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#1 |
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It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who
are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you alone. Deal? ;-) I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each model when compared to each other? http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ Thanks. |
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#2 |
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"Steve L" <me@privacy.net> wrote in message
news:27upr0dgliar3blfpff1s4i14io7pr97id@4ax.com... > It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who > are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant > me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you > alone. Deal? ;-) > > I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh > Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're > the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? > > Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below > and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each > model when compared to each other? > > http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ Now that's confusing - they seem to be almost the same bike. I'd ask EBC what the intended difference between the two is. (the 3HT claims to be lighter...) cheers, clive |
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#3 |
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On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 02:46:57 -0000, "Clive George"
<clive@xxxx-x.fsnet.co.uk> wrote: >"Steve L" <me@privacy.net> wrote in message >news:27upr0dgliar3blfpff1s4i14io7pr97id@4ax.com... >> It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who >> are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant >> me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you >> alone. Deal? ;-) >> >> I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh >> Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're >> the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? >> >> Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below >> and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each >> model when compared to each other? >> >> http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ > >Now that's confusing - they seem to be almost the same bike. I'd ask EBC >what the intended difference between the two is. (the 3HT claims to be >lighter...) Thanks Clive, I might just ring them if you guys don't turn up trumps (which I doubt). If it makes it easier, and so that everyone doesn't have to visit the site, I'll list the specs for each bike below: EC = Edinburgh Cuillin 3HT '04 RC = Revolution Cuillin '04 Frame: EC - 7005-series Aluminium RC - Aluminum Forks: EC - SunTour XC60 suspension fork 75mm travel. RC - SunTour XC60 75 Wheels: EC - Deep-section Vuelta Freeway rims RC - Alloy QR. Tyres: EC - WTB (Wilderness Trail Bikes) Velociraptor 26 x 2.1 RC - Tioga Factory XC 26x1.95 Transmission: EC - 24-speed Shimano EZ Fire shifters Shimano Acera gears SunTour XCC300PB chainset 22/32/42 Shimano 11-30 cassette Steel cage pedals - toeclip compatible RC - Shimano Altus 24-speed Rapidfire shifters Shimano Acera rear / Tourney front gears SunTour chainset with 22/32/42 chainrings Shimano 11-32 cassette Metal-caged pedals, toeclips compatible Brakes: EC - Tektro V-brakes with Allen key-fit brake blocks. Shimano levers. RC - Tektro V-brakes. Shimano Altus levers Handlebars: EC - Tioga aluminium riser bars RC - Tioga riser bars and Aheadstem Saddle: EC - Dual fabric anti-compression saddle on alloy seatpost RC - WTB Rocket Saddle Weight: EC - 30lb/13.6kg RC - 33.5lb/15.2kg. Thanks for your help. |
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#4 |
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"Steve L" <me@privacy.net> wrote in message news:27upr0dgliar3blfpff1s4i14io7pr97id@4ax.com... > It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who > are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant > me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you > alone. Deal? ;-) The standard question asked by this group when anyone asks 'what bike should I get?' is 'what do you want it for?' As a general rule we get sniffy about bikes of £200 or less -- which neither of your options are. Also as a general rule we suggest leaving out unnecessary stuff -- e.g. bouncy forks if you want a road bike -- and to concentrate on the best basic kit -- frame and transmission. EBC bikes are often suggested as good VFM. Nothing earth shattering but good for the dosh. You might also look at the Dawes and Ridgeback ranges. If possible have a test ride. Can you visit an EBC shop? If not you are taking a bit more of a chance. T PS -- I don't recognise your claim of any unwillingness to provide advice. This group has always seemed welcoming and helpful to honest questions -- though this is usenet -- you have to treat any advice with care. |
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#5 |
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in message <27upr0dgliar3blfpff1s4i14io7pr97id@4ax.com>, Steve L
('me@privacy.net') wrote: > It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who > are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant > me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you > alone. Deal? ;-) > > I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh > Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're > the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? Very similar bikes. The brakes, transmission components and suspension fork are all common. The primary difference between these two is the frame, with the Revolution having more funky looking tubes. In principle the tapered, shaped tubes could give more stiffness to the frame in key places but seeing that neither frame has butted tubes it's extremely likely that both are stronger and stiffer than they need to be anyway. The Cuillin 3HT comes with Velociraptor tyres which are my top choice of off-road tyres for use in Scottish conditions - cope well with mud, loose surfaces, and gravel while not too slow on firm surfaces. Also the 3HT is specified as '7005 Aluminium', whereas the Revolution Courier is only specified as 'Aluminium'. Aluminium, as used in bicycle tubesets, is alloyed and heat treated in a variety of different ways, which make a real difference to the quality of the finished product. 