Hi All!
Catching up...
jags: Piccies, as requested. They're not as crisp as I'd like 'cos we took them at 21:00 hours on the first day of summer and there wasn't much light for moving subjects. These photos show the whole shootin' match atop the Surly rack. That includes 6l in the MSR dromedary water bag atop the rack in this photo. The big red dry sack contains my -15C 3lb/1.36kg winter sleeping bag, my 2.16lb/.98kg pad, silk liner and air pillow, and weighs 6.15/b/ 2.78kg total. The smaller, black sack is my tent, complete with footprint and dry sack for the inner compartment, and a variety of stakes ranging from Scandium sand hogs to titanium needle stakes, weighs 3.76llb/1.70kg. Total for the sleeping system is 10lb/4.5kg. With six liters of water, the 10l MSR Dromedary sack weighs 12lb/5.46kg and allows about one refill of the 6.5l in bottles on the frame and steerer. The rear panniers are carrying 12.5lb/5.7kg apiece, so 25lb/11.3kg for the pair, and the weight in them is packed low and forward and compressed laterally with the Ortlieb's own compression straps and my added ones that also tie them to the rack.
Since these photos -- and with the switch to the Tubus Cargo Evo -- the tent now goes under the underseat tool bag. The red dry sack goes forward right against the tool bag, putting the dry sack's weight just ahead of the rear axle. The MSR Dromedary has been switched-out for two smaller bladders with the same capacity, one in the bottom of each rear pannier. All panniers are secured with compression straps that also secure the ends of the red dry sack. The dry sack and tent load as a module, held together by webbing and Fastex buckles. They're then cinched down using weblock Arno straps. Neither the panniers nor rack-top load wiggle or bounce in any discernible way.
The Tubus Logo Evo has now made it to Springfield (yes, the one creator Matt Groening has admitted he used as the inspiration for the town in
The Simpsons) and should come across the bridge to me here by 16:30 this afternoon. If all goes well, it'll let me drop the bag hooks a total of 63mm lower than they are now, and lower the bag caps to nearly the same level as the rack deck, lowering the rack-top load and letting me move it further ahead. If not...well, the Cargo Evo in the proper 26" size is coming, and it'll drop the lot 13mm lower. Not a lot, but maybe enough. The Cargo Evo's deck is a lot more usably wide than the Logo, so it may be wash. We'll see. The good weather will hold through today, then we've got rain predicted through Monday that will make test runs less fun. I'll be a busy fellow today.
Pete: Alternatively, take your rack-top load off and put it in [an ExtraWheel trailer]...
Now you're tempting me, Pete! Mightily! I've had my eye on one of those since I saw one in your touring pics. What you might see as a trailer, I see as a Water Wagon, hauling all but one of my bottles and the Dromedary, full to 10l. I'm definitely keeping it in mind, but would prefer to do without a trailer of any kind if possible for the trips I take solo. For tandem camping with 4 panniers, a trailer can't be beat. The big problem for me is the concern about the trailer sinking on the dampened playa rims of dry lakes. That photo of my Miyata I posted elsewhere on the Forum (
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=3990.0;attach=1187 ) showing it standing on its own in Nevada's Black Rock Desert gives an idea. It just sucks the energy out of me to churn through that stuff. If an afternoon thunderstorm kicks up and it rains when I'm out there...good luck getting back out again till it dries enough to "surface". <-- Why I have to carry the extra food and water, 'cos the water on the dry lakes is all alkali-contaminated and can't be consumed. It also means sleeping in a chair, 'cos the tent and bag would be under several inches of water. Yeah, the trailer would be a help and a hindrance. Which would depend on the situation of the moment.
Stuart: You're a gem; thanks so much, great job as always!
JimK: Yes, the free-weights with and without the panniers are a great idea. Implemented and done. Though final testing will have to be with a real load, the free-weights should allow gross changes quickly enough to give me some quick indications.
Ian: Glad you like the title; it came to me as I woggled home from that first test-tour muttering those same words. Excellent thinking wrt my high cadence being a factor. Though I pride myself on being a smooth pedaler (the French term "souplesse" just sounds so much more sophisticated, but I can't pretend..."smooth pedaler" does me fine), it could be a factor. Thinking along those same lines, I revved like mad in low gears to get up to speed without trashing my knees, then dumped it into overdrive and just barely (for me) ticked over at 40rpm. No change. Oddly, I also found that on coast-down with no pedaling input, the bike would sometimes "drop into" the wobble as I decelerated without pedaling.
I don't think it's my cadence, and I now also don't think it is a classic case of shimmy, precipitated by such things as trail and gyroscopic precession of the front wheel and such. When there's a lot of weight on the back (with or without any water bottles, front panniers, or HB bag), shaking the handlebars while the bike is at rest is enough to start a sine wave through the top tube -- much worse with the back brake locked to provide a pivot point beneath the rear tire. More and more, I am thinking it is a case of either weight transfer or related to the polar moment of the loaded bike.
Oddly, this is
exactly the reason and identical symptoms/behavior that caused me to retire the Miyata 1000LT and buy Sherpa. Me 'Yata did fine all through Europe and throughout the 2010 Great Basin Tour that included the extended transit of Black Rock. On my return, I overhauled the bike, found the last strut-weld on the alu rear rack had broken, replaced it with the Surly, and then the bike became unridable thereafter due to shimmy, even with just 5lb/2.3kg in a rack-pack. Cost me my planned 2011 tour of the Ruby Mountains and cross-transit of Black Rock. I never did figure what caused that nor how to address it. I don't want that to be the case with Sherpa, but there have to be some related causal factors I'm missing. If only I could see the connection. Does anything jump out that catches your collective eyes?
Thanks so much for the kind and encouraging responses; very much appreciated!
All the best,
Dan.