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46 comments
The April one (www.parisroubaixchallenge.com/us/homepage.html)is 140-150K from San Quentin to Roubaix. It does the Arenberg Forest and the boards at Roubaix. It's described as a race!
I'm attempting April's to see if I can "hack" a longer distance in June. Really do want a cobble stone, why I don't know but I want one. The Compeed idea seems to be popular. Hmm may dig out the old flexistem from a while back.
Bit far for you I know, but the High St (aka Royal Mile) in our Nations capital offers a decent length of cobbles, uphill too.
http://g.co/maps/r9pwd
Alderley Edge in Cheshire has a mile or two of cobbled uphill. Quite often see the northern based professionals out doing circuits there, when they aren't in the sunshine of Majorca.
http://www.cyclesportmag.com/features/geraint-thomas-interview-wales-of-...
Thanks, everyone, for the latest suggestions on where to find cobbled roads in the UK, and other tips on surviving Paris-Roubaix.
For those that may be interested, my training continues. Lots of long hard rides, often in bad weather, but admittedly mainly on tarmac, plus some shorter spurts on the broken concrete of Salisbury Plain’s military roads, and along the unsurfaced byway sections of the Fosse Way in Gloucestershire. Nowhere near as rough as the real pave’ will be, I know, but a step in the right direction.
I’ve been experimenting with bikes, including steel, aluminium and titanium, as well as trying out various wheels and tyre widths.
To help avoid the dreaded snakebite punctures, I’ve also been testing tubeless tyres and wheels. There’s a full review of the Fulcrum Racing 3 Two-Way Fit wheels in the Gear section here on road.cc - and a tubeless tyre review will follow soon.
I’ve received a lot of advice from riders who have done the route before - suggestions on tyre pressure, saddle, bar tape, gearing, clothing and so on. Most memorable was a tip from a guy that rode the Paris-Roubaix audax last year: “before you start, remove your b****cks, keep them somewhere safe, then put them back in when you’ve finished”. Hmm. Nice.
A slightly more inspiring story: While I was pottering about at the Newport Velodrome recently, I spotted Magnus Bäckstedt, former Tour de France professional and winner of Paris-Roubaix in 2004, doing some training on the track. I was too much in awe to ask for tips, but I did shake his hand and get my photo taken with him. It’s the nearest I’ll ever get to Paris-Roubaix glory.
If no-one else has said it: use metal bottle cages, bent inwards for maximum grip, and make sure everything you carry is secured thoroughly.
Respect the Pave, fear the Arenburg and Sectour 4.
6hrs 18mins. Roll on next year.
I wasn't sure if this thread had run its course, but for those still following: I did indeed complete the Paris Roubaix Challenge on Sunday. Thanks to all the advice I got here on this forum, and elsewhere, my final choices of tyres, wheels and frame were absolutely spot on, and helped make the pave' simply bad rather than utterly horrific.
Nothing fell off my bike, nothing snapped and I didn't get a puncture. Result.
I was exceedingly happy to get round in 5hr 3min. Without the stops for food and photos I guess ride time would be a tad under 5 hours.
Roll on next year? I'm not sure. Maybe the Paris Roubaix Cyclo in June 2013. Longer, but more relaxed, with more time to stop and eat - and even look at the scenery...
@ Yorkshire Whippet - having enjoyed the P-R Challenge, are you doing the Cyclo this year as well?
Well done David. Glad you had a ball and everything's intact!!!
did riding round queen square in Bristol help at all do you think?.. i'm guessing not having seen the size of PR cobbles compared to the small victorian bumps we have here.
David,
Not this year. I've got my sights set on riding the World Champs course later. Then it will be back for 2013. Thinking of giving the Tour of Flanders a go in 2014, if so then it may well be the cyclo in June. For me the distance was just about right.
I'd like to know how different the cyclo is.
Well done on a 5hr ride.
Thanks guys.
@Yorkshie Whippet - That’s quite an impressive itinerary. Good luck with it all.
@Fringe - You’re right, the Bristol cobbles were extremely mild compared to the real Roubaix thing, but they were better than nothing, and quite handy for getting used to cornering fast with a front wheel bouncing around. The best training ground turned out to be the Fosse Way through Wiltshire and Gloucestershire - a mix of road and off-road sections - where I cruised along on the tarmac and then pounded a big gear for all I was worth on the rough stuff - which was pretty much my strategy last Sunday.
@giff77 - Placing the words ‘ball’ and ‘intact’ in the same sentence is most apposite.
There's a bit more info about the bike I used here:
http://road.cc/content/feature/56310-riding-paris-roubaix-pave-its-all-a...
David, Looking to do the Paris-Roubaix challenge in April '13. Interested in the Salisbury Plain military roads you mentioned riding on. Im in Bournemouth so Salisbury isnt too far from me. Where abouts are these roads? Appreciate any help. Thank you.
I never made it to the perimeter road, but did go over the Imber road a few times. However, the best place I found to get the hang of riding fast on bad roads was the unsurfaced sections of the Fosse Way. It was rough, but to be honest, nowhere near as rough as those Roubaix cobbles.
In fact, there's NOWHERE as rough as those Roubaix cobbles!
Why not just go over to Belgium for a weekend?
Not too expensive on train, and if you go on a friday night you could easily get two rides over some cobbles in.
There are probably some cycling specific b&b's as well.
Google...
I've done a few cobbled classics and did all my training in Accrington in Lancashire. There's serious cobbles there some climbs upto 10% . I made my final preparations using the blaze hill in Alderley Edge where Sky train for cobbles. That's quite steep but I got up on my roubaix with big tyres on. I've put pipe insulation under the bar tape and I'm using massive 31 mm tyres with nipples on. Got round both my cobbled sportives with ease including the 22% Walton berg.
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