One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.
One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
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If I was forced... I'd probably end up just keeping the Atlantis... Based on my current riding and needs.
68 cm Atlantis (note the one bike I still haven't found).
So second choice would be the AHH.. It would be first choice if I didn't tour as much.
In reality the Bombadil would do it all... I just don't like the amount of seat post showing..
So Atlantis as it will cover bother the AHH and Bombadil roles ..
I think that is my answer ... Glad I don't have to make that choice.
Kelly
Then what would my wife complain about?
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Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
I love this group. Always the best answers. Jan I think you are on to something on with one super nice. Never thought how it would make the wife happy. Funny thing is she has given me a bike limit and a while ago I tried to surpass it by giving her one of my bikes--we are the same height. She didn't buy my scheme--she has a Townie and that's all she wants--so I lost that battle. The one bike decision is tough. Maybe sell them all save and finally buy that AHH I've drolled over for years...or maybe even the San Marcos... I hope the 1 bike decision doesn't turn into one more...and what's the general rule with writing numerals? I'm sure Grant knows. Oh and Jim, your stable is enviable...except that it's missing a Troll:)
You guys and your wife-imposed bike limits! I've gone wife-free and now only my warped sense of guilt over little-ridden bikes causes me to limit further acquisition. Money, too, but there's always a way.
On Tuesday, January 22, 2013 at 4:48 PM, murphyjrfk wrote:
Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
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Philip
www.biketinker.com
Philip (ees waffer theen...)
www.biketinker.com
Realistically I'll always have at least 2 bikes, one is a my refurbished 80s Bianchi which used to be my wife's has too much sentimental value to give up, I only use it for charity rides and has limited use beyond that. But I have found myself wondering if I could somehow roll up my Simplone, Hillborne (650b) and vo PolyValent into one awesome bike.
Here's a couple of options I have come up with...
A custom lightish 650b which could take some weight, running a 1x9 drivetrain with the option to go single speed, single color with limited decals for leaving locked up outside....kind of a high end PolyValent...OR maybe a 650b quickbeam with 132.5 spacing running 42/32 upfront and a the option to run a 6spd freewheel which could be manually shifted across multiple gears.
With either frame I could tinker until my hearts content.
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What's a year w one bike anyways. Probably put some things into perspective.
And I might get lucky and a small ahh or Rambo or bleriot pops up for sale.
You <can> do anything. If I <had> to, it would be (hands down) my Atlantis, Alba bars, conventional Riv triple setup, dyno lights. (I’m guessing there may be a lot of Atlantii in the answers to this post.) I’m grateful I don’t have to.
An interesting related question, for those who currently have more than one bike: Is your <favorite> bike the same as the one you’d choose if you could only have one? For me, the answer would be no – my favorite bike is my Quickbeam, but I’m too old and out of shape to make it work as my only bike.
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Wait. You can have more then one bike?!Now I'm going to save up for a Roadeo.
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It's funny. I have a bunch of options in my stable that are fun and have loads of practical applications. But honestly, the most fun bike to ride that I own is my custom Della Santa that can't even take a 28 width tire, has no braze-ons for a rack or whatever. But every time I go for a ride on that bike I feel like I'm Paolo Bettini. The bike is a dialed in 17 pound wonder. It would be hard not to choose that bike as THE ONE.No logic to it...On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 6:56 PM, Kelly <tksl...@gmail.com> wrote:
I wouldn't give up any of my bikes at this point. If I had to live with one....
68 cm Atlantis (note the one bike I still haven't found).
So second choice would be the AHH.. It would be first choice if I didn't tour as much.
In reality the Bombadil would do it all... I just don't like the amount of seat post showing..
So Atlantis as it will cover bother the AHH and Bombadil roles ..
I think that is my answer ... Glad I don't have to make that choice.
Kelly
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You <can> do anything. If I <had> to, it would be (hands down) my Atlantis, Alba bars, conventional Riv triple setup, dyno lights. (I’m guessing there may be a lot of Atlantii in the answers to this post.) I’m grateful I don’t have to.
An interesting related question, for those who currently have more than one bike: Is your <favorite> bike the same as the one you’d choose if you could only have one? For me, the answer would be no – my favorite bike is my Quickbeam, but I’m too old and out of shape to make it work as my only bike.
From: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com [mailto:rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of shawn
Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2013 8:17 AM
To: rbw-owne...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [RBW] Re: 1 bike? Could you do it?
I have a Roadeo and an Atlantis, but If I could only have one bike it would most definitely be the Atlantis. "You can do anything on an Atlantis. Because you can."
On Tuesday, January 22, 2013 9:48:04 PM UTC-5, murphyjrfk wrote:Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.
One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
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The A/R is a lot more comfortable. I can use it anywhere plus I have two bags on it for carrying stuff. Two bikes is ideal for me but I could live with just the A/R.
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Cheers!
cm
but IMO a bike lifestyle type should have at least one fallback bike.
On Tue, 2013-01-22 at 19:10 -0800, Jan Heine wrote:
> For recreational and general transportation use, one bike would be
> quite feasible. In fact, since I prefer to focus on the ride rather
> than the bike, I don't really see the need to own several similar
> bikes that fill the same purpose. Given a choice, I'd prefer one truly
> awesome bike over a bunch of just nice ones.
Great, right up to the moment something fails, you need a part, and the
bike goes on deadline.
I think that even if you're Jan and you have a bike parts company, there
are still going to be times when you have to order a part, or when you
have to take the bike down to the shop and they tell you it'll be a week
to ten days.
At that point, it's great to have at least two bikes!
Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
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Wait. You can have more then one bike?
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Wait. You can have more then one bike?!Now I'm going to save up for a Roadeo.
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Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.
