I became a fan of Dispatch at PennState sometime- easy to do... good band with some jamband type vibe, short catchy songs too- good mix. I recently got into three other bands, which I thought I had found all on my own, with the help of iTunes recommends thing.
1.State Radio
2.Braddigan
3.Pete Francis
Now, I bought the first State Radio album last summer, Braddigan not too long after that, and just started listening to some of Pete Francis' stuff online tonight. All of it sounded really familar, however, and it wasn't until tonight when I actually hauled up wikipedia, that I realized why...they're all from Dispatch. So... there you have it. If you like a band, and they break up, don't be too upset, just buy up all of their solo stuff.... works most Dispatch, works relatively well for Phish...
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Earthquake
I am now officially a resident of Southern California... I've driven the freeways, seen chicks in puffy magenta sweatsuits with oversized glasses, spotted upwards of twenty mazarattis and now... finally, experienced an earthquake.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
John Muir Trail
The John Muir Trail "starts" in Yosemite National Park, and winds through the high Sierras, ending up at Mt. Whitney, the highest peak in the lower 48. I've recently decided that a thru-hike of this 211 mile trail, which in reality would be more like 240 when all is said and done, is necessary at some point before my life gets too complicated to leave for three weeks.
What I didn't realize, however, was that if you look at google map's "Terrain" feature, and zoom in real tight, it follows the JMT. Check out the beginning here. It's not difficult at all to follow it all the way South, to Mt. Whitney. Another cool thing I found out online is that a town nearby Whitney Portal offers bus service up to a small town near Yosemite National Park, where a different bus can then take you into the park, where you can park for extended amounts of time for free.
So... here's to another reason why I can't wait to get my masters, so I can get some real world experience.
What I didn't realize, however, was that if you look at google map's "Terrain" feature, and zoom in real tight, it follows the JMT. Check out the beginning here. It's not difficult at all to follow it all the way South, to Mt. Whitney. Another cool thing I found out online is that a town nearby Whitney Portal offers bus service up to a small town near Yosemite National Park, where a different bus can then take you into the park, where you can park for extended amounts of time for free.
So... here's to another reason why I can't wait to get my masters, so I can get some real world experience.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Stroke It...
StrokeIt is the coolest software I've downloaded for my PC in a long time. You can do all sorts of things by just right clicking, and tracing a certain pattern. I close windows by just tracing out a "C" on top of the window. I added my own shortcut to close just a tab in FireFox when I do a "C reversed" which I learned after about 20 minutes of fooling around is actually just tracing it backwards.... not like a C you see in a mirror... if you know what I mean.
Anyway, if you have a PC, download this thing- it's sweet... and plus, its called strokeit.
Anyway, if you have a PC, download this thing- it's sweet... and plus, its called strokeit.
Monday, March 17, 2008
L.A. Circuit Race
This was a hot-dog style flat circuit race. The big decider was not any inclines towards the end of the race as with many other circuit races, but was the wind. The course was just two 180 degree turns on one medium sized California road (so like, 18 lanes).
One direction was a headwind. The other was a tailwind... it was blowing about 20mph the whole time. In the tailwind direction we'd hit 30 without trying too hard, and then be sitting in at like 12-15 dodging all over the place to grab wheels without loosing too many spots.
Ted, Ernie and I were there, and Ted and I both tested out the waters off the front early on, but quickly realized that nothing stood a chance. Even if you had a gap, the tailwind section just blew everything back together. There was one guy off solo for a few laps, and he must have thought he was flying... probably the only time a cat3 field brought back a solo dude who was doing 30+mph.
We were all careful to stay near the front, and took the last 180-degree turn into the tailwind finishing straight in the top 20. Ernie, Ted, then me. We stayed put, and when the time was right, Ernie blasted it.... Lots of people were watching his wheel, and for good reason- he's a beast in the sprint, but he was a train that day instead- Ted and I rode it up to the front, and managed to snag 4th and 6th. A jump a bit sooner on maybe would have gotten us further up.... it's hard to go too early in a 20mph tailwind we learned.
6th place is good enough for one more upgrade point though, so I'm now sitting pretty at 5. 15 more to go... I'd love to grab a big chunk of that at a stage race, but that is unlikely to happen with the SanDimas including an uphill prologue, and CycloVets being much more attainable, but still difficult by including the Boulevard RR course. Stay tuned.
