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- #21
too bad the hipsters usurped the fixies for the moment.



i love me some hipsters
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too bad the hipsters usurped the fixies for the moment.
Why the hell would anyone seek out a single speed or fixed gear bike?! People give that s*** up when they're 5. Its not like you're saving any money.
Is this all for impressing other hipsters, or is there a real reason? Maybe the single gear is less likely to snag your designer skinny jeans?
They are lots of fun to ride - too bad the hipsters usurped the fixies for the moment.
Fixed Gear Bikes are for Assholes (facebook group)
A group dedicated to affirming the reasonable and self-evident proposition that anyone who rides a bike with only one gear and no brakes for the purposes of fashion is necessarily and inarguably a fxxxing tool.
people on Facebook calling someone a tool.... internet irony.
Fixed Gear Bikes are for Assholes (facebook group)
A group dedicated to affirming the reasonable and self-evident proposition that anyone who rides a bike with only one gear and no brakes for the purposes of fashion is necessarily and inarguably a fxxxing tool.
For some experience mountain bikers, a single speed rigid bike is the essence of mountain biking.
Seriously, fixed gears are for velodrome racing, not street riding. A decent single speed is a much safer choice and will make you better rider. If you are trying to impress the girls, there are much better ways than riding a fixie.
I'll mostly be riding it around my campus which is mainly flat. I'll be riding it back in suburban chicago which is definitely flat so I don't think hills will be much of an issue.
I do have an early 70's peugeot that I fixed up just to have the front spokes snap on me and warp up my front fork...trying to find replacement parts for that now. Maybe i'll convert that into a single speed
Why the hell would anyone seek out a single speed or fixed gear bike?! People give that **** up when they're 5. Its not like you're saving any money.
Is this all for impressing other hipsters, or is there a real reason? Maybe the single gear is less likely to snag your designer skinny jeans?
I don't give a **** about impressing other people...i like it because I like it
Fine but why?! If someone came onto this forum and said they wanted a single-speed landcruiser because they just liked it, you wouldn't wonder?
Single speeds build strength and good cadence. They are excellent for training and force you to work on handling skills rather than shifting. For some experience mountain bikers, a single speed rigid bike is the essence of mountain biking.
+1 on the sheldon brown linky. All you'll need to know right there.
I built a fixie out of an old steel frame - my commute to work was a flat 4 miles and I wanted some kind of exercise...
I don't agree that they belong on a track only. They are lots of fun to ride - too bad the hipsters usurped the fixies for the moment.
I'd like to convert my old commuter to a single speed. I grew up riding bmx bikes and I'd like to add some of that element to my ride. Anyone selling/recommending a rear single speed hub?
More like the essence of "look I'm different". In nearly 30 years of mtb I can't think of a time I would've enjoyed fewer gears on a challenging trail. It would certainly be safer, I wouldn't go nearly as fast or as far on a rigid single-speed.
If you rode SS for a while, you'd get stronger and then you'd be able to go further no matter what you were riding. I'm kind of out of shape this year due to my Cruiser addiction, but I'd still jump on my SS for anything less than an epic. I do keep a Titus around for
Sierra riding and one local park that is too deep to get to the back on my SS.
SS is a different riding style. Much more standing and hammering instead of sitting and spinning. You can only go so slow, so you end up getting faster, maybe faster than you want. There is a grade after which I can't continue, so I walk. I'm 47, so this happens pretty often. It's granny gear.
Rigid is like fixed gear. You are more in touch with the trail. I found when I first started riding full suspension it was too easy. I could just go straight. I went back to a hardtail and then pretty quickly to a rigid singlespeed. That was around 2001. I've ridden many thousands of rigid dirt and fixed gear roadie miles since then. I don't own any skinny jeans, I have a front brake and I wear a helmet.
Is that a flask in the water bottle holder?
Got a full pic of that bike? What's with the grip on the top tube?
Nope. It's actually a purpose-built flask holder.
Those are pegs. You take your feet off the pedals and put them up there so you can bomb down hills on your fixie when the cranks are turning faster than you could keep up.![]()
For all you hipsters out there...
Im looking for a cheap fixed gear. Any suggestions?
I see bikes like these
Motobecane Singlespeed Bikes - 2010 Track Bicycles by Motobecane USA up to 60% Off
Track Bkes | SingleSpeed Bikes | Fixie | Windsor Bikes - The Hour | Save up to 60% off Fixed gear and singlespeed bicycles
that go for really cheap, but are they any good? What kind of stuff should I be looking for?
Good question. If you have never been on a fixed gear bike, other than your Schwinn Orange Crate or Stingray when you were 5, it's tough to see the logic. As mentioned above, fixed gear bikes make you a stronger rider, smooth out your cadence so you pedal more efficiently and they are simple to maintain and cheaper to build.Fine but why?! If someone came onto this forum and said they wanted a single-speed landcruiser because they just liked it, you wouldn't wonder?
I live near San Fran, so I completely grasp the helpless nature of some bikers who go to the bike shop just to have a bolt tightened. But this is an auto forum, so I'm guessing you're not so helpless with a wrench that you couldn't possibly deal with any mechanism more complex than a single gear with a chain around it.
Sooo...![]()
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Why the hell would anyone seek out a single speed or fixed gear bike?! People give that s*** up when they're 5. Its not like you're saving any money.
Is this all for impressing other hipsters, or is there a real reason? Maybe the single gear is less likely to snag your designer skinny jeans?