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T7 handle is excellent.
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GYXU > General > T7 handle is excellent. 16 May 2007 05:31:34

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T7 handle is excellent.

Brian O . 15 May 2007 07:07:21
 
So I got my UDC shipment today with my two coker tubes, kh rail seat
post and T7 handle for my coker. One word: amazing. It adds a whole new
dimension to riding the coker. It almost feels as if you are piloting a
helicopter. (I can only imagine because I've never actually piloted
one)

When you push down on it the whole unicycle and your body dive forward
allowing you to quickly accelerate or climb a hill and pulling back
allows you to quickly slow or descend hills.

I have to admit, when I first opened the box I said to myself, "I paid
$65 for this?!" I felt a bit ripped off but once I got it on the uni,
WOW. It is just amazing and opens up all kinds of options for
adjustability. (as would a rail adapter)

I took it out for a two mile spin and I made it up a hill I've never
been able to do on my coker, its great. Another great plus is that if
you start to get sore from the saddle you sit right on the back end of
the saddle and put your weight on the handle and the jewels are able to
hang freely and comfortably.


--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
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Brian O . 15 May 2007 07:14:28 permanent link ]
 
Here are some picture of it on my uni. Note in the second picture that
even if you are holding on with just one hand if you hold in the middle
it behaves just like a normal saddle handle but gives more control as
its further away and allows you to still put your weight on it. Also,
despite what it may look like in the second picture due to the wide
angle perspective I actually -do- have a wrist haha. the T7 handle cost
me half of what I spent on the unicycle itself thanks to my awesome
deal from Chrashing.


+------------------­--------------------­--------------------­---------+
|Filename: T76.jpg |
|Download: http://www.unicycli­st.com/attachment/19­982 |
+------------------­--------------------­--------------------­---------+

--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
-------------------­--------------------­--------------------­-------------
Brian O.'s Profile: http://www.unicycli­st.com/profile/10744­
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Brian O . 15 May 2007 20:53:16 permanent link ]
 
Another update: As someone who hasn't been cokering for very long I
couldn't readily feel the weight difference between the 29er tube and
the coker tube. Maybe to an already experienced cokeur it would be a
significant difference but to me it doesn't seem nearly as dramatic as
many would have you believe.


--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
-------------------­--------------------­--------------------­-------------
Brian O.'s Profile: http://www.unicycli­st.com/profile/10744­
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Ahollow 15 May 2007 20:56:58 permanent link ]
 
Looks great, Brian.

I just ordered the Nimbus 36 Deluxe with the T7; it looks like it could
help a lot. Just can't wait to get it now! All the conversations on
here about the 36er's, I couldn't resist.


--
ahollow
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Brian O . 15 May 2007 21:39:39 permanent link ]
 
ahollow wrote:
Looks great, Brian.
I just ordered the Nimbus 36 Deluxe with the T7; it looks like it could
help a lot. Just can't wait to get it now! All the conversations on
here about the 36er's, I couldn't resist.


Good choice, you won't be disappointed. It is great fun.


--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
-------------------­--------------------­--------------------­-------------
Brian O.'s Profile: http://www.unicycli­st.com/profile/10744­
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Feel The Light 15 May 2007 21:48:53 permanent link ]
 
I've been riding a 36 a few weeks. It's flat around here, and I'm not
very good, so I think I won't get a handle for a while. I appreciate
the reviews. Do you see any advantage for a flat lander ?
What I really want to know, why the rod in back of the seat ? Hang
luggage ?
It looks like it wants to poke me !:eek:


--
feel the light
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Mscalisi 15 May 2007 21:50:24 permanent link ]
 
I like my T7 quite a bit. I'm considering hacking off the tail bit to
save weight.


--
mscalisi

<> Unicycle for (reducing the) Buddha <><
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Jmando 15 May 2007 22:00:25 permanent link ]
 
Whoa! Where's your wrist!?


--
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"Watch yourself."
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Texasuninut 15 May 2007 22:05:52 permanent link ]
 
I considered cutting the back off my t7, but it makes a great kickstand.
It keeps the seat off the ground if I have to lean it up somewhere. I
flatlands the T7 can assist in turns and help shift your weight around
on rides.


--
texasuninut
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Johnfoss 15 May 2007 22:08:53 permanent link ]
 
feel the light wrote:
Do you see any advantage for a flat lander ?

