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Bikes For Sale / Re: Thorn Nomad Mk 2 For Sale 620M
« Last post by burko on Today at 11:39:38 AM »
This is an immaculate model I purchased back in 2019 with the intention of cycling to Australia. Sadly, it managed only Lands End and Edgbaston for the cricket! It's been in dry storage ever since. The frame Geometry apparently suits someone in the 5'10'' to 6'5'' range.
It has very smooth 14 Speed Rohloff Hub gears, dynamo lights & a Brooks leather saddle. The front and back racks allow an ample load & there are lots of extras like crucial spare parts and front suspension forks if you wanted more 'off road'. SPD shoes thrown in if you're size 45. I'll possibly sell the Ortlieb panniers too. Photos should be attached hopefully.
I'm located just north of Bath in Malmesbury ( SN16 postcode ). 07500 657918. Offers close to £2000 considered.

Hi there,
Could you please advise if the bicycle is still available ?

Kind regards
Burak Soyer
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Thorn General / Re: Mercury 40
« Last post by John Saxby on Today at 02:35:51 AM »
Quote
Are you feeling clever to have got your Mk3 while you could, John?
  I'd like to say I timed it all well, Ian, but really, I just lucked in.  There was this fellow on the Thorn website who praised the Mercury, and I thought, "Why not? If it's good enuf for Ian, it's good enuf for me."

I sold two good bikes to cover much of the cost:  My Raven went to a friend of our daughter, who was over the moon about it when she rode it: "I don't have to fuss with derailleurs, I just twist the grip to the right gear!" She's toured in Ireland with it.
Then, I sold to my yoga teacher, the ti-framed Eclipse light touring bike I bought here in Ottawa in the winter of 2002-03.  This was the first really good bike I ever bought, and I was treating myself, as we were going to South Africa for three years in Aug 2003. The Eclipse was a lovely bike in many ways, but I had innumerable problems getting the gearing right. (But there's often a silver lining:  my frustration about not being able to get my lowest gear on a steep uphill in the Ottawa Valley in 2013 led to my discovery of & eventual membership in the Church of Rohloff.)  My yoga teacher bought the bike for his teenaged son, who never rode it much, and then announced he wanted an e-bike. I kept quiet, though it crossed my mind to offer to buy it back...

But my Mercury (named Freddie, of course) has been a delight.  It does most of what each of the other bikes would do, and I no longer need the Raven's medium/heavy touring capabilities.  I've done overnights and a weeklong tour in West Qué (with Ron Séguin); on these, and on day rides, I find myself saying, "Dang! This bike works sooo well!" A couple of years ago, I was visiting friends in the back country of the Ottawa Valley, and on my ride out of town, I eased past two women riders.  One said, "Oooooh, fancy bike!"  I said, gallantly, "Thanks, lass!"  She smiled.

That road you have as your "regular" ride looks a treat, Ian.  This spring, I've not been riding as much as I'd like (wretched weather, heavy-duty head cold, etc.) but I've started riding across the river and into the hills and trees of Gatineau Park. (Will assemble some photos and post those.)  Today, I rode to the base of the long/steep hill to the lookout which is the turnaround for my favourite 33 kms/2 hrs 15 mins out-and-back.  The canopy of trees has blossomed in the past two weeks, and just two days ago, my wife and I saw & heard the largest wing of Canada geese we'd ever seen/heard -- there was 80 or 90 of them overhead, heading for a bay on the Ottawa River for the night; perhaps going -- where? -- further north in Eastern Ontario, I'd guess.  Absolutely magical sound, and with the trees' foliage, confirmation that summer really has arrived. :)
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Thorn General / Re: Mercury 40
« Last post by Moronic on June 02, 2026, 11:10:00 AM »
I should add for completeness that it's not all like this - the trail I mean. Some bits are quite rough, other bits are quite steep, and there's about 10km of pure gravel. The pics were taken as boast shots - 'guess where I am today'. Forty km on this trail is harder work than the same distance on a typical public road, except that motor traffic is mercifully absent.
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Thorn General / Re: Mercury 40
« Last post by Moronic on May 31, 2026, 11:41:17 PM »
Are you feeling clever to have got your Mk3 while you could, John? I'm certainly delighted that I stretched to the purchase of mine at a time when that needed some faith.

