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uwmswimr
03-10-08, 02:23 PM
There has been an underlying idea in a few posts that cycling has an "Image problem", well how would you feel about your image if you were riding this commuter bike....

http://www.giant.co.jp/giant08/images/bike/R/R0211026_l.jpg

look closely and you will see that it has an integrated seatpost....

Jerseysbest
03-10-08, 02:28 PM
There has been an underlying idea in a few posts that cycling has an "Image problem", well how would you feel about your image if you were riding this commuter bike....

http://www.giant.co.jp/giant08/images/bike/R/R0211026_l.jpg

look closely and you will see that it has an integrated seatpost....

Isn't the point of a seat post to be not integrated?

Hobartlemagne
03-10-08, 02:58 PM
That picture makes my think of a new "bike commuter image".
The image of a commuter who actually thinks he can get away with looking
surprised when his $6000 bike gets stolen while he's in the office.

tfahrner
03-10-08, 03:04 PM
if i were riding that as my commuter bike, my image would that of somebody deeply insecure of his image, who drives when it rains, or is dark, or when a headwind mocks his aerodynamic seat fin, or when he needs to pick up a gallon of milk on the way home.

bikeCarrot
03-10-08, 03:14 PM
That's a commuter bike?! Seriously?

noisebeam
03-10-08, 03:25 PM
That bike would work fine for commuting for me. It wouldn't be top choice, but totally workable (with addition of pedals, lights and mirror)

Al

caloso
03-10-08, 03:39 PM
Race bike + flat bars = commute bike!

maddyfish
03-10-08, 03:57 PM
I'd commute on that if I could store it properly.

Artkansas
03-10-08, 04:17 PM
You're 3 weeks early. :D

Lamplight
03-10-08, 05:36 PM
If that were my commuter, the image you would see would be one of agony as I tried to get comfortable on a bike with handlebars eight inches lower than the seat. :lol:

sykerocker
03-10-08, 05:50 PM
If that's a commuter bike, then I'm obviously being environmentally conscious by leaving the Ferrari F51 at home.

Cosmoline
03-10-08, 06:34 PM
Lower that seat some and raise the bars. I'm not in that big a hurry to get to work.

JeffS
03-10-08, 08:32 PM
I might be a lone, but I see intergrated seatposts as a way to make bikes more disposable.

Don't get me wrong, I understand the theory behind it, but would hate to see them go mainstream. That would make the prospect of buying a used bike (the only kind I buy) quite difficult.

kjohnnytarr
03-10-08, 08:43 PM
That bike sucks.

pluc
03-10-08, 08:51 PM
Sorry, but that's a racing bike... and yes it's ugly as hell.

donnamb
03-10-08, 09:21 PM
If that were my commuter, the image you would see would be one of agony as I tried to get comfortable on a bike with handlebars eight inches lower than the seat. :lol:
+1. And then there's the image of my bank statements after all the necessary chiropractor visits...

mrbubbles
03-10-08, 09:29 PM
¥390,000 = $3900USD and it's only offered in two sizes, small and medium.

coldfeet
03-10-08, 09:51 PM
If cycle commuting has an image problem.......

That bike is not the answer!

roseskunk
03-10-08, 10:00 PM
That bike sucks.

i couldn't have said it better.

bragi
03-11-08, 12:19 AM
I cannot imagine going on a beer run on that bike. Plus, given the position of the seat and handlebars, I'd be worried about, well, you know, certain blood vessels...

MrSensible
03-11-08, 04:27 AM
There has been an underlying idea in a few posts that cycling has an "Image problem", well how would you feel about your image if you were riding this commuter bike....


Like a gullible fool, as well as damn uncomfortable.

MIKEnDC
03-11-08, 05:46 AM
Well a bike like that seems to inherently invite passing motorists to "Kiss my ass."

Maybe it's not so bad, after all. :D

Cyclaholic
03-11-08, 06:24 AM
There has been an underlying idea in a few posts that cycling has an "Image problem", well how would you feel about your image if you were riding this commuter bike....

http://www.giant.co.jp/giant08/images/bike/R/R0211026_l.jpg

look closely and you will see that it has an integrated seatpost....

How'd I feel about my image?... I don't think I'd feel much beyond the pain in my lower back, and I'd have to carry all my sh!t in a backpack which at that angle would slide up my neck and flop over my head, I'd also look really stoopid trying to pedal without errr... pedals. But hey, put a rack, fenders a real seat and riser bars on it (and pedals :D ) and I'd ride it... still would be a compromise compared to my LHT tho...

bikeCarrot
03-11-08, 06:45 AM
Well a bike like that seems to inherently invite passing motorists to "Kiss my ass."

Maybe it's not so bad, after all. :D

:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao:

Elkhound
03-12-08, 11:28 AM
That bike would work fine for commuting for me. It wouldn't be top choice, but totally workable (with addition of pedals, lights and mirror)

Al

And fenders, and racks, and panniers.

noisebeam
03-12-08, 11:30 AM
And fenders, and racks, and panniers.