I can't imagine riding any kind of long distance without my handle
anymore. If you have a crotch, you can benefit from a good handle. It
not only allows you to take some of your weight off the jewels (or
female equivalent) and allow better circulation down there, it also
changes the angle of your pelvis on the seat to something more like
what you get on a bike. Presumably a better position for hours of
pedaling.



why the rod in back of the seat ? Hang luggage ?
It looks like it wants to poke me !:eek:

I don't know what your butt looks like; it shouldn't poke you. :)­
I think one of its purposes is as a kickstand. If there's no crosswind
you can stand the unicycle on the rear bar (if it's like mine). Also I
have strapped a backpack with a change of clothes and other stuff to
mine. Also it's protection. What you don't want is a single piece of
tubing sticking out where it can hit the ground. I made that mistake
yesterday, when I headed onto rocky dirt without folding back the
bar-ends that make up the front part of my handle. One dismount and
instant chewed-up plastic end caps!


--
johnfoss

John Foss
Email: "jfoss" at "unicycling.com" -- www.unicycling.com
-------------------­--------------------­--------

"pretty much every trail that we've done on the California or Moab Muni
weekends is an XC trail." -- Kris Holm, on XC from a North Shore point
of view
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Kington99 15 May 2007 22:13:19 permanent link ]
 
feel the light wrote:
I've been riding a 36 a few weeks. It's flat around here, and I'm not
very good, so I think I won't get a handle for a while. I appreciate
the reviews. Do you see any advantage for a flat lander ?
What I really want to know, why the rod in back of the seat ? Hang
luggage ?
It looks like it wants to poke me !:eek:



Really useful for pushing the uni, and gives room for another bottle
cage, and yes you can balance the uni by it on the ground. It never
pokes.

Brian you need some grips on that thing, they'll protect the ends and
make it much more comfortable to use. I also hold it somtimes like a
normal handle, but on the tpoints of the handle, the cross bar on mine
has the computer and bell on it.


--
kington99

Dave

- what a thoroughly post-modern subversion of the cycling genre -
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Brian O . 15 May 2007 22:29:44 permanent link ]
 
kington99 wrote:
Brian you need some grips on that thing, they'll protect the ends and
make it much more comfortable to use. I also hold it somtimes like a
normal handle, but on the tpoints of the handle, the cross bar on mine
has the computer and bell on it.



I don't know about adding grips to the side or anything to the center
cross bar, I actually really like holding there in the middle. Maybe if
I could find a way to wrap road bike grips around both the sides and
the middle I think that would be ideal.

However yes, even if you are just riding this on flat ground the T7 is
excellent, gives you great stability and allows you to take weight off
the saddle. As for the part in the back, its absolutely awesome for
when you get off and need to push the uni. I plan to mount some sort of
storage on the back end with it. The T7 does not get in the way of
mounting or dismounting.


jmando wrote:
Whoa! Where's your wrist!?


Behind the camera. Haha, actually I meant the third picture of course.


--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
-------------------­--------------------­--------------------­-------------
Brian O.'s Profile: http://www.unicycli­st.com/profile/10744­
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Ahollow 15 May 2007 23:42:55 permanent link ]
 
johnfoss wrote:
Also it's protection. What you don't want is a single piece of tubing
sticking out where it can hit the ground. I made that mistake
yesterday, when I headed onto rocky dirt without folding back the
bar-ends that make up the front part of my handle. One dismount and
instant chewed-up plastic end caps!



John, I'm not sure what it is you are folding up here. The T7 is
solid, isn't it? Any photos? Thanks.


--
ahollow
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Cathwood 16 May 2007 00:26:21 permanent link ]
 
Brian O. wrote:
I don't know about adding grips to the side or anything to the center
cross bar, I actually really like holding there in the middle. Maybe if
I could find a way to wrap road bike grips around both the sides and
the middle I think that would be ideal.



The grips are to protect the paint from being chipped off if it hits
the floor. I also have grips on both of the back 'tubes' and 'elbow
pads' on the elbows. (I drop it quiet often when I'm doing my
freemounting practice).


--
cathwood

Cathy
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Johnfoss 16 May 2007 00:41:43 permanent link ]
 
ahollow wrote:
John, I'm not sure what it is you are folding up here. The T7 is
solid, isn't it? Any photos? Thanks.