One direction was a headwind. The other was a tailwind... it was blowing about 20mph the whole time. In the tailwind direction we'd hit 30 without trying too hard, and then be sitting in at like 12-15 dodging all over the place to grab wheels without loosing too many spots.
Ted, Ernie and I were there, and Ted and I both tested out the waters off the front early on, but quickly realized that nothing stood a chance. Even if you had a gap, the tailwind section just blew everything back together. There was one guy off solo for a few laps, and he must have thought he was flying... probably the only time a cat3 field brought back a solo dude who was doing 30+mph.
We were all careful to stay near the front, and took the last 180-degree turn into the tailwind finishing straight in the top 20. Ernie, Ted, then me. We stayed put, and when the time was right, Ernie blasted it.... Lots of people were watching his wheel, and for good reason- he's a beast in the sprint, but he was a train that day instead- Ted and I rode it up to the front, and managed to snag 4th and 6th. A jump a bit sooner on maybe would have gotten us further up.... it's hard to go too early in a 20mph tailwind we learned.
6th place is good enough for one more upgrade point though, so I'm now sitting pretty at 5. 15 more to go... I'd love to grab a big chunk of that at a stage race, but that is unlikely to happen with the SanDimas including an uphill prologue, and CycloVets being much more attainable, but still difficult by including the Boulevard RR course. Stay tuned.
Sunday, March 09, 2008
Racing
One weekend.
4, maybe 5 legitimate break-attempts
zero results.
goal for this weekend: don't get in the wind until I can hear the bell for 1 to go.
4, maybe 5 legitimate break-attempts
zero results.
goal for this weekend: don't get in the wind until I can hear the bell for 1 to go.
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Speedplay Overhaulin'
One of the speedplay pedals on my old TT bike has really been feeling junky recently. Spins very freely (which is actually not good-sign that it needs lubing) and very loose. Well, I found out why tonight, when I finally sat down with all the necessary tools, including a head lamp.
It actually didn't take too long to take the pedal completely apart, trickiest part was getting the snap pliers to work well- I bought a pretty flimsy pair. Speedplay's instructions are actually pretty.... pretty..... pretty... pretty clear. I was confused once I got everything apart, though- I was missing a whole cartridge bearing somewhere.There are two cartridge bearings inside the pedal body of speedplay Zero pedals- and I only removed one. The other was completely destroyed. The outer race was so fangled and broken apart that I didn't even realize it was a race.
The bearings themselves are TINY! most of them fell out without me even realizing it- it is likely most were already gone anyway. The inner race was the real bitch though, it was stuck to the spindle of the pedal itself. I took the other pedal, which is pretty healthy, apart to prove to myself that the thing stuck on the spindle was indeed the inner race. Once I knew it was junked anyway, I set out to tear it off with some pliers. Still took some work, but it came off. Now I just need to find someplace to buy some new Speedplay bearings...
It actually didn't take too long to take the pedal completely apart, trickiest part was getting the snap pliers to work well- I bought a pretty flimsy pair. Speedplay's instructions are actually pretty.... pretty..... pretty... pretty clear. I was confused once I got everything apart, though- I was missing a whole cartridge bearing somewhere.There are two cartridge bearings inside the pedal body of speedplay Zero pedals- and I only removed one. The other was completely destroyed. The outer race was so fangled and broken apart that I didn't even realize it was a race.
yup, that's what a bearing bracket looks like after you beat it to shit. The other matching piece that would have held the balls secure was ripped to shreds. Check out how small the ball bearings are.
The bearings themselves are TINY! most of them fell out without me even realizing it- it is likely most were already gone anyway. The inner race was the real bitch though, it was stuck to the spindle of the pedal itself. I took the other pedal, which is pretty healthy, apart to prove to myself that the thing stuck on the spindle was indeed the inner race. Once I knew it was junked anyway, I set out to tear it off with some pliers. Still took some work, but it came off. Now I just need to find someplace to buy some new Speedplay bearings...
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
New TT rig
Well it was about time. I had my federal tax return in my account for almost 48 hours, and then I found this prize online. $340 for a proper TT frame from a relatively reputable manufacturer? Hell yes I will!
