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Again, I said 'Most' skid resistant, not so absolutely skid resistant to the degree that it
dis-allows any skidding at all...(which I'm sure is impossible anyway)Maybe i should have added a little back-story...
I'm currently in the process of building my first fixed gear bike. I will be running a front brake before any asks, and I was asking for the 'most' skid resistant tyre available in the forums opinion; not because I will be skidding non-stop, left, right and centre, but because I will be skidding occaisonally and with my very tight budget constraints I thought the longest lasting tyre would be the most economical option :) -
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Hi i have these items for sale:
PRICE DROPS
1x Vittoria rubino tyre, 23c brand new and unridden £7, Now £5


1x unknown beater crankset, 170mm, 44t (no idea on bcd) £15, Now £10

1x Cinelli drops (black leather bar tape never ridden), 1x specialized 110mm stem, 1x system ex quill converter
Drops- £15, Stem+quill converter- £10, Alltogether- £20, Now £15



2x Schwalbe innertubes 700x23 £5 for pair

1x bontrager set+seatpost £5

1x beater risers covered in tape £3

Sorry for absoloutely shocking pictures...
Pickup from Lewisham/S.E London/Central London
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Hi wan to run a front brake on my first build, was wondering what you would recommend as the best brake lever for running in the bend of risers?
I'm currently thinnking either a Dirty Harry, or Tech 77 DJ, but was wondering if you had any better recomendations or other general advice. bars are 40cm wide and 25.4 clamp, although the bars size is slightly thinner i do have a shim
(Sorry for absloutely atrocious photo)
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I'm currently on a 56 square and its a little bit stretched, so a 56.5 isn't really a sensible choice for me. Which is really annoying as that frame is actually very nice and very very cheap!