- Ritchey PRO Cyclocross Crankset $125. The non-driveside crankarm cracked in half while I was preriding the Monson cyclocross course.

Luckily it happened while I was trying to power up a steep run up (I was moving rather slowly). I crashed and bruised my left shoulder and my testes. If this had happened on the gnarly descent, I'd be in the hospital right now. Also, I missed the Palmer Cross Race because I was unable to repair the damage to the bike (luckily I was able to borrow a nice bike from Felt to race on at Monson, no joke, it rode really well. Thanks Felt!). I plan on pursuing Ritchey for a remedy. Turns out the crankarm that failed had been recalled. Thanks for telling me. - Campagnolo Record Left 10 speed Shifter $160. I broke the brake lever in the crash when the crankarm failed. I think that it is repairable, but I took the opportunity to order 2009 Centaur shifters, which have the new Campy shape while retaining the ability to shift multiple gears in a single shift (the 2010 and 2011 are limited to 1 down, 3 up, probably in an effort to make the 11 speed groups more appealing).
- Fuji SLM 2.0 MTB $4o00--Destroyed. I sent it to Thule. I only mention it because I haven't gotten to replace it yet so I haven't been able to mountain bike for most of the summer.
- Easton EA 90 SL clinchers $750. While the rims on these wheels are almost identical to Velomax's Orion II rim and therefor stand up to abuse, the hubs refuse to remain adjusted. Seriously, the front hub requires adjustment every 100 miles and the rear appears to need attention every 200. While the adjustments are simple and take less than 5 minutes and two 5mm wrenches, it is annoying. Other users of these hubs have concurred that this is an issue that plagues them too.
- Easton EC 90 Aero tubulars $1800. Different hub from the above wheel, same issue, only more pronounced. These wheels come out of adjustment almost immediately, rendering them useless as race wheels.
- Velomax Orion II clinchers $550. Broken spoke. My fault. Waiting on a spoke that Landry's ordered for me. Other than this isolated incident, I have had good luck with these wheels. This is my second set.
- Ritchey Protocol WCS clincher wheelset $550. Knocked out of true in a minor crash during WNSP. When I tried to true it, a spoke nipple crumbled in my spoke wrench. Replaced by Landry's in like 15 minutes (they called to say it was done before I got home from dropping it off).
- Chris King HeadSet $125. The one on my cross bike appears to be indexed. I abused it, I am not blaming King. I have tried to adjut it a number of times and it is just rough. I plan on seeking professional help.
- Shimano 105 threaded Headset $25. I installed this on my Basso (winter/travel/"B"/loaner bike) a year ago when I was broke and couldn't afford anything better. Its seriously indexed and needs replacement before any serious miles can be put in on the Basso.
- Shimano Ultegra Octalink Bottom Bracket $35. This was on my cross bike and was just plain worn out. It developed play. Normally, I would just repack or replace the bearings. Unfortunately, Shimano designed these to be disposable, you can not adjust them or access the internals. Thanks Shimano. Luckily my good friend Andrew had a suitable Dura Ace BB laying around that I am now using (and the DA is serviceable)
- Sidi Dragon SRS MTB Shoes (non-carbon) $250ish. Eggbeater pedals suck. Not only can you not tell if you are clipped in or not, but they eat into the soles of your shoes. I experimented with Eggbeaters a little while back and they ground themselves into my soles and eventually the sole cracked as a result. Crank Brothers must know about this problem. They should sell these pedals with a little metal plate to prevent the damage. It would cost them penny's per pair sold and save users from ruining perfectly serviceable shoes.
3 days ago