Not for me ;)

Al

Roody
03-12-08, 03:31 PM
So who says bike commuting has an image problem? My co-workers brag on me.

And I ride a second hand "entry-level" MTB. :eek:

chipcom
03-12-08, 05:41 PM
Race bike + flat bars = commute bike!

how convenient...you can just throw on some aero bars and wheels and it might be TT bike! Man, what will they think of next! :lol:

Elkhound
03-12-08, 07:08 PM
Not for me ;)

Al

Without fenders, how do you keep the gunk off you in wet weather?

Without racks and panniers, how do you carry your stuff? Do you never have to stop at the drug store or grocery store on your way home from work?

white_feather
03-12-08, 07:34 PM
I would ride that bike like I would ride Heather Locklear. As often as I could and as long as possible! I don't know which one is hotter either. I love that bike. It is sexier than socks on a rooster!

JeffS
03-12-08, 07:57 PM
Without fenders, how do you keep the gunk off you in wet weather?

Without racks and panniers, how do you carry your stuff? Do you never have to stop at the drug store or grocery store on your way home from work?

Does it rain every day? Do you have to stop by the store every day? Is someone forcing you to only own one bike?

Just saying... there's a great many commuters who don't ride forum-approved commuter bikes.

Elkhound
03-12-08, 07:57 PM
I would ride that bike like I would ride Heather Locklear. As often as I could and as long as possible! I don't know which one is hotter either. I love that bike. It is sexier than socks on a rooster!

I'm sorry, I can't agree. I wouldn't like to use that hunched-over posture. That's all very well and good for racing, but for commuting and other transportational cycling, an upright posture is much more comfortable.

My next commuter will look something like one of the ones in the top row. (With a man's frame, of course.) (http://www.dutchbikes.us/)

JeffS
03-12-08, 08:16 PM
My next commuter will look something like one of the ones in the top row. (With a man's frame, of course.) (http://www.dutchbikes.us/)


I was just discussing the price of a Velorbis with them today. I knew I didn't want to know the answer... especially since the bike I was considering wouldn't have been for me.

Then I got sidetracked comparing and contrasting the Velorbis 8speed with the Civia Hyland 8speed - both of which try to accomplish similar things in very different ways -- and do so at the high end of the price scale.


Let's see... if I sold my car, I could get a Victoria Classic for the wife, a Scrap Deluxe for myself, and a Bakfiets for hauling the dog/kid. Probably wouldn't have enough money left to cover the shipping bill though.

white_feather
03-12-08, 08:22 PM
I have a Kona Eighty-Eight and I want to get an Africa 3.0 bike. I almost wish i had gotten the Africa bike instead but I do love the Eighty-Eight. I will get an Africa 3.0 before the summer though. I may even try to sell my Trek Y3 or even trade it.

Elkhound
03-12-08, 09:40 PM
Let's see... if I sold my car, I could get a Victoria Classic for the wife, a Scrap Deluxe for myself, and a Bakfiets for hauling the dog/kid. Probably wouldn't have enough money left to cover the shipping bill though.

I didn't say that I would get one of those; I said I would get something along those lines, namely:

1. Up-and-back handlebars;
2. A foreward-placed crank and/or a back-leaning seat;
(1 & 2 together resulting in a comfortable, upright position.)
3. Integrated fenders, chaincase, and skirt/coatguard to protect both the rider and the mechanisms from the mess thrown up from the tires;
4. A hub gearing system, tucked away from the elements, no derailleurs to skip and slip;
5. Integrated racks, the better to carry stuff;
6. Generator-powered lights; no more batteries failing at the worst possible moment.

I would NOT get a Brooks saddle; my prostate will thank me. I'd also want 'campus'-type pedals.

noisebeam
03-13-08, 08:53 AM
Without fenders, how do you keep the gunk off you in wet weather?

Without racks and panniers, how do you carry your stuff? Do you never have to stop at the drug store or grocery store on your way home from work?

Very little rain where I live, ~7" annually.

I use a messenger bag and do sometimes stop at the store on the way home for smaller loads, a half gallon of this, a box of that. But my errands for larger size or quantities are done from home so I start with an empty (and a larger) bag.

Al

Elkhound
03-13-08, 09:21 AM
Very little rain where I live, ~7" annually.

I use a messenger bag and do sometimes stop at the store on the way home for smaller loads, a half gallon of this, a box of that. But my errands for larger size or quantities are done from home so I start with an empty (and a larger) bag.

Al

I understand about the rain; I hadn't noticed you were in AZ; here we get lots of rain and snow.

Don't you find the bag on your back rather hot and uncomfortable, and doesn't it raise your center of gravity to where it affects your balance? Panniers put the weight of your cargo down low.

noisebeam
03-13-08, 10:08 AM
I understand about the rain; I hadn't noticed you were in AZ; here we get lots of rain and snow.

