Author: Richard Masoner

Breezer Finesse preview

This is Joe Breeze showing off his new Breezer Finesse commuter bicycle. Breeze calls this is “dream bike” and it is!

Joe Breeze and the ultimate commuter bike.

The Breeze-designed frame is equipped with the Shimano Alfine 8-speed hub, shifter and cranks. That’s a Ritchey carbon fiber seatpost and carbon fiber forks on this ultimate commuter bicycle, 24-spoke wheels, townie bars with “Joe Bars” for more aero positioning. The Busch & Muller Lumotec FLY IEQ Senso Plus headlight and B&M Toplight Plus tail light are powered by the Shimano Alfine front hub dynamo. The Breezer Truss Sport Rack looks sharp. Full fenders and kickstand complete the utility of this bike. The Breezer Finesse will be available for about $1900 from Breezer dealers beginning in March 2008.

Interbike 2007 photos and more

The Bike Hugger started a Flickr pool for Interbike 2007 photos, which I’ve joined and will post my photos too. The Hugger also provided good coverage on the Outdoor Demo day, with quick views of a city bike from Felt and Raleigh’s Soujourn touring bike.

Bike Magazine has lots of nice bike porn, including some good closeups of the new carbon belt drive that’s been getting some attention lately.

Singletrack tried the new Spot bicycle with the carbon belt drive and compared it with the Orange belt drive prototype.

MTBR.com also has their usual excellent gallery of photos from the Outdoor Demo days.

VeloNews also posted plenty of yummy gear photos from the Outdoor Demo. Cyclingnews provides a more newsy overview.

In case you missed this earlier:Specialized president Mike Sinyard and some of his employees rode their bikes the 600 miles from Specialized HQ in San Jose to Las Vegas. I thought about doing that, but it’s either high mountains or hot desert for the entire journey, which kind of scared me. It’s a tough ride.

Interbike 2007 news.

Two brothers: the thief and the fence

Brandon Tomlinson works for Genentech in South San Francisco, California. Genentech manufactures Human Growth Hormone (HGH), a performance enhancing drug. HGH increases muscle mass by stimulating protein synthesis, strengthen bones by stimulating bone growth and reduce body fat by stimulating the breakdown of fat cells. HGH is popular among some athletes because it’s impossible to test for. Brandon apparently has done presentations at conferences on the problem of undetectable performance enhancing drugs in athletics.

Brandon’s brother Lance Tomlinson owns the Max Muscle Sports Nutrition franchise store in San Jose, California. Brandon’s Sports Nutrition Store sells supplements for body builders.

DEA agents knew that Lance’s Sports Nutrition shop also sold HGH that was stolen from Genentech. It didn’t take much effort for them discover that Lance had a brother who worked at Genentech. They connected the dots and made the arrests.

What a couple of geniuses. If you’re gonna steal from your employer, don’t use your brother as a fence.

Bicycling and wealth

When American troops landed on south Pacific islands and New Guinea during World War II, they brought many of the comforts of home with them: Hershey bars, radios, powdered milk, and SPAM. The island natives saw the this cargo arriving as if sent from heaven when Sea Bees bulldozed airstrips through the jungles and men with radios and signal lights directed cargo planes to land on these strips.

Commuters Panda When the American G.I.s left after the end of WWII, the manna from heaven stopped flowing. In attempts to get cargo fall from the sky again, islanders imitated the same practices they had seen the soldiers, sailors and airmen use. They carved headphones from wood and wore them while sitting in fabricated control towers. They waved the landing signals while standing on the runways. They lit signal fires and torches to light up runways and lighthouses.

Last week, the city of El Paso, Texas debated the merits of a bicycle parking requirement for new development. While councilors Steve Ortega and Beto O’Rourke supported the proposed ordinance, councilman José Alexandro Lozano apparently is a throwback to the cargo cults of old, equating automobile ownership with personal wealth when he noted that a Mexican town where many people rode bicycles was regarded as backward. Clearly the path to prosperity and progress is to appear wealthy, if Lozano is to be believed.

Meanwhile, truly progressive and wealthy regions such as Silicon Valley and Boston increase their push for bicycling as transportation. A study in London shows that rich people bicycle more than poor people.

Quit worrying about keeping up appearances and hop on a bike!