7005 is not a particularly good grade of Aluminium tubing, but at least you know what you're getting. On the whole in my experience the Co-op's own brand bikes are very good value for money. What I'd advise is go and sit on the bikes and if possible try a bit of a ride on each. The one that feels better (after adjusting for fit) is the one to get. If they both feel much the same, go for the one which is lighter. If they're pretty much the same weight, my on-paper preference would be the 3HT, mainly because of the tyres. If you're riding either of these bikes in serious off-road conditions you will need a fork upgrade before very long - the SunTour forks are not brilliant. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ... a mild, inoffensive sadist... |
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#6 |
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On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 02:21:14 +0000, Steve L <me@privacy.net> wrote:
>It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who >are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant >me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you >alone. Deal? ;-) Judging by the live threads I'm looking at, we don't seem to talk much about cycling whoever is asking. The main active discussion with 315 posts is about religion and Hitler. >I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh >Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're >the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? Suitability depends entirely on your intended use. Without trawling through detailed specs, these seem to be a little too rugged and knobbly-tyred for pure road use. I'm not an MTB person but assume that Edinburgh bikes know their stuff and have created good, basic off roaders. Maybe someone who knows more than me can say whether 15.2 kg is heavy for this type of bike. >Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below >and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each >model when compared to each other? > >http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ > >Thanks. |
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#7 |
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On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 02:21:14 +0000, Steve L <me@privacy.net> wrote:
>It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who >are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant >me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you >alone. Deal? ;-) Newbies are always welcome, and bikes under £500 are most certainly not viewed as being unworthy of our opinions. If you had asked about a sub £200 or, perish the thought, a £99.99 Toys-R-Us [1] special then yes, we would be advising you to stay clear. But around the £500 mark - I'm positively jealous! It is often the case that we don't mind answering questions about cheap bikes, but the person asking the question tends not to like the answer. -- Amazon: "If you are interested in 'Asimov's I-Robot', you may also be interested in 'Garfield - The Movie'. ... erm, how do they figure that one out? |
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#8 |
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On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 02:21:14 +0000, Steve L <me@privacy.net> wrote:
>It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who >are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant >me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you >alone. Deal? ;-) Newbies are always welcome, and bikes under £500 are most certainly not viewed as being unworthy of our opinions. If you had asked about a sub £200 or, perish the thought, a £99.99 Toys-R-Us [1] special then yes, we would be advising you to stay clear. But around the £500 mark - I'm positively jealous! It is often the case that we don't mind answering questions about cheap bikes, but the person asking the question tends not to like the answer. Love and hugs from Rich x [1] What is the Ascii code for the back to front 'R'? -- Amazon: "If you are interested in 'Asimov's I-Robot', you may also be interested in 'Garfield - The Movie'. ... erm, how do they figure that one out? |
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#9 |
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Steve L wrote:
> It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who > are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant > me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you > alone. Deal? ;-) Far from it. There have been plentry of recommendations for sub-500 bikes here in the past. > I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh > Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're > the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? As a purchaser of a sub-500 bike from EBC several years ago I can certainly EBC bikes in general (except their sub-100 MTB they had a couple of years ago.) > Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below > and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each > model when compared to each other? They look like essentially the same bikes to me, forks, mech, brakes...though they do seem to have different frame tubing. I'm a bit confused as to EBC separation of the EBC and Revolution brands to be honest. Colin |
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#10 |
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Richard Bates wrote:
> [1] What is the Ascii code for the back to front 'R'? Well, the HTML entity is Я -- you could always post a link when referring to Toys Я Us. |
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#11 |
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#12 |
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Steve L vaguely muttered something like ...
