The Grocery Getter is almost in ridable condition. I robbed the crank bolts from the Stratus to hold the salvage cranks to the BB on the Fusion, and sized the chain. The bike can be ridden around the block, but without a seat pad on the pan to keep my bony butt from sliding around I wouldn't take it any further than that, and my wife (the rider the bike was ultimately intended for) won't have a chance at staying on the bike. Also I'm having some shifter issues with the SRAM 9.0 shifter and the SX4 rear derailler. I get 1st and 8th gear fine, 2nd and 3rd usually shift right in, but after that I get some weirdness. When I shift into 4th it eventually goes to 5th ditto 6th and 7th going up a gear. Going the other way Dropping from 8th to 7th gets me nothing on the cassette, but dropping to 6th gets me 7th, and so on until I put the shifter in 3rd which gets me 3rd instead of 4th, then 2nd and 1st. I'm going to try tightening the shift cable and see what happens.
That weirdness aside, I like this bike as far as I have been able to ride it so far, less than a mile total. I can't say anything about how well it rolls with it's salvage front wheel and rear tire, but I have already had a flat tire. I forgot to put rim tape on the new rear wheel before installing the tire and turned the tube into swiss cheese. Whoops! I'm still making the bracket for the Honking Huge Tailight
tm but my bending brake went down (is this bike cursed?) and then I cut the wrong corner off the bracket (I think this bike is cursed) and tore out all the electrical connections at the switch, including the insides of the switch (I'm pretty sure this bike is cursed now).
The brakes on this bike are freaking awesome. I used a set of 2 finger alloy levers off a BMX bike with sidepull calipers, and I have Avid linear pull brake calipers on the bike. The levers were made with enough pull to work linear pull brakes, but with enough leverage to lock up sidepull calipers. I thought I was going to do a stoppie a couple of times the back end got so light. I'm worried about the rear rim collapsing from the braking forces because there's so much flex in the rim sidewall.
Another weird thing about this bike is it whistles. No tunes or anything, just a single note whenever the speed get high enough or the wind blows fast enough, but I can't find the source. I tried making sure the handlebars were stopped up but that didn't do anything, so there is another source somewhere...
Handling, the bike was very twitchy when compared with the Zenetik, almost aggressive, but stable. By that I mean riding in a straight line is not hard, but the bike wants to turn hard when you try to turn it. Part of that is the handlebars I salvaged off my daughter's 30 YO BMX bike, and the fact that they are slightly ahead of the steering axis, and part of that is the 20X1.5" Kenda Kwest recumbent tire up front. The tire was very hard to lock up in a straight line and as I posted earlier wanted to lift the back end rather than lock up, and was hard to slide on clean pavement when turning also. Good tire. The 8 YO Michelin Wild Gripper City 26X1.5 tire was a little slick, but it was a little slick 8 years ago, except in the rain.
Those handlebars I mentioned were chosen because they offer a huge amount of real estate for instrumentation and lights. There is the normal area by the clamp that would hold a light and a computer, and then there is the crossbar that would hold several lights, computers, GPS units, horns, sirens, map clips, Etc.