Bicycle Maintenance

Photo info: FUJIFILM X100T, 23mm, f/2.8, 1/125 sec, ISO1600
“Cleaned Up” Cedar Park, 2020

During my lunch break I cleaned the drive train on my bicycle. My Kona Blast is 20 years young and this is the first time I’ve actually cleaned the chain, cassette, and crankset so I was looking forward giving the bike a little love. I used a degreaser and stiff brush to work all the grime loose, then rinsed it all off with the hose. I don’t have any proper bicycle lube, so I used transmission fluid, which is a popular lubricant for motorcycle chains. It’s also a good cleaner, which I found out because after wiping the excess fluid, the cassette was shiny! I forgot what it looked like new. 😆

By the way, I removed the “dork disk”, which is the plastic piece attached to the spokes by the cassette. It serves little purpose, and it was yellow with age and cracked off dramatically when I tried to remove it. 😊

Time to ride!

Evening Rides Around the Neighborhood

Photo info: FUJIFILM X100T, 23mm, f/5.6, 1/100 sec, ISO250
“Evening Ride” Cedar Park, 2020

Lately I’ve been going on evening bicycle rides around the neighborhood. They are so relaxing since I take it pretty easy. And I love the granny gears on my bike. It’s like magic powering up those hills. 😊

I spent a little more time removing one last sticker from the frame and now it’s nice and clean-looking. There’s still some gummy residue which is really hard to remove completely, even using Goo-gone and my motorcycle degreaser. But it’s looking good! I just left one Kona sticker on the seat tube, and an International Space Station sticker on the fork. I’d love to find some new Kona stickers for the down tube, but want to keep it simple, such as plain black lettering.

Since we don’t drive much during the COVID-19 lock-down, I use the bicycle to collect the mail from our neighborhood mailbox. The panniers can hold a lot, which was fortunate today since a big yearbook-sized package arrived for Koa. But no problem! I loaded it into the pannier and then went on the rest of my ride.

It’s nice to ride at sunset (I try to be back before dark) since I often get to see the clouds lit up nicely. I also get to see lots of birds, but I don’t have my binoculars. I want to get a handlebar bag or basket so I can have them ready to use without having to get off the bike. I can’t simply reach back to the panniers for the quick grab, which is needed for birding. The problem is, fitting a bag on the butterfly/trekking bars is a little more complicated than on drop bars or a straight bar. Oh well, maybe I can find a bag laying around the house that I can modify to fit the butterfly bars.

In the meantime, I’ll just bring my camera for cloud photos. The clouds don’t fly away nearly as fast as birds do. 😁

Photo info: FUJIFILM X100T, 23mm, f/5.6, 1/500 sec, ISO200
“Cirrocumulus” Cedar Park, 2020

From Mountain Bike to Hybrid/Trekking Bike

Photo info: FUJIFILM X100T, 19mm, f/4, 1/900 sec, ISO200
“Comfort Bike” Cedar Park

Way back in 2000 I bought my Kona Blast hardtail mountain bike (OMG it’s been 20 years?!) and have been enjoying it ever since. I’ve been tweaking it little by little and now it’s a strange, goofy, hybrid franken-bike, but I still love it. The Kona Blast (they still make this model) has always been an entry-level mountain bike, and serves as an inexpensive and solid platform to upgrade components to your liking. Most people get rid of the RST forks, which are simple spring type, but I’ve held onto them and I think they are fine for the mostly road-riding I do. In fact, I had no worries taking my drill to them in order to make holes for the fender mounts.

My first upgrade to my Kona was the addition of an inexpensive rear rack and makeshift bag for the rack. I put my camera, headlight battery pack, cellphone, and bike lock in here. I also put on a generic kickstand. I couldn’t live without it.

