Sunday, March 31, 2013

2013 SMR 12

A little moist but some good riding weather.


The display case at Junction had a whole lot of AMGEN TOUR OF CALIFORNIA MOUNT DIABLO STAGE information.  The roads will be closed at 2pm, or earlier if they have reached "capacity".  The race is expected to enter the park at 3pm with a 3:45 finish.  There is also a photo of the official commemorative AMGEN ToC Mt. Diablo Stage jersey which will be available "on race day"... I assume that means they'll have a merchandise booth at the Junction or something - like they had at Bonny Doon on the Santa Cruz stage a couple years ago:
Bonny Doon Booth





Road Kill Report:  1) black cat, 2) blue bird,  3) brown frog


We decided today was probably the greenest the Mountain will be for the year.  Bring on the brown.


Wednesday, March 27, 2013

2013 WNR 01

The Wednesday Night Rides have returned.  It was kind of dark but it was because of rain clouds in the sky... sun didn't set until well after I was done.  Brought my knee warmers but didn't need them.



Clavicle Cracker






JB at Upper Washout

















Wounded Knee



Wildlife Encounter:  BOBCAT!

Passed'em:Passed'me ratio = 0:1

Saturday, March 16, 2013

2013 SMR 11 -- The Pipe

Doo doo doo dit dit doo dit:  Important announcement... My e-mail service that was associated with this blog (diabloscott@terra.es) will be terminating soon.  I have convinced the nice folks at Yahoo to allow me the use of this new address:  diabloscott@ymail.com

I've updated the text over there in the margin so you can always come back here to look it up if you send me something and it bounces.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled blog.

OK, today's plan was to ride up to my proposed AMGEN TOUR OF CALIFORNIA Mount Diablo Stage viewing area.  A few times I have stopped for photos here but didn't really remember how much of the road below I'd be able to see.  On the way up I noticed a few other places that could see lots of South Gate Road, so they'd be decent back-up plans.  The Pipe is about a quarter mile up from Juniper - just past the 3000 ft elevation sign; and it's about 2 miles from The Summit so it should be a strategic point in the race for both the stage win hopefuls and the GC contenders.




I'm predicting this will be the money shot.

View from The Pipe

Top of the Pipe

The Pipe from Below
When I got to The Pipe I found that I could see quite a bit of Summit Road below, but not much of South Gate.  Anyway, here it will be... nice views, a place to sit if I want, a place to display my California flag, and a better than average chance of achieving the Ultimate Prize (getting on TV).

I figure that if you can't edit your ride video to less than three minutes, you'd better have some exceptional footage.  Today's clip is 2m17s.

The Pipe from Diablo Scott on Vimeo.

Saturday, March 09, 2013

Saturday Morning Ride with the Health Club Team

Product Review:  You already know Hammer Gel is like liquid go ... but the Montana Huckleberry flavor is crazy good; it even has little seeds in it.  Thanks to my brother's family for giving me this jug for X-mas.



My usual Diablo partner knew he was going to be sick in plenty of time to let me make arrangements with the health club team for their Saturday Morning Ride.  They called the route "Franklin Canyon and Cummings Skyway" but I saw neither a canyon or a skyway.  I didn't have a route map so I just followed the people who looked like they knew where they were going but I'm still not quite sure where I was most of the time.  I mean I've looked at the map since then and I know where the roads are, but I don't think I could find them again without a GPS or something.

I think that's the Vallejo-Carquinez-Al Zampa bridge.

Golden Bear on the smoke stack of that ship.



So good riding with good folks.  That guy with the Capo jersey is an animal.  There were four or five of us that could ride with him but we didn't do much of the pulling.

Roadkill Report:  two skunks on some road about 20 miles northwest of Diablo.


Hammering Franklin Canyon from Diablo Scott on Vimeo.


Team Club Sport: Franklin Canyon and Cummings Skyway from Diablo Scott on Vimeo.

Saturday, March 02, 2013

2013 SMR 10

Well... that was some nice weather!

Wildlife Encounter:  turkeys near Wunderbar Pet Hotel

From Junction I went down to the Kiosk and back up... created a new Strava Segment for it:

Д Mt. Diablo SGR: Junction-Kiosk-Junction

Be sure to go AROUND the kiosk.




