Author Topic: RST or Raven Tour?  (Read 11677 times)

Fred A-M

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #15 on: April 03, 2009, 09:32:38 PM »
Wrong side of 50 yrs of age, first ever cycling tour, day 1: 90 miles.  Day 2: ran out of daylight at 115 miles.  Day 3: 100 miles.  Perfect comfort, no aches anywhere.

Wow, that's going some Joataman. If you got yourself a Son hub & Supernova, you wouldn't even have to worry about running out of daylight!   I did a 4 day tour in the Picos de Europa (Spain) last summer, probably loaded with about 15Kg camping set up on the rear and also found the front end a little light and twitchy!

Great to see a few RST owners enthusing about the merits of their trusted steeds - I was beginning to wonder if the RST was on the way out in terms of popularity but seemingly not!

 

Tito

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #16 on: August 21, 2009, 04:52:27 PM »
YES! Got it finally!

The RST arrived two days ago. Thanks again to everyone for great advice, my new thorn is just amazing.

First impressions:
The looks - beautiful finishing, high quality as you would expect. The bike looks classy, old school quality, not pretentious. I was a bit worried when I unpacked it and saw the number of spacers (probably some 15 cm), but I have installed the handlebar a bit lower, and now it looks just fine. All I need now is to cut the part of the fork which is sticking out, no big deal.

The feel - very comfortable. This is the first time I own such a high-quality bike, but I was still surprised. My previous bike has an aluminum frame with suspension fork, but i find the thorn more comfortable (except when I hit a bump on the road, although this does not feel too bad either).
It is surprisingly agile, and it's true that you need to be more careful because it does not ride like on rails, but it is excellent for commuting.
The handlebars are wider than I am used to, but I will keep them for the time being and see if I will get used to them.

Rohloff - I have read in other posts that the first impressions of the hub are usually "surprisingly silent". I knew that it will not be my case - I really like the silence of a derailer, and I remember having tested a rohloff bicycle a year ago or so, and found the gears quite loud. It was around midnight when I finished assembling the RST, so when I took it for a ride, it was very quite outside. And my first impression surprisingly was "surprisingly silent". I started switching from gear one up to seven, and could barely hear a thing. At first I thought that I had installed something wrong, because I knew that gears 8-14 were the silent ones. But then I switched to gear 8 and up, and found complete silence. Gear 7, is loudest, and has a grinding feel to it, which I don;t mind at all. I am therefore really pleasantly surprised, knowing that it will only get better and smoother.

Brakes, however, are not silent. I went for LX with grizzly carbide rims, and the brakes are squeeking quite a lot. Will this stop soon, as the brakepads get worned out a little bit, or do I have to do something about this?

One small drawback is that the bicycle arrived slightly damaged. :( SJSC put it in a small cardboard box (bicycle was dissasembled so that it costs less to ship overseas), and when it arrived it looked as if it had been thrown off a cliff. The seat tube was nicked a little bit, and parts of paint were chipped off. One crank arm was also scraped, and more worryingly crank ring was damaged. I wrote to SJSC, and they quickly replied that they will send me a new crank ring, but htey were silent on the damaged frame. I suppose I will have to retouch it myself with the paint that comes with the bike - anyone can recommend how to do this, with a regular brush, or with something special?

By the way, the bike was really carefully wrapped up in foam, it was really the fault of DHL for the damage. However, the box was not marked "fragile", and noone could tell that it was a bicycle, so SJSC perhaps you can do this in future shipments...

Photos coming up soon, for anyone who is interested
« Last Edit: August 21, 2009, 05:04:02 PM by Tito »

julk

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #17 on: August 21, 2009, 11:42:28 PM »
I touch up small scratches/chips in the paint with a matchstick sharpened and the end dipped in paint.
I use masking tape to hide the good paint, then take it off before the touch up paint dries.

jags

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #18 on: August 22, 2009, 12:07:13 PM »
hope you enjoy your new bike,funny i had my frame chipped as well when it came out of the packaging.
ah but overall i loved it so wasen't to bothered about the chips,what i done  i went to the nearest motor parts store, got them to mix the exact colour (small tin) cellouse finish small artists brush ,and just build up the colour let each coat dry, only take a few hours.you might need some tinners to clean the brush but dont put the tinners anywhere near the frame .
i think you can get a cream cleaner to fix the scratches in the crank arm. ;)
hope this expert advice is helpful enjoy your bike post some photo's please.

Cake

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #19 on: August 22, 2009, 02:08:45 PM »
Enjoy your new steed Tito!

I'm looking forward to the photos already.


Tito

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #20 on: September 03, 2009, 09:52:40 PM »
Here are the photos

Tito

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #21 on: September 03, 2009, 10:02:48 PM »
...

Tito

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #22 on: September 03, 2009, 10:05:44 PM »
and a couple of photos of my favourite saddle...

Cake

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #23 on: September 04, 2009, 01:50:58 PM »
Mmmmmm thats very nice indeed.

Fred A-M

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #24 on: September 04, 2009, 08:03:45 PM »
Hi Tito

Great to hear that you are a relatively happy shopper and a seemingly very proud RST owner!  Look forward to hearing of further impressions/adventures!  I agree that the RST is way more comfortable than an aluminium frame with suspension forks, having made the same jump myself.

In terms of my own impressions, I've just come back from a week's cycling in south central france, kitted out with four panniers for the first time (probably 18kg of luggage excluding 3 water bottles), and I'm happy to report that the RST was a dream in terms of handling and as per all previous trips, behaved faultlessly throughout, so 3 years 6 months on, I'm still exceptionally happy with it.   

Fred
 

stutho

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Re: RST or Raven Tour?
« Reply #25 on: September 06, 2009, 09:19:39 AM »
Congratulation,

Looks like an excellent set up.  The brakes should quite down after they bed in.  If they don't then try increasing the towing in - or purchasing a brake booster.