> It appears that you don't like answering questions from newbies who > are looking for a cheap (sub £500) bike, but if you'll all just grant > me this one, I promise not to ask any more questions and to leave you > alone. Deal? ;-) > > I've decided that I'll definitely be going for either a Edinburgh > Cuillin 3HT '04 or a Revolution Cuillin '04, but which one? They're > the same price but I need some advice from you guys, please? > > Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below > and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each > model when compared to each other? > > http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ > > Thanks. If I were to spend your £229, I'd probably go for, based on their descriptions, the EBC 3HT. It's lighter, has better tyres, stainless spokes (though the other one _may_ have, they aren't specified) and doesn't have a strange frame tube section ... But, with £500 to spend, I'd go for a different bike altogether, and add £50 for a Specialised Rockhopper http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/...il.cfm?ID=19868 although I'd _really_ look on-line for a discounted 04 or even 03 model year bike .. ![]() such as http://www.evanscycles.com/product.jsp?style=4083 However .. I'd try to get a ride on one before buying, especialy if I didn't know what the particular bike felt like. After all, what suits me, might not suit you. Fit and Feel are most important, probably but also arguably, more important than any spangly bits .. ![]() -- Paul ... http://www.4x4prejudice.org/index.php "A tosser is a tosser, no matter what mode of transport they're using." (8(|) Homer Rules !!! |
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#13 |
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>Could you please review the specs of both bikes at the website below >and give me your professional opinions & the pros and cons of each >model when compared to each other? > >http://www.edinburgh-bicycle.co.uk/catalogue/ > >Thanks. My only criticism would be the frames being 7005 based (at least one but both probably). You can get bikes from Giant and GT as well as other brands I bet for similar money that have the more crack resistant 6061 type frames that are stronger and possibly lighter (depending on actual frame design). As I understand it most 7005 frames are only heat strengthened at the welds but the 6061 type frames are completely heat strengthened over the entire frame. The 7005 frames have a tendency to crack because the frame is a mixture of both heat strengthened and non heat strengthened. Also 7005 is an indication that the frame may have been made in a less sophisticated factory in taiwan where as 6061 is an indication of more advanced welding and frame assembly (probably made in Giant's huge factory). Theres nothing really wrong with 7005 but I just think if your paying reasonable money it would be better to have 6061. As aluminium has a tendency to weaken with age unlike steel (unless it rusts) I think 6061 is a better long term bet. I personally wouldn't consider your budget cheap as the vast majority of bikes sold in this country are well below £200. |
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#14 |
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in message <lmnqr0pqpb457644fn2ej71t0fhdqc63ic@4ax.com>, Richard Bates
('usenet01@artybee.net') wrote: > [1] What is the Ascii code for the back to front 'R'? There isn't one. The American Standard Code for Information Interchange is a 7 bit code, which you can think of as being divided into four 5 bit pages, thus page 0: control codes page 1: numerals (padded with punctuation) page 2: upper case (padded with punctuation) page 3: lower case (padded with punctuation) Although there are 32 characters in each page, the needs of punctuation mean that there isn't room for any accented, umlauted, or non-latin characters. This problem was first addressed by a series of 8 bit codes (ISO 8859) of which the one most familiar in the UK is IS0 8859-1; this too is a strictly latin alphabet. For a mix of latin and cyrillic characters you need ISO 8859-5, in which the character code for capital Ï (the reversed 'R') is 207 decimal (CF in hex). The more general solution would be to use UTF-8, of course. To post to Usenet in 8859-5, one should set the Content-type header to: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-5 If I've got things set up correctly (and that's a big if) this message should be so formatted. However even if I get posting it right I wouldn't bet too much on many people's newsclients being configured to handle it properly. -- simon@jasmine.org.uk (Simon Brooke) http://www.jasmine.org.uk/~simon/ ;; better than your average performing pineapple |
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#15 |
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On 13/12/04 12:55 pm, in article
u3g092-l8v.ln1@gododdin.internal.jasmine.org.uk, "Simon Brooke" <simon@jasmine.org.uk> wrote: > If I've got things set up correctly (and that's a big if) this message > should be so formatted. However even if I get posting it right I > wouldn't bet too much on many people's newsclients being configured to > handle it properly. Strangely enough, Entourage on a mac gives (descriptive in [], otherwise literal): [R reversed][E reversed]: H[o vertical line][wierd w] t[o vertical line] (and so on) ...d |
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