I don't have a T7 handle. Consider mine one of many prototypes that may
have helped inspire it. Mine is a Wygonowski handle, to which 'I added
some mountain bike bar ends to the front bumper'
(http://unicycling.­smugmug.com/gallery/­345524#13733089). I can loosen
the bolts and fold them down and around to protect them when I ride
trails.

In that picture you can see how the brake lever and water bottle fit
in. When I lower the seat for trail riding, the bottle doesn't fit
though. More recently I "won" a bike bell at Moab, and then stuck on my
computer around where the top of the bottle is. Now I can only use
short bottles, which is okay because I use my Camelbak for any long
rides. My back bumper is low enough below the seat to allow that bungee
strap to help hold a backpack or other bag back there.

For you trivia fans, I have reason to believe my Coker is the exact
same one 'pictured here'
(http://www.unicycl­e.com/shopping/shope­xd.asp?id=568). Some of you may
have ridden it as the Unicycle.com "demonstrator Coker" at Unicon 11 in
Washington. Since it did not get sold at the convention, I ended up
taking it home with me! It's now titled as the Radial 36" Deluxe but
the photo is a little older, and shows the Coker tire that I just
finally replaced last week. *IF* it's the same one.


--
johnfoss

John Foss
Email: "jfoss" at "unicycling.com" -- www.unicycling.com
-------------------­--------------------­--------

"pretty much every trail that we've done on the California or Moab Muni
weekends is an XC trail." -- Kris Holm, on XC from a North Shore point
of view
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Kington99 16 May 2007 00:42:27 permanent link ]
 
cathwood wrote:
The grips are to protect the paint from being chipped off if it hits the
floor. I also have grips on both of the back 'tubes' and 'elbow pads'
on the elbows. (I drop it quiet often when I'm doing my freemounting
practice).



very sensible, my rear handle has a few scratches on it and the sharp
corners of the handles are quite scratched from me dropping it on the
side during dismout. I have standard slide on rubber grips on, they
soak up a lot of the energy when i throw the handle down as i dismount
to avoid getting caught in it.


--
kington99

Dave

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Thejdw 16 May 2007 01:12:11 permanent link ]
 
yay, happy brian :)­


--
thejdw

dunawan wrote:
why are koxx one unicycles so costly???
forrestunifreak wrote:
They are expensive because they use only the finest soft drink cans.


don't follow Jesus, follow me!<<
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Maestro8 16 May 2007 01:49:44 permanent link ]
 
mscalisi wrote:
I like my T7 quite a bit. I'm considering hacking off the tail bit to
save weight.


I was discussing this with fellow Cokeurs and the point was raised that
the "tail bit" balances out the front / back weight distribution of the
handle.

Dunno how big a difference it'd make, but hanging a chunk of metal in
front of the seat is going to affect the balance.

I'd be interested to hear about any effects you notice from your
hack... go for it! You can always weld it back on if you don't like
it...


--
maestro8

Those are my principles. If you don't like those, I have others. --
Groucho Marx

The only way to comprehend what mathematicians mean by Infinity is to
contemplate the extent of human stupidity. -- FranГois-Marie Arouet de
Voltaire
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Brian O . 16 May 2007 05:31:34 permanent link ]
 
habbywall wrote:
I ordered mine today.
I can't wait to get it.
I have ridden a long ride without a handle, and must say, I really hope
the handle helps because without it riding isn't always easy.


I just went for a 10 mile ride, did it in under an hour cranking almost
full speed on 150s and the handle was excellent. Helped me power up and
down hills, weave through traffic and hang on during the really rough
bumpy parts. I would never choose to ride a coker without such a
handle.


--
Brian O.

mscalisi wrote:
We only need one 36" rim, one that doesn't suck. A properly sized KH rim
(like the 29er only larger) would be awesome.


'ProjectUNI' (http://www.otherwo­rldsociety.org/proje­ctuni) - The
Unicyclist PC Game - In Early Development.
-------------------­--------------------­--------------------­-------------
Brian O.'s Profile: http://www.unicycli­st.com/profile/10744­
View this thread: http://www.unicycli­st.com/thread/60885


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GYXU > General > T7 handle is excellent. 16 May 2007 05:31:34

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