Don't you find the bag on your back rather hot and uncomfortable, and doesn't it raise your center of gravity to where it affects your balance? Panniers put the weight of your cargo down low.

It doesn't bother me so I am fine. I've carried a lot at times on my back, it changes balance, but doesn't affect my cycling.

If I could dedicate one bike for large load errands I'd put panniers or the like on it, but as it is I prefer to use one bike for all my riding transportational and purely recreational.

A trailer would be more useful for me at this point. I can carry groceries, etc. on my back, not not large goods from hardware store (which would not fit and be too heavy for panniers) - these are also the kind of errands that get me in the car - so a trailer would reduce my car use more than panniers.

Al

Elkhound
03-13-08, 11:28 AM
A trailer would be more useful for me at this point. I can carry groceries, etc. on my back, not not large goods from hardware store (which would not fit and be too heavy for panniers) - these are also the kind of errands that get me in the car - so a trailer would reduce my car use more than panniers.
Al

Trailers certainly have their place but:

1. When empty, they tend to bounce and fishtail;
2. You have to consider when you are going out to run errands if you are likely to be buying enough to need the trailer, and then hitch it up; if you underestimate your returning load, you are in trouble.
3. When laden, trailers affect the way the bike handles.
4. Getting a bike+trailer around tight turns and/or through doors into buildings takes either an assitant, a good grasp of triginometry, or both.

That's why I X-tracycled one of my bikes for noncommuter use, and am saving my pennies for a Big Dummy.

Sixty Fiver
03-13-08, 11:43 AM
That thing makes my eyes hurt, it's fugly as sin, and makes the baby jesus cry.

I don't know who would commute on a bike like that.

http://www.giant.co.jp/giant08/images/bike/R/R0211026_l.jpg

I do commute on this:

http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/kuwiefixdrop2.jpg

And my answer to fugly bikes and the poseurs that ride them is this:

http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/Carlton40a.jpg

cutman
03-13-08, 12:08 PM
I use a messenger bag and do sometimes stop at the store on the way home for smaller loads, a half gallon of this, a box of that. But my errands for larger size or quantities are done from home so I start with an empty (and a larger) bag.

Same here. I ride a single speed to work with a messenger bag but my commute is only about a half mile. If I'm going across town, or if it's raining, or if I'm getting some groceries, I'll bring my Trek Multitrack, complete with fenders, rack, lights and an upright seating position.

Elkhound
03-13-08, 01:03 PM
I do commute on this:

http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/kuwiefixdrop2.jpg

And my answer to fugly bikes and the poseurs that ride them is this:

http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/Carlton40a.jpg

I take it then, that your commute isn't very far and is as flat as a pancake.

Roody
03-13-08, 01:26 PM
I think the Giant is a beautiful bike. But what's the theory behind the low flat bars? It seems they give fewer positioning options than drop bars on a longer stem. Why is that considered to be a good point? Why not stick with drop bars if you want an agressive stance?

The combination of the seat post and the flat bars would probably make the Giant a good single purpose bike--like a TT bike--but a poor choice for the more diverse needs of a carfree cyclist or even a commuter.

Sixty Fiver
03-13-08, 06:11 PM
I take it then, that your commute isn't very far and is as flat as a pancake.

:lol:

CrimsonEclipse
03-13-08, 08:42 PM
I would ride that bike like I would ride Heather Locklear. As often as I could and as long as possible! I don't know which one is hotter either. I love that bike. It is sexier than socks on a rooster!


Yeah! I... wait...What?!


CE

rhm
03-14-08, 08:17 AM
Hey, if Giant wants to set one up for me with fenders and dynamo lights, I'll be happy to commute on it for a year and review it here. A rack and chainguard would be good, too, but like I say, I'll be happy to try it out for a limited time. Then ebay it.

ajmstilt
03-14-08, 09:15 AM
If cycle commuting has an "image problem" *that* bike is the problem. Too many people i talk to think you have to have a $3,000 dollar bike and $500 of specialized ugly as sin spandex cycling gear to ride that 5 mile commute.

JeffS
03-14-08, 09:25 AM
Too many people i talk to think you have to have a $3,000 dollar bike and $500 of specialized ugly as sin spandex cycling gear to ride that 5 mile commute.

Yes, that's true, but just as many "advocates" believe you have to have racks/paniers/fenders/dynamo lighting/20 tools/etc to commute as well.

The huge shopping list that some people propose as almost-mandatory is just as intimidating to a potential rider.

CaptainTandem
03-14-08, 09:52 AM
No way. I like to blend in; not stand out as some wannabe racer-dude. Looks like it would be an uncomfortable ride.

noisebeam
03-14-08, 09:59 AM
I really think most folks overestimate how that bike vs any other will be perceived by the general public driving by. To most it looks like just about any other bike once a cyclist is on it. Far more important to total image is how the cyclist on the bike looks and where they ride.

Al