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Forums / Question and Answer / Re: 1X11 for bikepacking?
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on: January 17, 2017, 09:05:53 AM
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I switched from a 2x10 (36/22 chainring + 11-36 cassette) to a 1x11 (28t SRAM DM chainring 11-46 XT cassette) on my Surly Krampus 29+. I have done several loaded trips with this setup and it works perfectly for me in the hilly terrain where I ride, with minimal HAB. I have never missed the 2x10 setup. If you are riding a smaller wheel size (29 or 27.5+), a 30t chainring will give you the same resulting G/I ratio.
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Forums / Routes / Re: Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: October 05, 2016, 04:04:55 PM
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Thanks! After making the first set of bags shortly before my first bikepacking race, I realized how much work it takes and why they are expensive - I vowed never again. With 2 kids in college, I had to bit the bullet & make the second set for the wife. Have to say, it was much easier the 2nd time around. Thanks for the report, and nice work on the bags!
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Forums / Routes / Re: Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: October 05, 2016, 09:37:29 AM
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The wife & I did the route over 5 days September 25-29. We managed to follow the ACA route 100% of the time, most people seem to cut parts of the route due to time/conditions. Perfect weather conditions, even managed to dodge rain over the last 2 days. It did rain a little during the night in Zion though. There definitely is a good amount of asphalt connecting the dirt sections, but there were only 2 that had a lot of traffic. Dirt sections are in very good condition for the most part, only 2 short sections that are mildly technical. Amazing scenery along the entire route. Don't underestimate the amount of climbing though! We camped 2 nights & stayed in hotels for the other 2. The nights are cold at elevation this time of year, it went down to the high 30s. I did a trip report on crazyguyonabike as that is where I found most info on the route when I did my research: http://www.crazyguyonabike.com/doc/utahcliffsfall2016Typical trail, this one on FR240: On the Pa'rus trail heading to the campground in Zion NP: Zion is spectacular on a bike:
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Forums / Routes / Re: Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: September 14, 2016, 12:39:49 PM
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I've seen reports of people doing it in May. Guess it depends on the snowpack that year, plus the dirt roads may be very muddy. Early June would likely be safe before it gets too hot. I'm going to attempt the route in 2 weeks around the end of September. Plan is to do it over 5 days. Camping is REALLY hard to find in Zion at this time of year, my own fault for procrastinating. I'm hoping to find a balance between not too hot at lower elevations & not too cold at night on the mountains.
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Forums / Routes / Re: Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: June 06, 2016, 08:22:50 AM
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I did it in 2014 with my wife When did you do the Utah Cliffs? I'm looking at the weather forecast (we were looking at starting on June 16th) but it's going to be 100+ and very windy for the entire time. I'm thinking we may delay this trip until September and rather do a few short trips locally.
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Forums / Routes / Re: Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: May 03, 2016, 11:15:07 AM
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Perfect! This is exactly the information I was looking for. Good to know you thought 4 days was aggressive, I may scale it back to 5 days then so we have more time to see the sights. We are both on steel mountain bikes with plus (29+ & 27.5+) tires, so we're not exactly rolling very fast. May even put regular tires on for the loop. We initially considered the ID Hot Springs route, but the remoteness as you mention makes me a little nervous (for her). Probably next year as her experience grows. I did it in 2014 with my wife, and she also had limited technical mountain biking experience.
I would also recommend you look into riding the Idaho hot springs main loop. If you did the cut-off the milage would be similar. This route probably has more non-technical dirt, but more climbing and total elevation gain. The hot springs are awesome. It is also significantly more remote, so bail out and hotel options are difficult.
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Forums / Routes / Opinions on the ACA's Utah Cliffs Loop
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on: April 28, 2016, 09:34:16 AM
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Not sure if my Google-fu has weakened, but I've found it surprisingly hard to get good info on the Utah Cliffs Loop, apart from a few (old-ish) trip reports: https://www.adventurecycling.org/routes-and-maps/adventure-cycling-route-network/utah-cliffs-loop/I'm thinking of taking my wife, who's an experienced road endurance cyclist, as an introduction to multi-day bikepacking. She is NOT comfortable on technical trails yet, so I'm trying to limit it to fire roads. Another big reason I'm considering this loop, is that there are multiple hotel options on the route in case she gets tired of camping. We're targeting a mid June start date, riding 3-4 days with a stop in Zion. I know there's quite a lot of asphalt on the route, which I don't mind. My question is how technical are the dirt sections? Is traffic as bad as some say, or is it just limited to small sections? We live in Southern California, so St. George in UT is drivable. Any suggestions for alternatives (mostly non-technical dirt)?
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Forums / DIY / Make Your Own Gear (MYOG) / Best way to bind thin ripstop seams
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on: December 22, 2015, 09:15:42 AM
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I'm in the process of making a new bivy bag from 1.6oz SilPoly & 1.1oz Ripstop. I normally use grosgrain to bind the seams on the heavier fabrics that I make my bags from, but I was wondering what is the best way to bind these thin fabrics? Should I stick with grosgrain or find something softer & more flexible?
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Forums / Question and Answer / Re:
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on: May 25, 2015, 08:27:51 AM
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There is a version of the Krampus fork that has all the mounts similar to the ECR fork - I just got one for my Krampus. Also considered a Salsa fork initially but this was a cheaper solution.
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