Photo info: SONY SLT-A77V, 10mm, f/8, 1/80 sec, ISO320
“Mountain Bike” Round Rock, 2013

I am now on my third seat, which I like. It’s a super-simple and thinly padded seat by Retrospec. I replaced the stock seat (which was painful) with a plushly padded gel seat from Serfas (see photo above), but that one hurt after riding for a short while as well. I then ready about how harder seats might actually be better and more comfortable for longer rides, and I have to agree! The harder Retrospec seat is really great. It’s kind of like motorcycle seats in that respect. Most motorbike stock seats are optimized for the showroom, not for long-distance comfort.

Photo info: SONY SLT-A77V, 35mm, f/2.2, 1/320 sec, ISO400
“Retrospec Seat” Cedar Park, 2013

I then decided to convert my Blast into a more commuter-style bike by replacing the WTB mountain bike tires with Continental Town and Country tires. The new rubber allowed me to inflate them to a maximum of 60 psi. That pressure plus the smooth tread made for a much faster (and quieter) bike on pavement. This made a HUGE difference! With the old mountain bike tires, once you stop pedaling, you lose speed pretty quickly, but with the road tires, you just keep flying along. It’s awesome.

I also bought some soft panniers for more cargo space. The bags still work great to this day (I usually just use one side) for carrying my bike tools, picking up the mail, or as cargo bags for trips to the library.

Photo info: Panasonic DMC-TS2, 7.8mm, f/4.3, 1/250 sec, ISO80
“Panniers” Cedar Park, 2013

About this time, I found that my neck got sore quickly because I was leaning over so much and had to crane my neck back to see forward. It was very uncomfortable. To help with this, I changed my handlebars from the stock bars to a butterfly/trekking bar. I love these things! I’m able to change the positions of my hands so that there’s less fatigue on them. They also look really nerdy, but I like them! (The photo above also shows the butterfly bars) They let me sit a little more upright, which helped with my neck, but not a whole lot. I therefore decided to raise the bars up even more by replacing the stock stem with an adjustable one which raised the bars quite a bit. It helped a ton and I could ride with less pain.

Photo info: OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-PL1, 14mm, f/3.5, 1/60 sec, ISO1250
“Butterfly Bars” Cedar Park, 2013

Next up was adding some Planet Bike fenders. I actually don’t ride in the rain very much so I don’t get to experience the benefits that fenders provide, but I’m sure it’s kept me clean when I ride thru gutters and stuff.

Photo info: SONY SLT-A77V, 35mm, f/2.2, 1/400 sec, ISO400
“Fenders” Cedar Park, 2013

Finally, I added a Lerway stem extension which raises the bars another 3 inches. for an almost completely upright body position, much like a cruiser bike. It’s so comfortable and makes riding much more enjoyable. Sure, it’s looking even more bizarre, but I crossed that line a while ago.

But speaking of aesthetics, I am wondering what to do about the body graphics. I used to have it covered with random stickers, but have since removed almost all of them. I’d love to get a nice, simple, modern Kona decal again and keep it at that.

For the future, I’d love to get a handlebar bag to keep my camera, phone, and maybe my birding binoculars in. While riding around the neighborhood, I see a lot of birds so it would be nice to pull up and get a better look at them! I can put the binocs in the pannier right now, but I can’t reach around and get them without getting off the bike. Also, I used to have a cheap bike computer (speedometer/odometer) on my bike but removed it for some reason. I can’t believe I would throw it out, but cannot find it. So, that would be nice.

So, that’s it with my Kona Blast. Still in love!

My Franken-bike

My Franken-bike

Click on the photo to view on Flickr where I have a bunch of notes describing the various components and their cost(mostly budget) that I have added on.

I’m really enjoying going out for evening bike rides around the neighborhood. It’s good exercise even though I really take it easy, stop a bunch to take photos, and look around to see the sights. I’m the first to admit I’m not a speed demon out there! It’s purely for fun. You won’t see me in any specialized bicycling clothes. I’m more often shifted in the granny gear than a higher gear. But I do have a smile on my face most of the time, and that’s what two-wheeled travel is all about for me.