the top to give added bond security between the base tape and the mastik glue atmo. the default wheel of the rs 'cross team continues to be
the T-25 tubulars that are the wheels most often seen in pictures of us racing. the goal is to make that wheel with a 22-23mm width as well for all the
same reasons, and with hope, some of these will be a reality after the first of the year. we have two seasons on cole wheels without a broken spoke,
a wheel needing truing, or a bike change in the pit because of the wheel atmo. righteous.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
richard - when is the next team event?
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
just found this on my desktop computer. pretty cool
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
The points and flare ins are some of my favorite details of e-RICHIE's frames. Well done as usual.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
I came across this one recently.
Apparently the frame sat in someone's garage for the last 30(ish) years and was never built up. It's being ridding now though and that's a good thing.
Also, Richard, I just wanted to say: Thank you.
Conor
Last edited by conorb; 11-24-2010 at 12:14 AM.
-
Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
back when i was banned atmo -
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks