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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
I'm doing a survey on what kind of bikes are being used for affordable
mid-range road bikes, bikes that you'd use for running around town or everyday commuting. Sure, on Sundays keen riders trot out their pride and joys -- the very high end Treks, Specializeds, Rossins, Colnagos, Cannondales, etc. but there is a fairly limited set of names you see on every day road bike frames, the ones that are locked to lamp posts outside the grocery store and are most often converted into single speeds. I suspect that certain brands are chosen because they are lightweight, good quality, but not so sought after as to be expensive or appealing to thieves. They are also, I suspect, not so precious that they can't take the occasional scratches and dings that come from heavy regular urban street riding or be "frankensteined" with mix-and-match components. And it seems to be quite regional. In this area (Toronto in Canada) the Grade B brands I most often see include: Concorde, Miele, Fugi, Fiori, Miyata, Nishiki. There is an Apollo brand that shows up on bikes originally sold in the Vancouver area but which I don't think was ever available around here. What brands/makes/models do you see in your area? What are your thoughts on what makes a great beater? I look forward to hearing your ideas. Peter |
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
sorry.
typo. that should have been "Fuji" Peter On May 11, 6:16 pm, wrote: I'm doing a survey on what kind of bikes are being used for affordable mid-range road bikes, bikes that you'd use for running around town or everyday commuting. Sure, on Sundays keen riders trot out their pride and joys -- the very high end Treks, Specializeds, Rossins, Colnagos, Cannondales, etc. but there is a fairly limited set of names you see on every day road bike frames, the ones that are locked to lamp posts outside the grocery store and are most often converted into single speeds. I suspect that certain brands are chosen because they are lightweight, good quality, but not so sought after as to be expensive or appealing to thieves. They are also, I suspect, not so precious that they can't take the occasional scratches and dings that come from heavy regular urban street riding or be "frankensteined" with mix-and-match components. And it seems to be quite regional. In this area (Toronto in Canada) the Grade B brands I most often see include: Concorde, Miele, Fugi, Fiori, Miyata, Nishiki. There is an Apollo brand that shows up on bikes originally sold in the Vancouver area but which I don't think was ever available around here. What brands/makes/models do you see in your area? What are your thoughts on what makes a great beater? I look forward to hearing your ideas. Peter |
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
In article ,
Dane Buson writes: wrote: What brands/makes/models do you see in your area? Well, first of course there are the ubiquitous but servile Huffy and Mongoose brands. But you probably meant something a little more highbrow. Generally lots of bike boom bikes like Akami, Apollo, Centurion, Sekai, Nishiki, some Raleigh, some unidentifiables. What are your thoughts on what makes a great beater? Cheap, not rusted through, aluminum wheels are a plus, 700c instead of 27" is nice. Oooh! Oooh! Suzue one-piece, forged, no-tool-marks, wide-flanged hubs! Yeah, they've nutted axles instead of QRs, but that's part of what makes a good beater too. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
Peter Cole wrote:
To me, the best beaters are the most standard bikes. Anything unusual in thread pitch, diameter or bearing/component mounting makes it a toss back. Horizontal dropout are a big plus. Yes, anything French gets the upturned nose. I still have some French parts from a broken bike (bottom bracket, headset)[1] that I'm keeping for a bit in case someone I know needs them though. [1] Before I knew enough to form this policy. -- Dane Buson - "The GOP is the evil party, the Democrats are the stupid party, and bipartisanship is when they join forces to do something both evil and stupid." - Stephen Johnson |
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What are the "beater" road bike brands in your area?
Tom Keats wrote:
In article , Dane Buson writes: wrote: What brands/makes/models do you see in your area? Well, first of course there are the ubiquitous but servile Huffy and Mongoose brands. But you probably meant something a little more highbrow. Generally lots of bike boom bikes like Akami, Apollo, Centurion, Sekai, Nishiki, some Raleigh, some unidentifiables. What are your thoughts on what makes a great beater? Cheap, not rusted through, aluminum wheels are a plus, 700c instead of 27" is nice. Oooh! Oooh! Suzue one-piece, forged, no-tool-marks, wide-flanged hubs! Yeah, they've nutted axles instead of QRs, but that's part of what makes a good beater too. True, I'm not fond of quick release on anything that will be locked up outside for more than five minutes at a time. Plus, at least the nutted axles always work, some of the quick releases are pure cheese. -- Dane Buson - "I have to convince you, or at least snow you ..." -- Prof. Romas Aleliunas, CS 435 |
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