Oddball Siting:  one of these things... my daughter calls them "running bikes".  It would be fun to try one sometime... but I'm really sure I'll never own one.




Barely cracked the 1.1kW bar in spin class Wednesday... probably because I had lemonade in my bottles instead of Cytomax.



Righteous Diablo video below.



Saturday, February 23, 2013

2013 SMR 09

Cold but sunny, and a little too windy.

Just me and JB to the Junction.


No wildlife today, there was snow on The Mountain Thursday, but there were POPPIES this morning.

Random C4 dude.
The ZigZag

1149 Watts in Janet's spin class Wednesday... that's a PB.


Actually I hit over 1300 Watts but the sample rate
only records once a second and since it didn't get recorded,
I obviously wasn't doing it for very long!

Saturday, February 16, 2013

2013 SMR 08


Almost warm enough to skip the jacket this morning.

Roadkill Report:  Jackrabbit GoreScore=8... severed head and his eyes were open, but not a lot of blood.

















Wildlife Encounter:  lots and lots of turkeys.  There was one really studly guy who looked like he was doing a mating dance around one of the hens... no wonder the population is growing so fast.




Heard there was a pretty serious cyclist injury with helicopter medivac on SGR about 11 o'clock... let me know if you have details.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

2013 SMR 07

A rare Sunday Morning Ride.

I wondered how things would be different on Sunday...
Turns out they're kind of the same except with different people.
Traffic wasn't any more or less either.

So it was just like a Saturday Morning Ride except I was solo and I was riding Eddy.

My Contour mount doesn't fit on the skinny Columbus SL head tube as well as it does on the larger diameter Klein aluminum head tube so the camera kept slipping to one side or the other when I hit a bump or turned a corner... I'll have to figure something out.

I had good intentions on doing a Summit today, but it was really windy and by Junction I had lost my attitude.

These guys kept passing me and then stopping on
the shoulder where I'd pass them back.

Wind and cold = clear blue skies.


Saturday, February 02, 2013

2013 SMR 06

Today's plan:  up NGR, down SGR, collect Kevin at the Tire Poppers, and re-Junction, back down NGR where his ride would pick him up.

I think the worst of winter is over... today was quite pleasant.

Walnut Avenue... best bike lanes in town.

North Gate seemed like a normal day, but there were masses of people on the Easy Side.


Kevin said his legs felt like limp noodles... we assured him that was a good thing.


JB Grabs Some Draft at Moss Landing




Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Product Review: Contour GPS Video Camera




I am a little conflicted writing this review, because Contour doesnt even make this model of camera anymore... but you might find one still for sale (maybe even at a great price) and a lot of the comments here will also apply to the other models, so here we go.

I thought a lot about what kind of sports cam I wanted for my bike. The two obvious options are the GoPro or the Contour. Both seem to have a lot of fans and both seem to take great videos. I like the Contour's looks and mounting options better but I just wasn't ready to buy yet.

I've also been getting interested in Strava, and you need a GPS recording device to take advantage of the coolest Strava functions. But I already have computers on all my bikes so that would be a lot of duplication just for some cool maps.

So then I realized the Contour GPS sports cam would allow me to take videos and upload GPS data to Strava too. After a little more self-convincing, I pulled the trigger.  You can click on My Contour link here or over in my sidebar to see a whole bunch of my clips, but most of the still shots and video you see on my blog since last June were taken with this camera... I hardly ever take my regular camera along for rides anymore.

The GPS function though is pretty bad:
  1. It takes a really long time to lock on the signal.  You might go a whole ride with no GPS recorded  You can help things along by finding a sweet spot in your back yard or something that you know it'll find, and warming up your camera there before each ride.
  2. The GPS makes the battery discharge faster.
  3. It only records when you're recording video.  There is no "GPS-Only" fuction.  The GPS data is encoded inside the video somehow and you can only extract it using the Contour software on your computer.
  4. Once you extract the GPS data you have to upload it manually to Strava or other programs - this may also require a little knowledge of html code.
  5. The GPS mapping onto the video only works in the Contour software and the Contour website - if you import the video into a video editing program you won't see the maps.
So if Strava data is important to you, you will certainly be disappointed with this as your device.


Overall though, I am not disappointed and I'm having a lot of fun with it.

