hey! i got an awesome job for this summer. but the problem is that i cant afford a car and my job is around 6 miles away… i was thinking that i could maby walk the first coupe weeks until i have enough money too buy myself a bike.
so does anyone know enough about road bikes that they can give me a few pointers on how too buy the right bike?
i just want something not too expensive… that will still get me from point a to b.
im 6’1’’ and weigh 155. if that helps.
Have you thought about buying or acquiring an older steel road bike and converting to singlespeed or fixed?
Also, these can be bought used on CL season round. I don’t know if you’re a fan of no gear, but I love it for its simplicity and reliability. Once you are used to it, you rarely wish you had gears, if at all.
It is really a matter of personal perference. My extended use of the unicycle has made me fall in love with the fixed gear bike.
If you were riding singlespeed, though, you can go as fast as you want downhill. The only forseeable problem is on hills. In general I find that the rule is, depending on your gearing, a singlespeed rider will go up the hill much faster than someone with a granny gear. This is only out of necessity because you want to keep your momentum. Despite this, with enough hills, the singlespeeder will tire more quickly.
Remember though, our legs are conditioned for a singlespeed and fixed gear cycle already: the unicycle.
What tends to annoy you first after your new bike becomes a little more broken in? For me it is almost always some weird clicking or misshifting with the gears. This is all moot with a fixedgear/singlespeed (many hubs, flip flop hubs, allow for both a fixed gear and singlepseed cog).
For 6 miles each way, just about any bike will work. (With some minor exceptions, come to think of it). If it’s hilly, then yeah, you’ll want some gears. Otherwise, singlespeed would be fine.
There are hardly any hills in the Valley of the Sun. Why not ride a unicycle? I mean, 6 miles on flat roads on a 36er is hardly that far.
I wouldn’t hesitate to get a singlespeed bike, freewheel or fixie. Simpler is better, especially when you rely on a bike for transportation. You really don’t want to come home tired from work and have to mess with fixing gears that don’t shift quite right if you don’t have to.
Make sure that whatever you get is comfortable, and I would probably favor something used or inexpensive. Expensive looking bikes are thief magnets. Make sure you can secure your bike at your place of work.
For spec comparison, I’d probably get something like this, only less shiny: Bianchi San Jose
Step 1: Get a cheapo $45-$150 bike off of craigslist.
Step 2: Put slick high PSI tires on it and adjust the gearing so it works well. (this is easier than converting to a single speed)
Step 3:
Step 4: Profit
When buying a bike a good rule of thumb is when straddling the top bar with both feet on the ground you should be able to put 2 fingers between your crotch and that bar. No less, and more is ok but not ALOT more. But really, get whatever you can. I wouldn’t spend much money on a commuting bike. If you go too nice it’ll just get stolen.
As per commuting on a bike vs a coker - a bike is a heck of a lot cheaper and way faster. I coker commute one day a week because my job starts late that day, otherwise I bike. (10-14mph vs 16-25mph for a 9 mile commute) You can build up a good commuting bike for far less cost than a low-end coker as well.
I ride a flat bar road bike, its a Norco VFR 4 2007 model.
I love it.
I know this doesnt help much, but if you dont like the ‘leaning over’ position of a full on roadie then a flat bar roadie is for you!
(i am looking at changing to a full on roadie but cash is a bit tight to do everything i want!).
J
personally i like ‘flick bars’, drop bars that have been turned the other way up and then cut down, they closer simulate the ‘up’ position on drop bars than flat bars do, like so.
I enjoy flying past single speed riders who have maxed out their gear on the road. I also enjoy flying past them crouched against the wind on my drop bars while they are stuck upright.
I like single speeds, but they really have a specific use, I believe, which is riding in super busy traffic (although a fixie is even better for that) or maybe mt. bike racing. For everything else gears are better and more efficient. If you have issues keeping them adjusted just slap on a pair of $5 friction shifters and the problem is gone. I haven’t adjusted my shifting since last Sept, and I ride every day in the rain and over rough roads.
Personal preference I guess, but I wouldn’t recommend single speeds to people who just want a simple commuting bike. Gears are freakin’ awesome.
Yes i guess I only ride short distances in reasonable to heavy traffic, and almost entirely flat. Certainly the chances to spin out a middling gear are small.
My everyday ride is a 26" mtb, no suspension, hybridised with some decent tyres, good v-brakes (had cantis) and mudgaurds. if it wasn’t for the fact it’s 4" short for me it would be a good bike.
Any decent bike properly adjusted for your size will do for a 6 mile ride each way.
Single speeds are simple. Fixed wheels are fun.
There is no connection between the number of gears and whether the bike has dropped handlebars.
Gears are only complicated because modern gears are designed for people who have no mechanical sensitivity. They have one lever to click up, and one to click down, and they have to be adjusted just right.
For simple gears, you can’t beat an old style derailleur 5 or 6 speed without click stops on the lever half way down the downtube. You just throw the lever until your legs are going around at the right speed, then twitch the lever to stop the chain tinkling. It works even when the cable is slightly out of adjustment. They were’t days.
Or you can try hub gears. Sturmey Archer 3 speed gives you a direct drive and one gear 33% higher and one 25% lower. Perfect until some posterior orifice steals that little dog chain at the back.
Or, if your route is safe, 6 miles is next to nothing on a Coker and not far from nothing on a 29er.
But there is a positive correlation between people who ride fixed gears and people who ride weird upside-down sawed off upright handlebars. At least in this town, I think it’s a hipster thing.
That bike he linked was $700. A single speed, in general, will cost MORE, not less, because they are rarer and they are “hip” and in high demand. A used single speed will also cost more than a used regular bike for the same reason.
If you really want a used single speed buy a used geared bike and convert it. Personaly, I’d just buy a geared bike and keep the gears. Either way $50-$150 on craig’s list or at goodwill. $500 or more for a new bike (either type) at a LBS.
Id rather have gears. As much of a unicyclist as I am, I like to coast down hills at 45-50mph and keep up with cars on the flats.
Seager, do you know much about Cyclocross bikes? They are kinda spendy new, and it would be cool if I could just make one up as easy as a road bike (Old frame, sweet new wheels).
IMO for commuting i would get a flat bar roadie - they fall under the category of ‘Performance Commuting’…
Here is 2 pics of mine, they are a good commuter for speed as they have the skinny tyres and are also a comfortable ride.
Peace