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Any comments/competition for Marin's urban bikes? Mtb/<1.75 " tires
Interested in any comments any one has about Marin's urban bikes or
any bikes (competition) they may have? The only other bike I've seen like these is the Kona Smoke. |
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#2
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Lobo Tommy said...
Interested in any comments any one has about Marin's urban bikes or any bikes (competition) they may have? The only other bike I've seen like these is the Kona Smoke. A mountain bike with some sort of pavement friendly tire can do anything an urban bike or hybrid can, only better. |
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On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 00:48:04 GMT, SuperSlinky
wrote: Lobo Tommy said... Interested in any comments any one has about Marin's urban bikes or any bikes (competition) they may have? The only other bike I've seen like these is the Kona Smoke. A mountain bike with some sort of pavement friendly tire can do anything an urban bike or hybrid can, only better. Except that most MTBs sold these days have front shocks. Others may think front shocks are great on the road, but I find them silly. |
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Dan Daniel said...
Except that most MTBs sold these days have front shocks. Others may think front shocks are great on the road, but I find them silly. Couldn't disagree more. Not only are front shocks useful on pavement, but rear ones are as well. Some roads are as rough as rooty and rocky single track. Some single track is as smooth as fresh asphalt. On many roads, my MTB is faster and safer than my road bike, mainly because it can take a hell of a lot more punishment without something very bad happening. I'll keep saying it whether anybody chooses to believe me or not. MTBs are some of the best road bikes ever made. I average 3-4mph faster on my road racing bike compared to my 29lb FS MTB on long road rides. Now that I have a real road bike, I'm having difficulty finding routes that aren't made up bone rattling and bike trashing crappy roads. These same roads I have floated over countless times on the FS MTB. Nothing beats FS for urban riding. The question there isn't why have suspension, but why on earth wouldn't you want it. |
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On Sat, 25 Sep 2004 03:08:19 GMT, SuperSlinky
wrote: Dan Daniel said... Except that most MTBs sold these days have front shocks. Others may think front shocks are great on the road, but I find them silly. Couldn't disagree more. Not only are front shocks useful on pavement, but rear ones are as well. Some roads are as rough as rooty and rocky single track. Some single track is as smooth as fresh asphalt. On many roads, my MTB is faster and safer than my road bike, mainly because it can take a hell of a lot more punishment without something very bad happening. I'll keep saying it whether anybody chooses to believe me or not. MTBs are some of the best road bikes ever made. I average 3-4mph faster on my road racing bike compared to my 29lb FS MTB on long road rides. Now that I have a real road bike, I'm having difficulty finding routes that aren't made up bone rattling and bike trashing crappy roads. These same roads I have floated over countless times on the FS MTB. Nothing beats FS for urban riding. The question there isn't why have suspension, but why on earth wouldn't you want it. Try 32mm tires on a road bike |
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"SuperSlinky" wrote in message t... .... I average 3-4mph faster on my road racing bike compared to my 29lb FS MTB on long road rides. Nothing beats FS for urban riding. The question there isn't why have suspension, but why on earth wouldn't you want it. Didn't you answer your own question? |
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Dan Daniel wrote:
Except that most MTBs sold these days have front shocks. Others may think front shocks are great on the road, but I find them silly. one word: lockout :-) they sure don't hurt when negotiating potholes...they're not always as kind to your rim though. bri |
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Dan Daniel wrote:
On 24 Sep 2004 10:59:07 -0700, (Lobo Tommy) wrote: Interested in any comments any one has about Marin's urban bikes or any bikes (competition) they may have? The only other bike I've seen like these is the Kona Smoke. Bikes like the Kona Dr. Dew, etc. Specialized Sirrus. Cannondale Bad Boy, Road Warrior. Jamis Street Series. Seems like many companies have similar ideas floating around. another model which may be similar to what you guys are talking about... http://www.electrabike.com/04/bikes/...wnie_home.html they actually have a few different variations I guess. I've noticed one of the main differences is a lot of these bikes go off a 24" wheel which makes them lower to the ground for stability and maybe a little easier to pedal at low speeds with SS and the front ring set slightly ahead. I even sat on a chopper style bike yesterday with an 8 speed cassette, grip shift, and single chainring. again, had the smaller tires. single rear brake, it was interesting but wasn't really gonna buy it -- just HAD to see how it felt. I think I'd rather just buy a beach cruiser myself instead of an "urban" cycle if I was going that way (something slow just to cruise around on). bri |
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 10:59:07 -0700, Lobo Tommy wrote:
Interested in any comments any one has about Marin's urban bikes or any bikes (competition) they may have? The only other bike I've seen like these is the Kona Smoke. I rode a Marin San Anselmo with the 7sp nexus for 5 years and LOVED it. It really was a perfect bike: fenders, rack, fast 700c wheels. The wheels were built with cheap Alex Rims, but built well with fat DT spokes, I trued them once in something like 20K miles. The geometry was perfect too, it was a fendered urban transport device, but with more aggressive angles than your average comfort bike. The only drawback is that the aluminum frame was way overbuilt--great when hauling back 50 lbs of Indian groceries, but a very harsh ride, so think about getting a fancier saddle than the stock one. I got t-boned by a car once--the bike was thrown half a block (I survived without a scratch). Some Chinese exchange students came to the rescue and bent the fenders back into place--funniest and most polite thing you ever did see--but the bike itself was perfect! |
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