Pic of the Day

Arminius

E*POWAH Master
Subscriber
Jul 26, 2022
620
1,063
Rhein-Ruhr Delta, Germany
I have good pic of that subject but it would only get taken down.
Either they closed it or I have other restrictions…..🤔🥳

IMG_3627.jpeg
 


Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
YES!

An Emu steak was on the menu at a restaurant in Courtenay. 6oz piece but it was very red and very tasty 😋.

Apparently there’s an oil produced from their glands or skin that’s supposed to be good 👍🏻.…for moisturizing 😉.
Just a random picture I had to be honest. More
YES!

An Emu steak was on the menu at a restaurant in Courtenay. 6oz piece but it was very red and very tasty 😋.

Apparently there’s an oil produced from their glands or skin that’s supposed to be good 👍🏻.…for moisturizing 😉.

YES!

An Emu steak was on the menu at a restaurant in Courtenay. 6oz piece but it was very red and very tasty 😋.

Apparently there’s an oil produced from their glands or skin that’s supposed to be good 👍🏻.…for moisturizing 😉.
I was joking but you Canucks will eat anything or rub it on your skin.
 

Stihldog

Handheld Power Tool
Subscriber
Jun 10, 2020
3,665
5,218
Coquitlam, BC
Just a random picture I had to be honest. More



I was joking but you Canucks will eat anything or rub it on your skin.
Holy Mackerel ! (Btw , love those too after they’ve soaked in salted brine for 6 months). It’s not like we eat Poutine all the time …just with pickled herring after each meal. And mackerel can be used to mask your body odour. 👍🏻

Edit; I forgot to mention bear Pepperoni with chocolate pudding …that’s heaven right there 🙏😋
 
Last edited:

Twin Valleys

Active member
Nov 5, 2019
56
344
southern Alberta, Canada
Just a random picture I had to be honest. More



I was joking but you Canucks will eat anything or rub it on your skin.
that's quite the compliment coming from a Scot - surely our appetite has a touch of the "haggis" brought over from our forefathers - now I wish I could get over checking the Dandy Don's football scores every week that my long departed Aberdeen dad followed like a religion - man its tough getting past those Celtics or Rangers
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
that's quite the compliment coming from a Scot - surely our appetite has a touch of the "haggis" brought over from our forefathers - now I wish I could get over checking the Dandy Don's football scores every week that my long departed Aberdeen dad followed like a religion - man its tough getting past those Celtics or Rangers
Haha brilliant I'm only 55 miles from Aberdeen . Yes Celtic and Rangers are never far from the top. I loved playing football at school but not a big follower. Strange though I could probably watch the womans teams.
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
Holy Mackerel ! (Btw , love those too after they’ve soaked in salted brine for 6 months). It’s not like we eat Poutine all the time …just with pickled herring after each meal. And mackerel can be used to mask your body odour. 👍🏻

Edit; I forgot to mention bear Pepperoni with chocolate pudding …that’s heaven right there 🙏😋
I never liked the look of rollmop herring all my life . On a ship 4 years ago they were on the salad server every day two different kinds. 2 inch square half inch thick absolutely lovely had a piece on the side every night. They stocked up on food in Namibia before I joined very cheap there for food. I only acquired a taste for Salmon about 3 years ago . You wouldn't think I was a Fisherman for 15 years eh.
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
9,094
9,570
Lincolnshire, UK
On Wednesday @johnc and I went to Cotic Bikes in Chesterfield UK. My son-in-law lives in the South of France and had bought an ex-demo Flaremax and he'd asked me to collect and store it for him until he could pick it up in January.

A few slogans:
# "The feel of steel".
# "Steel is real".

Here is the Flaremax in Moonstone.
Cotic Flaremax.jpg


That is a 130mm travel Pike Ultimate on the front and Cane Creek Air1L (designed for short travel) with 125mm on the rear.

We also saw Cotic's prototype emtb. The production model will have lots of small differences. But the biggest will be that it wil use the EP801 and not the EP8 fitted. All cables as externally routed as possible, all bearings are super sealed and designed for easy access. Choice of three colours only, of which this is one.
Cotic emtb.jpg


They did try to have an inboard battery, but it just doesn't work in steel. They even tried going with aluminium alloy (I'll bet that was a bone of contention within the team)! But in the end it was the ride feel that ruled the design. Nothing other than what they ended up with felt as good. They will offer three different sizes of battery all standard Shimano ones.

I sat on the bike and I could tell from the sag that it was set up for someone much lighter than me, turned out it was the Cotic guy's wife who had ridden it that morning. And it was way too small for me. However, @johnc was a bit closer in size and weight to the wife than I was so he took it for a test ride around the block. @johnc has an earlier model of the Merida eOne Sixty that already has an outboard battery, so he is completely OK with the design in terms of looks. He thought the bike rode great, and that it felt like a lightweight emtb. He dubbed it a serious contender for his next bike. Production models in Jan. Cotic will sell a frame and shock, or in fact, any part-assembly for you to complete.

I was asking the Cotic guy about the company and I was told this:

Bike frames are manufactured and painted in Edinburgh, Scotland, and shipped down to Chesterfield where they are assembled. They only make a max of four bikes per week (yes, a week!) So even if the average sales price of a bike is £5k and they sell them all, that is only a turnover of £1m/year, assuming a 50 week year. It is pretty much a made to order business, so stock is at a minimum. The founder and owner is a mechanical engineer called Si Turner. I asked if that is why the company was called Cotic, as in SiCotic (Psychotic). I thought it was just a slightly amusing observation, but the Cotic guy laughed and told me that I was the first person he had spoken to who had worked that out! Surely not! :unsure:

They don't just do mtb, they do gravel bikes, road bikes, hardtails as well as FS. Here's a few.
Cotic various.jpg


They also sell Tee-shirts (on that rack behind the orange hardtail), so I bought a grey Cotic branded Tee-shirt for my son-in-law). :)

Cotic have three test tracks available for customers. Two are rideable from the shop and are more gravel and XC-oriented (bottom right on the map) The rougher trail is a 20 mins car ride away and can give a proper test of an mtb (top left).
Cotic test tracks.jpg


That was very enjoyable indeed and worth the 90 mins in the car to get there. We finished off the visit with a ride into the centre of Chesterfield and lunched at a German bar.
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
On Wednesday @johnc and I went to Cotic Bikes in Chesterfield UK. My son-in-law lives in the South of France and had bought an ex-demo Flaremax and he'd asked me to collect and store it for him until he could pick it up in January.

A few slogans:
# "The feel of steel".
# "Steel is real".

Here is the Flaremax in Moonstone.
View attachment 152043

That is a 130mm travel Pike Ultimate on the front and Cane Creek Air1L (designed for short travel) with 125mm on the rear.

We also saw Cotic's prototype emtb. The production model will have lots of small differences. But the biggest will be that it wil use the EP801 and not the EP8 fitted. All cables as externally routed as possible, all bearings are super sealed and designed for easy access. Choice of three colours only, of which this is one.
View attachment 152044

They did try to have an inboard battery, but it just doesn't work in steel. They even tried going with aluminium alloy (I'll bet that was a bone of contention within the team)! But in the end it was the ride feel that ruled the design. Nothing other than what they ended up with felt as good. They will offer three different sizes of battery all standard Shimano ones.

I sat on the bike and I could tell from the sag that it was set up for someone much lighter than me, turned out it was the Cotic guy's wife who had ridden it that morning. And it was way too small for me. However, @johnc was a bit closer in size and weight to the wife than I was so he took it for a test ride around the block. @johnc has an earlier model of the Merida eOne Sixty that already has an outboard battery, so he is completely OK with the design in terms of looks. He thought the bike rode great, and that it felt like a lightweight emtb. He dubbed it a serious contender for his next bike. Production models in Jan. Cotic will sell a frame and shock, or in fact, any part-assembly for you to complete.

I was asking the Cotic guy about the company and I was told this:

Bike frames are manufactured and painted in Edinburgh, Scotland, and shipped down to Chesterfield where they are assembled. They only make a max of four bikes per week (yes, a week!) So even if the average sales price of a bike is £5k and they sell them all, that is only a turnover of £1m/year, assuming a 50 week year. It is pretty much a made to order business, so stock is at a minimum. The founder and owner is a mechanical engineer called Si Turner. I asked if that is why the company was called Cotic, as in SiCotic (Psychotic). I thought it was just a slightly amusing observation, but the Cotic guy laughed and told me that I was the first person he had spoken to who had worked that out! Surely not! :unsure:

They don't just do mtb, they do gravel bikes, road bikes, hardtails as well as FS. Here's a few.
View attachment 152045

They also sell Tee-shirts (on that rack behind the orange hardtail), so I bought a grey Cotic branded Tee-shirt for my son-in-law). :)

Cotic have three test tracks available for customers. Two are rideable from the shop and are more gravel and XC-oriented (bottom right on the map) The rougher trail is a 20 mins car ride away and can give a proper test of an mtb (top left).
View attachment 152054

That was very enjoyable indeed and worth the 90 mins in the car to get there. We finished off the visit with a ride into the centre of Chesterfield and lunched at a German bar.
I have heard of cotic right enough. . I still have my custom steel Alves hardtail light as anything and superfast and no flex climbs well. . Elastommer front shock haha
 

steve_sordy

Wedding Crasher
Nov 5, 2018
9,094
9,570
Lincolnshire, UK
I have heard of cotic right enough. . I still have my custom steel Alves hardtail light as anything and superfast and no flex climbs well. . Elastommer front shock haha
How has the elastomer shock stood the test of time. Many rubber-like products fail after too much sunlight or just from the passage of time. They go sticky or brittle.
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
How has the elastomer shock stood the test of time. Many rubber-like products fail after too much sunlight or just from the passage of time. They go sticky or brittle.
Not much bounce in them if there ever was . Be 90s that bike . One inch tubing as well I tried loads of places in UKto get replacements all said the same like hens teeth. Yes rubber hatches on my kayak perish if you leave them on.
 

Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,410
5,294
Scotland
This is the most miles I've got from a motor. Probably add another couple of hundred as the mission control regularly doesn't work or stops half way . This is motor number four. Battery doing good though.

Screenshot_20241218_103432_Specialized.jpg
 

Arminius

E*POWAH Master
Subscriber
Jul 26, 2022
620
1,063
Rhein-Ruhr Delta, Germany

EMTB Forums

Since 2018

The World's largest electric mountain bike community.

559K
Messages
28,286
Members
Join Our Community

Latest articles


Top