After my crash everyone was asking whether I would ride again, including the Doctors and Nurses "
Of course" !! I replied, in fact, I was a little
surprised that People were even asking. So a couple of Months after leaving Hospital I got my short-term memory and concentration back....
What was I saying? Oh yeah...plus the Casts were removed from both of my Hands so I could use a Laptop so I had all kinds of time on my Hands to research and shop for a new Bike, I knew that I needed one ready to go when I was ready to ride, it was kind of a psychological thing, something to strive for.
A PT Nurse told me that Patients with my kind of mindset recover much faster than those that just lay there and give up - so I was on the right Track!!

My 2010 Pinarello FP3 is now mounted in my stationary Trainer, I was measured for the Bike and my 53cm fits perfectly, there is quite a lot more seat-post showing now that I have the Saddle adjusted and the Steerer tube still needs to be cut down to size but it will do right now while I gain back my flexibility.
Why Pinarello? After all, there are so many different Bike Manufacturers around including Specialized, Colnago, Cervelo, Felt, Scott and the list goes on. I've always wanted a Pinarello, I guess it's as simple as that!! But more importantly, the Pinarello, although not the lightest Kid on the Block, is one of the better built, it's a moncoque design, meaning it's all in one piece when it comes out of the mold, so nothing can come apart, it's better than bonding two tubes together. The rear Seat and Chainstay triangle is of an asymmetrical design, meaning they strengthened the Drive-side by adding more material because this is the side that all the power is transferred through to the Road.
Components again are a matter of choice, my last Bike was adorned with Campagnolo Record 10 Carbon/Titanium Components but this time around, seeing as I had to replace everything all at once I wanted to keep the initial price lower so I opted for SRAM Force, the choice of a lot of Criterium Racers, and I'm really happy with it although I've never ridden the Bike on the Street the feel of changing up and down through the Gears is really awesome. I'm getting very accustomed to the new way of changing, one click for the rear Cogs and it's decision time let the Lever go and you drop into a smaller Cog, click one more time to the left and the Chain rises to a Bigger one simple!!
Wheelset this is the best place to put upgrade money. The Pinarello came with some good, strong Fulcrum Racing 5 Training Wheels, perfect for my first couple of months of street riding, after all, I won't be trying to break any records, merely getting confidence back for riding outside, after I'm finally allowed to ride outside that is, the Fulcrums are perfectly fine on the Trainer, you don't wanna run spendy ones on one anyway. I have been considering SRAM S60 wheels which are part Aluminum, part Carbon Fiber, we'll see.
The rest of the Components Bars, Stem, Seat Post, Saddle, Bottle Cages are all MOst , manufactured for Pinarello, they are their own Component brand and match perfectly, the Brakes are FSA manufactured for Most. By the way, the Seat Post is Carbon wrapped with an Aluminum core which I prefer because I know several Riders who have had broken Carbon Seat-Posts which can end with horrible consequences.
The Pinarello FP3 is an awesome Bike for the price however, the Paint job is absolutely outstanding, it might not be a Dogma or even Prince, it's not even an FP7 but the cost of a Di2 equipped Dogma is out of the Stratosphere at $16,500 but is arguably the best Bike in the world!
I need to start buying Lottery Tickets in 2010!!
In the meanwhile, I will post a full review when I finally get to take it on the Road.