General Cycling Discussion - how often do you

Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.
madman91
08-06-05, 08:37 AM
upgrade your bike? a few years?
i bought a specialized hardrock pro disc 2003 in feb 05. Would you think that its good enough to upgrade? Or should i wait till i get a fullsuspension or better hardtail?
thanks
madman
-titanium-
08-06-05, 09:03 AM
i have been cycling for 3 years, i had an alrite but not great bike for 6 months by the itme i started cycling it was a plain amuminium mtb no suspension quite light aswell. After buying some cheap manitou suspension and a deore chainset i decided to sell it and i bought a high spec mtb (specialized stumpjummper 2001) i have had it for 2 years, i just bought a high spec racing bike a few weeks ago, my mtb is a really great bike and i have no intetions to get a new bike any time soon, when i eventualy do i just cant sell my stumpjumpe, it has so much sentimental value to me and is a lovely bike.
KingTermite
08-06-05, 09:17 AM
I've only been riding in my adult life for 1 1/2 years now. So I'm still on the same bike, but I have added side bars, new seat, new tires, gone through two computers, two helmets, two bike racks, and a plethora of other miscallaneous items (tools, bags, clothes, etc...). Probably spent about twice as much as I did on the bike on miscallaneous accessories since.
Now I'm thinking of going for a road bike. :D
madman91
08-06-05, 04:21 PM
should i keep my hardrock for a while and upgrade parts or just ride it out till i get a new one?
mtnbiker66
08-06-05, 04:53 PM
should i keep my hardrock for a while and upgrade parts or just ride it out till i get a new one?
I say keep it and ride it if your happy with it. Heres a sweet upgrade story. A fried of mine owns a bike shop and he needs some work done on his house. It will take me a couple of saterdays and I'll wind up with a new Enduro and a new Allez road bike.pretty sweet.
zonatandem
08-06-05, 05:00 PM
Buy the be$t you can afford . . . a lot cheaper than 'upgrading'!
We keep our custom tandems for a minimum of 50,000 miles.
Good stuff lasts . . .
As You Like It
08-06-05, 08:56 PM
Heh, it's looking like something on the order of about every 7-8 years for me, not counting my very first bike when I was a kid. I had my Huffy I bought when I was 13 until I was 21, then I had my Trek (mtb) from 21 through age 28, then at 28, I got my Burley(road bike), and I know I'll get at least 8 years out of it, and probably many more!
Maelstrom
08-06-05, 09:23 PM
Almost constantly. Some (rarely) are frivolous. Some are because of a true upgrade need, eg changing out a fork for a better one, and some are breakages.
Frivolous - 10%
upgrade - 50%
breakage - 40%
I buy new parts at minimum monthly. I have been lucky that I have enough parts now that I don't have to buy as often as I used to :)
Maelstrom
08-06-05, 09:24 PM
Buy the be$t you can afford . . . a lot cheaper than 'upgrading'!
We keep our custom tandems for a minimum of 50,000 miles.
Good stuff lasts . . .
True but not as much fun. I dont regret low balling myself initially at all. I learned a lot, and in the long run have saved that money by never having to pay a mechanic :)
Blackberry
08-07-05, 12:51 AM
You've started down a slippery slope, maybe. I bought my first bike out of college 20 years ago. Bought something newer about 4 years ago. Got another bike last year. Now I seem to want a new bike every five minutes.
I wait until the first one wears out or hits thirty years old. Whichever comes first.
madman91
08-07-05, 07:24 AM
I'll wear it out till it seeps down and creaks when i sit on it
:D
thanks for the advice
madman
Blackberry
08-07-05, 07:29 AM
I'll wear it out till it seeps down and creaks when i sit on it
:D
thanks for the advice
madman
Sounds like your talking about my personal life. :eek:
taylor8
08-08-05, 12:06 AM
One of my bikes is about 25 years old and I seed no need to upgrade. The frame fits me very well and everything works.
If it works why upgrade. I you got the bucks and just want a better bike go for it.
I did get a MTB in April.
Joe
Cyclepath
08-08-05, 09:17 AM
Parts do wear, so upgrading is a natural option. I just replaced the original RX100 rear derail on my '91 Peugeot Success with a new 105. Chain too. Shifting is much crisper & easier, feels like a new bike.
Replaced the steel fork with aluminum (on sale from the LBS) about 8 years ago after a wreck. Put on a triple crank about 6 years ago, & a new Mavic wheelset (the front wheel had also been trashed in the wreck). Keeps the thrill alive!
Nicodemus
08-09-05, 06:01 AM
I get a new bike every time the old one gets stolen.
madman91
08-14-05, 07:27 AM
thanks for all your responses!
madman
I've been riding seriously now for 15 years. For the first 7 years I had one bicycle which I only just barely maintained (oiled, got the spokes fixed, changed the tires, changed the cables). In the last 8 years, my collection has grown to 6 bicycles, and there were two others which I sold or traded in. So ... I guess you could say I've been upgrading, or at least changing/adding pretty regularly.
My newest bicycle, and the one I ride the most, is just over two years old. While I haven't bought a bicycle in the last couple years, I have done quite a few upgrades to that one to customize him even more and taylor him to what I want.
So I'd say that especially once you know what type of cycling you like to do, upgrades of some sort or another (new bicycles, new parts for the bicycle, etc.) are a normal part of a cyclist's life.
Retro Grouch
08-14-05, 02:02 PM
upgrade your bike? a few years?
i bought a specialized hardrock pro disc 2003 in feb 05. Would you think that its good enough to upgrade? Or should i wait till i get a fullsuspension or better hardtail?
madman
Why that's easy. The key word is FUN! Whichever you think will be the most fun for you - do that. Personally I'm constantly changing or fiddling with one thing or another on my bikes.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.12 Copyright © 2013 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.