One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
--
Could I hang a bike or two on the wall and not count it? My first thought was "no," but I could cut back to just the Quickbeam, if I got the gears straightened out again to have two to three manual change fixed gears. I like pulling bikes apart and fooling with them, which usually means I need a largely-convergent backup. If it was an all-new bike, it would probably be a monster cross of some ilk. Geared, maybe.
I have another cheater answer - what if I just had me bike *at a time?* So I sell my bikes and buy a Gryphon, ride it for a few months, then buy a Roadeo, sell the Roadeo and buy a Jones spaceframe, ad delirium... That actually sounds really fun, but is completely at odds with my personality.
Philip
www.biketinker.com
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My shop Hiawatha Cyclery is pretty bike-commuting-focused in a bike-commuting town. Lots of our customers are car-free and only have one bike. Often, when the one-bike commuter types have a need for repair, they ask us to expedite the repair in our queue on the grounds that they're car-free and the bike is their only transportation. My mechanic Mongo fixed cars for 25 years before "retiring" as a bike mechanic. He's unfazed by the car-free argument: "you'd be surprised how many people only have one car," he says with a twinkle. Of course, we try very hard to make the repair process as seamless and quick as possible, but IMO a bike lifestyle type should have at least one fallback bike.
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After riding for years, I, just last summer bought a SOMA Fabrications Extra Smoothie. I am 65 and don't race, but I had a super light Specialized Roubaix Pro and it was just not comfortable. I also rode a double suspension MTB, but I could not get into trail riding on a regular basis, partly because the trails stay wet most of the winter and they are not good for riding because they tear up the land. Both bikes had been raced by their previous owners and I knew was getting pro quality stuff. That is, until I rode the ES by SOMA. I had met Grant Petersen and got a lot of insight from reading his book, "Just Ride".
I went with 700 X 28mm ruffy-tuffies and LOVE the ride. I have now sold both other bikes and all I ride is the Extra Smoothie. The frame only cost $399! My total cost of the bike, including custom fitting by a Serotta dealer who really knows his stuff, only came to around $2 Grand. This included custom wheels and most accessories you would find on a Sam or any other RIV inspired bike. They have a great website and I do not have any commercial interest in the company.
Best Wishes and good luck on your search.
Number One-DO GET A PRO BIKE FIT-I wish I had done it years ago.
Jack E
Nashville, TN
On Tuesday, January 22, 2013 8:48:04 PM UTC-6, murphyjrfk wrote:Suppose the title says it all. But I've been a thinking about going down to 1---not a big step down cause I normally only have two three tops o' working bikes anyways. And the overlap is out of control. How many 26" touring bikes does one fellow need deal. But I love what I love I guess.One bike? Could ya do it and what would it be?
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On Wed, 2013-01-23 at 07:33 -0800, Jan Heine wrote:
>
> I find that with fewer bikes, it's easier to keep them in top shape.
> For many years, I raced and trained 12,000 miles a year and had a
> single bike, without ever missing a ride or race due to the bike not
> being rideable.
I recently had a bottom bracket spindle break on my George Longstaff
Audax. It took 10 days for the LBS to get the part and replace it.
I crashed. I walked away from it, and aside from the broken spindle,
the only damage was a slightly bent front derailleur that no longer
shifted well; getting that fixed only blew a day and a half. But bikes
often do get damaged in crashes, and sometimes in ways that can't be
fixed with a simple tweak (like a bent derailleur hanger). Forks bend.
Sometimes frames crack (I know a few people who have had to replace
carbon frames because they cracked when they fell over with two full
water bottles) and have to be replaced.
If I had to replace the fork on the Longstaff (assuming I could actually
even do that, the builder having been dead since 2003) it would take
months. Frame replacements can weeks, if it's a broken Cannondale or
Trek, or maybe years if it's something like Jan's Rene Herse.
Back in 2012, on the Longstaff, I discovered a cracked rear rim (Mavic
MA3) on Aug 13. I had the wheel rebuilt with an Open Pro at the LBS.
The new wheel was delivered Sept. 13. Almost all that time was
obtaining the rim, which was out of stock for about 3 weeks; the rest of
the time was the build itself.
Also in 2012, I had a cracked rear rim (this time, a Velocity Synergy).
Velocity replaced the rim and rebuilt the wheel under warranty. Bike
(this time, the MAP) was out of service from Feb 24 - March 2.
Besides extended deadlines waiting for parts or frame repairs, there's
another type of failure that Jan might not encounter. If you commute to
work and have to be there at a given time (yes, flex time is wonderful
but not everybody has flexible working hours) or if you are driving
30-90 minutes to the start of a club ride, finding the bike you intended
to ride with a flat tire first thing in the morning could be a major
problem.
While it can be a 10 minute job to fix a flat, it can also sometimes
turn into a 30 minute job. After all, you first have to find what
caused the flat, and sometimes that's not so easy to do (especially if
you're far sighted). And 30 minutes' late start on a 60 minute drive to
a ride start is almost certainly going to mean you'll miss the ride
start.
Maybe not a problem if you're fast (like Jan) and also have the cue
sheets, GPS data, etc., in advance (as is typical of a brevet;) but for
an ordinary bike club ride, where you only get the cue sheet when you
sign in, showing up late often means you miss the ride completely.
It's awfully nice in that event to have another bike you can grab,
that's ready to go except that it might need a few pounds of air in the
tires and a swap of gear into a different bike bag. That's a 3 minute
job, and it means you won't be late for work and won't have to take
annual leave and get a scolding from a supervisor, or won't miss the
ride.
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I'm anxiously awaiting the thread "If you could have 10 bikes, what would they be?" :)
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Truth be told .... you only have One bike ... ever. It resides within you, not outside of you ;)
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