I've been stepping up the riding after having succumbed to various distractions, among them moving house (but not far). There's a lovely 40km (25 mile) cycle route (one way) that now begins pretty much at my door, and ends at a rustic outer suburb that offers several cafes. And a train that can bring me all the way back.

There was a time when I would cycle both directions, and I'm nearly back to that. Working my way up to it.

I've attached a few pics from the ride last week. The Merc really is a superb steed for this kind of going. You could argue that just about anything would be, but I would claim that not many other options would so effectively combine liveliness with comfort, and none with so little maintenance.

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Bikes For Sale / Thorn XTC Classic SWB, 525M Frame
« Last post by Obsidian on May 31, 2026, 04:45:25 PM »

Sadly it’s time to find a new home for my XTC. It’s been a brilliant bike, comfortable and fast, and the steel frame, 26” wheels and wide tyres (up to37mm) mean it is good on rougher surfaces and when loaded.
The XTC was Thorn’s top of the range lightweight steel tourer. The Classic was hand built in the UK (in approx 2000) with 725 conical tubing and 531C forks.
The 26” wheels of the XTC make this bike especially suitable for shorter riders (approx. 5’ 5” to 5’8”) because it allows for a comfortable reach without having to compromise on toe overlap or a high bottom bracket.

Frame size 525mm
Bottom bracket to top of seat tube 510mm
Top tube ctc 510mm
Reach 460mm
Standover at mid-tube 770mm

725 Reynolds conical tubing
Investment cast lugs
Ritchey dropouts
Forks 531C, uncut steerer

Overall length 1650mm

Shimano Ultegra triple flight deck levers
Thorn 80mm silver stem
FSC head set
Shimano Ultegra front mech
Ultegra cranks
Chainrings XT 52-42-30
Cassette 32-12
Shimano Deore XT rear mech
Sunrims CR18 26” alloy rim front
Sputnik alloy rim rear
Shimano STX HB-MC30 front hub
Tyres Panaracer Tourguard 26x1.5 (front), Schwalbe Marathon Plus 26x1.35 (rear)
Avid Shorty 6 cantilever brakes front and rear
Charge Spoon saddle
Thorn layback seat post 27.2mm
MKS GR-9 platform pedals
Full mudguards, rear reflector and Secula rear light
Tubus stainless steel carrier

This bike has been well-used over its life. It has not been ridden for a while and it needs some tlc. Most seriously, the handlebars have been bent (they are still rideable but someone knocked the bike over when it was loaded and one handlebar took the brunt of it). The rubber brake hoods need replacing, the plastic ‘Ultegra’ on the brake levers is missing (cosmetic only), the chain, transmission and cables all have wear and you should plan on replacing in due course. The front mech needs adjusting. There is surface rust on bolts etc. The front rim is the original and I don’t know how much wear is left in it (the back rim has had little use).
The frame has various chips and scuffs to the paintwork as seen, but the frame and forks are straight with no dings.

£250 ono

Location: Horsham, West Sussex

Collection preferred so you can see what you are buying. If you come by train, we are less than a mile from the station. Otherwise, I can box it up and send it on receipt of full payment for +£80.
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Thorn General / Re: Mercury 40
« Last post by John Saxby on May 29, 2026, 03:42:56 PM »
Following up on Moronic's comment,
Quote
I'm still really enjoying my Mercury Mk3 650B. Perfect for my use envelope of day rides and light touring, tar and gravel.

