Yeah. Blame my wife for that name.Yours is "Ear Fetish", isn't it?
I test fit both Mariko and Yuna on the Mac Ride, static in the garage. Getting started will be tough—can’t use the dropper the way I have it mounted (I need to slam my 150 mm dropper to the seat collar due to my short legs so have the clamp on the dropper itself). But once moving it should work fine with either kid, as I have plenty of torso length to see over even Mariko.Installed: Mac Ride. I’ll try it with the 4 year old tomorrow.
More on this thought in the context of “I don’t want an RV, I want freedom” post from a week or two back:This means that down the road [the new 7.3L gas OHV V8 will] make its way to Class A gas and Class B and C RVs. I've not been super impressed by the dynamics of Ford's Triton V10 in rented moving trucks and the like so this is probably a good thing, maybe even relevant to my life if I manage to pay down my debts and go roaming the country/world a bit in a decade.
WTF are you on about? Have driven Shafer in both an old Audi *and* a minivan...<snip>or a Land Cruiser-type vehicle if we’re going to hit some more dicey roads, like Shafer Trail.
Doesn’t it have stream crossings? Apparently not as I google it. Regardless there are plenty of other High Clearance 4x4 Only roads in the National Parks and National Monuments that’d chew up the minivan.WTF are you on about? Have driven Shafer in both an old Audi *and* a minivan...
It's the desert, man... there are *wash* crossings.Doesn’t it have stream crossings? Apparently not as I google it.
Troof.Regardless there are plenty of other High Clearance 4x4 Only roads in the National Parks and National Monuments that’d chew up the minivan.
Through some google-fu I found a highly relevant thread to these above interests:I’ve idly back of napkined before whether it’d ever make sense for me to, say, get IFR and dual engine rated and then rent a plane to fly to North Bend/Coos Bay, and am still not certain of whether that’s even feasible with a layover of a few days. (I’d write off the cost of actually training me because I think that would be fun.) ((For heading to Seattle I’d always fly commercial as commercial first class is readily available and pretty cheap, and because Seattle’s airspace seems like it’d be a bit intimidating, to say the least.))
I wonder how comfortable such small planes would be anyway. I vaguely recall that ones of a reasonable size would also require a fueling stop en route. Kind of sounds like a pain already… with the caveat that the alternative ways of getting to North Bend Airport from Denver are summer-only twice a week direct flights on an Embraer or connecting through SFO at 5-6+ hours total otherwise.
Hmm. At least flying a plane would let me possibly live up the stereotype of an overconfident doctor flying the thing into terrain, though!
Commencal canceled one of my demos! (because they sold the demo bike in question)Two Commencal DH bikes booked. Trestle days shall be Aug 12 and Aug 13.
Time to order some body armor. I’m thinking it’s time for a Leatt.
What's the reason you see?I know why.
They didn't change much for the RWD models other than making the fancy triple coat white the default and thus free option, at least.Because I just bought the Leaf.
Change yours to “FBI Surveillance Van6”
The view of the crowded 2.4 and 5.0 GHz spectra from my house.
Strong.And for @Full Trucker I defined an e-Hecktrack segment. My time (not from today what with going OTB but rather from my prior 24:16 Helltrack effort) is 13:17. That's 2/2 for e-bikes, because #1 is Todd Munson at 11:27. He's the Masters enduro racer guy…
Which is 100% patronizing horse hockey, IMNSHO. I wrote a strongly worded response:All our segments are ranked according to the total "Elapsed Time", not "Moving Time". We like to think of our segments as a race, and in a race the clock keeps running even if you stop.
It looks like you entered the segment start point range and then remained within this allowable range without going far enough outside of it to re-trigger the segment timer. Our matching process has to be a little loose to account for GPS issues, which is why this extra bit was included. Unfortunately I'm unable to adjust your segment effort time.
In the future, we recommend turning around well past the start point for the segment so the turn-around time isn't included in your segment effort.
Oh man... I put way too much effort into that, didn't I? But also for some reason, I feel like it would make @Toshi proud... he's a Known Complainer™.To be honest, I find this response to be fairly canned and insufficient. While I understand the matching process needs to be a "little loose" with regards to start points, the distance from the actual segment start point the Strava matching algorithm has identified as being within range is, to put it bluntly, laughable. Especially since a rider who rode the exact same route as me at nearly the same time was matched correctly, I personally have ridden the same route prior and been matched correctly, and I am matched correctly to other segments with similar start point locations on this exact ride.
But also to be honest... I don't *really* care that much about getting the segment time adjusted. While I do enjoy "racing" against my previous efforts and my friends, what I was really interested in conveying to the Strava team is that this particular segment start point match is egregiously inaccurate. My expectation is that this feedback would be sent to the development team, in an effort to improve the software.
Thanks for your time, I do appreciate it. This request can be considered closed.
Yeah. GPS matching doesn’t seem too accurate.lol at Strava "accuracy"...
Custom title material right there.Known Complainer™
Scratchpad post time:the alternative ways of getting to North Bend Airport from Denver are summer-only twice a week direct flights on an Embraer or connecting through SFO at 5-6+ hours total otherwise.
It looks like what we did last summer, drive to Eugene with a one way rental and then pop up EUG-SEA directly, would be better.There's one flight out of OTH to anything relevant, a 2:00-3:34 PM jump from OTH to SFO. Single class service, just as well. Then given typical delays it'd be safest to then fly 6:05-8:15 PM on AS 1673. This would be $393/person with bags in coach on a typical-fare day, $573/person if the Alaska leg was in first class.
DL 5696 is $113/person for Embraer first class 3:05-4:30 PM (or DL 5716 at same price, same plane from 11:16 AM). Dropping to coach opens up Alaska/Horizon direct flights as well, with both Delta and Alaska at $79 per leg.
I think this might be worth the 2 hour and 10 minute drive to save $1,256 coach vs coach. Adding a one-way rental for an Enterprise minivan for a random test week in September adds $139 to the cost. Hertz's surcharge for one-way on that same test week is $240.
If it were a direct flight from OTH-SEA I might say $1,000-1,100 is worth avoiding the drive, but as the comparison is to a 6 hour trip with a connection in SFO it seems pretty clear.
What would rock my world/what's most plausible is if the 300 Series Land Cruiser stayed body on frame (as it is reputed to do) yet came with not only a hybrid but a PHEV option. For that I'd jump through some financial hoops and consolidate my garage.Thought of the day:
My ideal vehicle would probably be my Land Cruiser... only lowered slightly on reasonable profile, perhaps 28" or 29" tall road-tread tires. With an AWD electric drivetrain swap, that is. 400 hp or so, 300 miles range so maybe 125 or 150 kWh to achieve that given its shape and weight, 350 kW charging.
Yeah, that'd do it.
Too bad no one is going to make such a conversion, a la the Jaguar E Type:
https://www.jaguar.com/about-jaguar/jaguar-classic/authentic-cars/e-type-zero.html
I met my brother in law's sister in law--not sure what that makes us