bicycling to work thread

Discussion in 'Automotive' started by guignol, Jan 29, 2008.

  1. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    Speaking of Bicycles and Alfred Jarry:

    [​IMG]
     
  2. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
  3. Dr. Wankler

    Dr. Wankler Member+

    May 2, 2001
    The Electric City
    Club:
    Chicago Fire
    I agree, but that's unlikely where I live. I think we're lucky to have the "right hook" outlawed.
     
  4. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    not to completely hijack the thread to the benefit of things ubuesque and 'pataphysique (the science of imaginary solutions really deserves its own and i may just get on that today) it must not escape our notice that far beyond simply being good friday (and accessorily the day of saint marcellin yum, yum) today is the 15th day of the month of Clinamen and the Supreme, First First Class Feastday of:

    THE INVENTION OF 'PATAPHYSICS

    a round of absinthe is in order and it's on the house.
     
  5. 96Squig

    96Squig Member

    Feb 4, 2004
    Hanover
    Club:
    Hannover 96
    Nat'l Team:
    Netherlands
    Well, if the free market works over time you should see more and more bike lanes in the US, at least in areas with decent population density, few hills and not too harsh weather.
     
  6. laasan

    laasan Member

    Apr 12, 2010
    bicycles are also moved by carcasses. just a bit fresher.. ;)
     
  7. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Anyone read the "Bike Snob NYC" books.

    I'm currently reading the first one - "Bike Snob: Systematically and Mercilessly Realigning the World of Cycling"

    It's hilarious. And oh so true. Once I finish it, I'll read the one just recently published - "The Enlightened Cyclist"

    His blog is great too

    Loved his description of his visit to DC. I ride the trails he talks about on a pretty regular basis.
     
  8. cleansheetbsc

    cleansheetbsc Member+

    Mar 17, 2004
    Club:
    --other--
    I'm such a bike snob, that reading 'Bike Snob' is beneath me.
     
  9. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    Of course. :D
     
  10. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    I am seriously considering upgrading my bike.
     
  11. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    whatcha got now?
     
  12. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    A Giant Kronos, probably built around '97 or so.

    Great bike, and pretty light, but I'm so tempted to get a cyclocross so I can hit some gravel trails
     
  13. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    a nice bike!

    i can give no advice of any use to you since my purchasing policy is to get the cheapest bike i can, usually at carrefour; my last one only cost me 83€*! these suit my purpose well enough and are surprisingly good value for money: frames made in france in the same factories that supply sunn or gitane, components from reputable manufacturers (shimano, sram, rigida)... the major downside is that final assembly is done by the guy who also stocks the lawn chairs and tiki lamps and uses the same professional care in doing so, so you need some mechanical knowhow and you start putting it to use the minute you wheel your bike out of the store. and you need to put more suitable tires on, especially for street use. but a perverse kind of reverse snobbery makes me proud to say my total outlay including tubes (which i never change until they have at least 5-6 patches), pads (which i shim with washers until they're right down to the nubbity nubbins) and all the other things that break (which i usually cannibalize off my old bikes or one of those dead beaters one always sees still chained to their final resting ground) is under 30€ per year.

    109€ list price -15% special offer -10€ gift certificate.
     
  14. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    thinking about nice bikes, there's a guy at our company (i have no idea who since he works shift and i never see him, only his bikes in the garage who either comes on (i assume it's the same guy since you always see one or the other but never both) an all original equipment (well, maybe not the wheels) 1958 rafael geminiani or, a replica of sean kelly's 1988 racer... what's left of it anyway, all the components are pretty banal shimano and all the markings have been rubbed off, but the vitus carbon/kevlar frame is unmistakeable:
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  15. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
  16. BocaFan

    BocaFan Member+

    Aug 18, 2003
    Queens, NY
    Does it explain why cyclists in NYC are always in a grumpy mood? Or why they feel its okay to bike the wrong way on a one-way street at night without a light, yet are the first ones to yell at any pedestrian or car that gets in their way?
     
  17. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    He does address some of those issues. but more in his second book than in his first.

    And always is a total exaggeration. Most bicyclists I know don't do the things you mention. Hell, when I ride to work, I start my day in a GREAT mood.
     
  18. BocaFan

    BocaFan Member+

    Aug 18, 2003
    Queens, NY
    Maybe the "always" only applies to NYC bicyclists then. Biking along a 5-lane road with no separate bike path is a far cry from biking through parks. So the grumpiness is justified, although I don't know why they bike when they seem pissed off half the time.
     
  19. JeremyEritrea

    JeremyEritrea Member+

    Jun 29, 2006
    Takoma Park, MD
    Club:
    DC United
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    So you're trying to argue that EVERY bicyclist in the five boroughs of NYC are all grumpy and actually hate riding their bikes? Seriously?
     
  20. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    methinks bocafan is mistaking his own prejudices and idées reçues for reality.
     
  21. BocaFan

    BocaFan Member+

    Aug 18, 2003
    Queens, NY
    meh, I said "half of the time". But one of these days I'm going to hit one of them with my car and they'll accuse me, probably get me in police trouble even though they were driving erratically the wrong way down a one-way street without a light at night and I was driving soberly the right-way with lights being part of the road rather than acting like I own the road.

    That said, the trouble will be soooooo worth it! hehehahahahehe :devilish:
     
  22. SpencerNY

    SpencerNY Member+

    Dec 1, 2001
    Up in the skyway
    Bike noob here...so what kind a difference can I expect in comfort if I upgrade from my $59.99 Pacific Prowler to at least something like a Trek and is there really a HUGE difference in drag when using the nobby tires as opposed to smoother ones.
     
  23. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    streetwise tires are THE upgrade to make. when i did that i gained almost two whole sprockets (i now generally roll at 44*14 and go to 44*12 as soon as a favorable circumstance presents itself, when i used to push 44*16 with occasional need to drop to 18).

    but what you need most is a downgrade so to speak: meaning get rid of the suspension! my bike is the same market range as yours and nice bikes, well, they're nice! but for my needs, try as it might every time i buy a new ride, my id can't justify the expense to my superego.

    if you also do backwoods riding though, you need to cough up the shekels for adjustable suspension that you can lock right down for the street and for a second set of wheels so you can change tire types back and forth quickly.
     
  24. guignol

    guignol Moderator
    Staff Member

    Apr 28, 2005
    mermoz-les-boss
    Club:
    Olympique Lyonnais
    Nat'l Team:
    France
    boca fan is obviously joking, but something i saw this morning brings home that there is some sick bikehate out there.

    last night someone thought it would be funny to rip out a couple of the posts supporting some newly planted trees alongside a new bike lane here in town, and arrange them so the ends jut out just at the height where passing cyclists' heads go.

    would he still be laughing if he saw the state of the woman who was on the ground there this morning? the sad answer is i think he would be.
     

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