Best products from r/peloton

We found 22 comments on r/peloton discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 41 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

5. Kings of the Mountains: How Colombia's Cycling Heroes Changed Their Nation's History

    Features:
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Kings of the Mountains: How Colombia's Cycling Heroes Changed Their Nation's History
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Top comments mentioning products on r/peloton:

u/minimus_ · 2 pointsr/peloton

My second favourite book of all time, fiction or non-fiction, is the Official Centenary book, released in 2003. Ok, so it's 10 years out of date, but for a fantastic insight into the first 100 years it is just unbelievable, with some outstandingly evocative writing and pictures. It is superb. Linky

u/Roobsa · 2 pointsr/peloton

Everyone should read The Hour by Michael Hutchinson (a very successful national TTer in the UK). It's a great read and pretty funny and goes into a lot of detail about the history of time trailing and the hour record.

u/yawningcat · 3 pointsr/peloton

Great topic. As I'm in holland I have a hard time thinking of a great one but would like to contribute by pointing out this book.
Mountain High: Europe's 50 Greatest Cycle Climbs - Saddlebag Edition by Daniel Friebe http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1780877552/ref=cm_sw_r_udp_awd_vp5vsb0QSTZSP

u/Avila99 · 3 pointsr/peloton

The book Slaying the Badger is an amazing holiday gift and one of the best cycling books ever written!

The 30 for 30 really doesn't do it justice.

u/istarbel · 4 pointsr/peloton

Great article. If you are interested in Colombian cycling Klaus is your man. His articles span from explaining the past to current interview. Really well researched, written and photographed. Matt Rendell's book Kings of the Mountains if you can find it is amazing.

u/spdorsey · 59 pointsr/peloton

This may be unpopular, but I have always enjoyed Phil and Paul's banter, description of landmarks, commentary, and (most of all) final sprint call-out at the end of each stage. I grew up listening to them and, while I realize nothing lasts forever, I will miss their voices.

(I own a copy of Mike and the Bike that came with the CD and Phil's narration, love it!!)

u/cwillis1605 · 1 pointr/peloton

David Millar: Racing through the dark autobiography other than providing a good insight into the peloton in a deep and straight to the point way that David Millar is known for its an incredibly good story (My mum enjoyed it and she didn't really pay much attention to cycling! He's now one Of her favourite riders)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1409120384/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1405910592&sr=8-1&pi=SL75

u/Reustonium · 8 pointsr/peloton

I just finished two of Phil Gaimon's books, they were approachable, entertaining, and somewhat enlightening about the life of pro cyclists. I'd recommend them both.

Pro Cycling on $10 a day
Draft Animals

u/LAcycling · 3 pointsr/peloton

haha exactly. And yeah, I just bought this book after Phinney discussed it in an interview. I'm only a couple hours in and it's a pretty insightful read if you're into this stuff.

u/HighSilence · 1 pointr/peloton

I'm reading Gironimo about the 1914 giro. It is insane what they used to do in the grand tours. The 1914 giro went 3100+ km over eight stages. Eight Stages. All in the high-300 to low 400km range.

From wikipedia:

> It is remembered as the hardest Giro of the heroic period of bicycle racing. Besides five stages of over 400 km (and the longest ever average stage length), it included the longest stage ever in the history of the Giro: the Lucca-Rome stage won by Costante Girardengo. This edition of the Giro was run at the lowest average speed (23.374 km/h); marked the highest gap between the first and the second (1 hour, 55 minutes and 26 seconds); saw the longest ever stage by time taken (the Bari-L'Aquila). Only 8 riders (of 81 participants) finished the race.

Gironimo is the book by Tim Moore. He re-creates the entire route with an old Hirondelle bicycle specific to the period. Complete with wine cork brake pads.

He also did one on the tour which I own and hope to begin soon.

u/Von_Lohengrin · 2 pointsr/peloton

We Were Young and Carefree by the late Professeur is a brilliant reed :)

u/J_90 · 1 pointr/peloton

I get bored of standard energy bars, I like to create mini versions of regular foods to mix it up. Feed Zone Portables gives me a lot of ideas for my creations.

u/Krisc119 · 20 pointsr/peloton

Probably a cooling vest, this one looks similar, but with active cooling. A couple locals use ice vests for warming up for TTs in the summer (95F+, 60%+ humidity).

u/lamby · 7 pointsr/peloton

The Escape Artist: Life from the Saddle by Matt Seaton. An incredibly moving book about an amateur British racer, written in a beautiful style. It's almost not "really" about cycling, but more about middle age and life. Highly recommended.

u/whiskey06 · 1 pointr/peloton

https://www.amazon.ca/Sex-Lies-Handlebar-Tape-Remarkable/dp/1910948004

It detail's Monsieur Anquetil's scorched earth approach to, well, everything.

u/Nerdlinger · 3 pointsr/peloton

If you want to learn more about road cycling and racing, try Roadie: The Misunderstood World of a Bike Racer.

Fr a specific race, there's Slaying The Badger, which is about to be presented as an ESPN 30 for 30 documentary this week.

A Dog in a Hat is the story of an Amrican rider's experiences on the European circuit back when Americans were just starting to get into cycling.

Rough Ride is Paul Kimmage's account of riding in the peloton and the reality of riding. It helped turn him into persona non grata in the cycling world for many years.

And Team 7-Eleven tells the story of the creation of the first big American cycling team.