Yep.  Here, the only interference is from our inaptly named "spring weather": cool, wet, and windy, with occasional 30º days thrown in...
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Cycle Tours / Re: Part Three, my tentative UK trip.
« Last post by mickeg on May 27, 2026, 11:59:54 AM »
...
I cycle in sandals throughout the summer. If it's warm then my feet get a patchy sun tan, if it's cool I use socks and if it's cold and wet I use waterproof socks. They eventually get wet through but still provide some warmth and are much easier to dry than soggy boots or cycling shoes.

I prefer SPD cleats over sandals on platform pedals.  That said, my last tour was planned to be in warmer weather, so I wore sandals in rain when it would be too hot for rain pants.  And it was warm enough that I wore sandals in the campsite too.  I used Shimano A530 pedals that had a large enough platform on one side that the sandals with a fairly stiff sole were comfortable and SPD cleats on the other side.

But I am already struggling to minimize too much weight, do not want to carry sandals, and bike shoes, and hiking shoes.  That along with some flip flops for shower shoes.

Photo attached from that tour, but the photo was taken after the rain had quit.  Yes, I am wearing socks with my sandals.

My bike shoes will be Keen Commuter 4 cycling shoes (discontinued).  They were sold as a sandal, but with a closed toe I consider them to be shoes.
https://www.biketiresdirect.com/reviews/keen-mens-commuter-4-cycling-sandal
https://www.treefortbikes.com/Keen-Mens-Commuter-4-Sandal

They are slow to dry out but I have some cycling overshoe covers that I plan to wear with them when I wear rain pants that can overlap over the overshoes.  When too warm for rain pants, I will wear waterproof hiking shoes with waterproof gaiters.

Thanks.
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Cycle Tours / Re: Part Three, my tentative UK trip.
« Last post by JohnR on May 26, 2026, 09:08:58 PM »
Today it looks like London temp is 35 (C), same with tomorrow.  At that high an altitude, I can't figure out what is going on, but I hope things are closer to normal when I am there, if I wanted to go somewhere that hot, I can think of a lot of other places to go.  If things look like this just before I leave home in a week, I may bring a pair of shorts and a short sleeve shirt.  But I really hate to bring anything that I might only use once or twice for a month and a half long trip.
That's British weather! A week ago we were emerging from an unusually cold period. Now it's uncomfortably hot. It depends on the weather patterns. High pressure west of UK pulls down cold air from the north. The high pressure has moved eastwards so we are currently getting hot air from the south. The general forecasts are now fairly good up to about 5 days ahead and two days ahead are quite good in predicting what time of day it might rain. The general recommendation for clothing is lots of thin layers which can be put on or removed according to the temperature.

I cycle in sandals throughout the summer. If it's warm then my feet get a patchy sun tan, if it's cool I use socks and if it's cold and wet I use waterproof socks. They eventually get wet through but still provide some warmth and are much easier to dry than soggy boots or cycling shoes.
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Cycle Tours / Re: Part Three, my tentative UK trip.
« Last post by mickeg on May 26, 2026, 04:58:31 PM »
Just back from 1000kms around Scotland George. Message/post if you want some ‘fresh out the blocks’ info. EG. There’s an electric bus company/app called Ember. For £2 they’ll take you between many bigger cities or towns with your bike and panniers in he luggage compartment. I used it and found it excellent.

Thank you.  I already have the Ember info in my phone, but seeing a reference such as yours makes it more likely that I would trust using them if I need a contingency.

The bicycling part of my trip starts in London, I expect to be in Glasgow by mid to late June.  Then have no specific plans until I have a hostel reservation on July 12 in Perth.  How many miles I do will depend on the weather and how I feel each day, but I will have several weeks to accomplish that.

I wanted to have my bike packed by yesterday, am behind schedule.  Packing the bike in an S&S case means I can't take full coverage fenders (mudguards), but I wanted more coverage than some of my past trips so I am fabricating some mounts for some cheap mini fenders, finished front last night, working on the rear today.
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