Contour currently makes two models, the $200 Contour Roam-2, and the $400 Contour+2.  The cheaper one doesn't have replaceable batteries (recharge through the camera) and has an "instant on" switch, so it's for people who want to capture video on demand, a few minutes at a time or shorter rides only.  The expensive one has GPS and replaceable batteries and other bells and whistles so it's for people who want to record everything for the whole time on long rides and then edit later.

The mounts that come with the camera aren't much good for cycling. You need the vented helmet mount and the rubber strap mount. Other possibles are the bike mount (bars or stem) and pole mount (seat stay).







The rubber lens cap doesn't fit very well and you'll lose it within a month.  I store my camera in an old sock to keep the lens from getting scratched.

In addition to the basic package, I bought (or received as gifts)  two flex straps, a pole mount (for the seat stay), a vented helmet mount, four extra batteries with charger (Wasabi from Amazon), and a 32GB Micro SD card.

The bezel in front of the lens has to be turned the proper direction according to the orientation of the camera - if you do a sideways mount you have to rotate the bezel so "up is up".  I painted some extra dots on mine so it'd be extra obvious.


This is my normal mount.














The Flex Strap mount comes with two bands, the smaller one is big
enough for a steel headtube but you need the bigger one if you have
an oversized headtube.




The Vented Helmet Mount gives a good perspective, but you might
get dizzy watching the videos.

















You have to line up that little dot on the rotating bezel with the arrow
on the top (there are arrows on three sides of the camera) - otherwise
your video will be sideways or upside down ... the little dot's pretty
small, that's why I painted some bigger dots there.



Doesn't look a whole lot different from a helmet-mounted lighting system.








The ski pole mount works well on a chainstay.  You can
rotate the ball thing to about any orientation.











All of the mounts work by sliding onto those rails at the base of the camera.  You can slide it on from either side and it's a nice tight fit but still easy and fast to put on and take off.  The pole mount above also has sort of a quick release bit that attaches to a screwed on clamp bit that you leave on the bike.



Here's an example of how screwy the GPS can be.  One of those
red lines is my climb up Diablo, and the other one is the descent
(same road).   More frequently it won't have any GPS data at all.




When you get it right though, it's pretty cool.  I can embed the Contour videos onto my blog but you lose the GPS mapping.




Here's the same video on the Contour site with the map included:  LINK



On the back door you see the battery light, the power on button, 
a door latch slider, and the memory light.  The lights flash different
combinations of colors to indicate that they're working, have locked
on to the satellite, running out of memory, etc.



The mode switch allows two different recording modes - you might pick highest def for mode 1 and long recording time for mode 2 for example... or video for mode 1 and continuous still photos for mode 2... but you can only program which mode is which while the camera is plugged into your computer... then you can switch between those two modes while you're on your ride.

Here's the link to My Contour Site where you can see lots and lots of little clips I've taken, and you can see some of the highly recommended clips of all kinds of other people too.

The Contour GPS gets a 6 out of 10 on the DiabloScott CycleCam rating scale.  One point off for the slightly buggy software, another point off for having to buy all the extra bits like mounts and decent size SD card, two points off for the unpredictable GPS availability.

Why didn't I get a Go-Pro? Mostly just the looks and the attachment options... and the lack of a GPS recorder.





Dork factor goes to 11


It's like a Fred annunciator.


UPDATE:  Here's a comparison of still photos.
I took photos of the same tree with different methods, and then cropped them to the same size... seems like a valid comparison.


Test Photo 1:  Screen grab from Contour 1080p video.


Test Photo 2:  Contour continuous still photo mode.

Test Photo 3:  Olympus pocket camera photo.
One thing I didn't mention before is that in the full HD 1080p mode, the camera uses a lens angle of 111°, and in all the other modes it uses 135° degrees, so there's a noticeable fish-eye effect in the still photo mode that you should be aware of that isn't too pronounced in the way that I cropped the photos here.  You'll also notice that in some of my videos you get a little more brake lever and shift cable in the frame... that's 720p mode, and the ones with hardly any lever and cable are in 1080p mode... IMO much nicer framing for bike videos... snowboarders and such may prefer the wider angle.

Here are uncropped screengrabs from the Contour Storyteller software so you can see the difference.

111°

135°