I'm also flirting with the idea of, ocasionally, rigging this bad boy up for the track. Would require a bit of work- taking the ders and brakes off, taking all the cables out of the frame, but all the housing could stay attached to the handlebars. Then just throwing a different crankset on, another seatpost/saddle combo, and a track bar (and likely a different stem). Complicated enough that I don't want to do it all the time, but for a few weekends a year, I say its definitely worth it until I get a track frame (next year when I get my tax return back).
So if you have any of the following laying around, let me know:
1. Track crankset (144BCD) Octalink. Not sure about crankarm length- 170??
2. Track chainrings / cogs
3. Track rear hub, or rear wheel
4. Handlebar for the track- what do people use compared to their road bars?? smaller?
Also obtaining some new carbon TT bars from Aerus. That'll compensate weightwise for the aluminum steerer tube
My old TT bike was a Titanium Airborne, which was a great road bike (albeit a tad heavy) and was an allright TT bike, but I really needed something with more upright geometry- a real TT frame. The Jamis has rear facing dropouts, so I can slide the rear wheel right up into the slots for it in the seattube. Also has some aero tubing. The seatpost above is roughly placed where it's going to have to be, which looks like a lot, because it is... but that is good- plenty of room for drop to the handlebars. I'm also scheming on making some sort of fairing to make the seatpost aero... because you know I'm an engineering dork.I'm also flirting with the idea of, ocasionally, rigging this bad boy up for the track. Would require a bit of work- taking the ders and brakes off, taking all the cables out of the frame, but all the housing could stay attached to the handlebars. Then just throwing a different crankset on, another seatpost/saddle combo, and a track bar (and likely a different stem). Complicated enough that I don't want to do it all the time, but for a few weekends a year, I say its definitely worth it until I get a track frame (next year when I get my tax return back).
So if you have any of the following laying around, let me know:
1. Track crankset (144BCD) Octalink. Not sure about crankarm length- 170??
2. Track chainrings / cogs
3. Track rear hub, or rear wheel
4. Handlebar for the track- what do people use compared to their road bars?? smaller?
Monday, March 03, 2008
Going Solar
I haven't plugged in cell phone into the wall for over three days. I haven't used the car charger either. No, thankfully I am not cut off from society (yet). I've been using this small solar/battery system:
I bought it off eBay for about $50, and considering its replacing the electricity that I don't pay for... it has a pretty long pay back period. However, the bad ass period has already elapsed, it is very bad ass. I think it's really cool that the energy running my phone was not created somewhere in a big dirty central plant, then pushed through a grid where something crazy like 40% of the energy is lost in transmission. The energy is right there in the sunlight. Goes through the little cord, and right into my phone.
It took a day or two to find the optimum place for it. For all the ladies out there who have slept over at my place, you know the sun shines into my window in the morning, so I can get about 3-4 hours of charging then, and depending on where I'm parked, I catch the afternoon rays in the parking lot. It takes about 6 hours to fully charge the battery, which is 1800mAh, or roughly twice the size of my cell phone battery. Assuming that both batteries operate between relatively similar states of charge, that correlates to being able to charge my phone twice on a days worth of sun. Easily enough for all the use I have for it.
I bought it with the intention of using it while camping and bike touring- it could recharge my phone, an iPod, and a Garmin. Keeping me in touch, entertained and on track.
I bought it off eBay for about $50, and considering its replacing the electricity that I don't pay for... it has a pretty long pay back period. However, the bad ass period has already elapsed, it is very bad ass. I think it's really cool that the energy running my phone was not created somewhere in a big dirty central plant, then pushed through a grid where something crazy like 40% of the energy is lost in transmission. The energy is right there in the sunlight. Goes through the little cord, and right into my phone.
It took a day or two to find the optimum place for it. For all the ladies out there who have slept over at my place, you know the sun shines into my window in the morning, so I can get about 3-4 hours of charging then, and depending on where I'm parked, I catch the afternoon rays in the parking lot. It takes about 6 hours to fully charge the battery, which is 1800mAh, or roughly twice the size of my cell phone battery. Assuming that both batteries operate between relatively similar states of charge, that correlates to being able to charge my phone twice on a days worth of sun. Easily enough for all the use I have for it.
I bought it with the intention of using it while camping and bike touring- it could recharge my phone, an iPod, and a Garmin. Keeping me in touch, entertained and on track.
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