Hybrid Bicycles - Post pictures of your Hybrid

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Timber_8
08-12-09, 10:31 AM
http://i113.photobucket.com/albums/n235/Timber_8/Bicycle%20Pictures/26058_1312190977326_1607213793_724825_263476_n.jpg
http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b382/M38/Bike_edited.jpg
My Gary Fisher Kaitai
KungPaoSchwinn
08-12-09, 10:55 AM
http://i171.photobucket.com/albums/u306/smile_at_u90012/DSC_4352.jpg
Panthers007
08-12-09, 11:03 AM
http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp323/nagognog/IMG_0485.jpg
http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp323/nagognog/IMG_0482.jpg
http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp323/nagognog/IMG_0484.jpg
I don't want a road-bike!
I already have one.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 02:05 PM
Nice bikes! I think 007 is winning, in case anyone's keeping score. Haha, just kidding, but that Trek is trick.
Two open beers, Timmy? Did you forget where you had left the first one? :)
http://i478.photobucket.com/albums/rr147/Rod_Smith/IMG_0508_2.jpg
'04 Marin Mill Valley. Upgrades include Time ATAC pedals, Fizik Nisene saddle, Thompson seatpost, Cane
Creek wheels, 105 rear derailleur, Gatorskins, Jandd rack, B.O.B. skewer, Road Morph. No Ultegra or XTR. :(
Timber_8
08-12-09, 02:26 PM
LOL I was on to my next Molson
Brian T.
08-12-09, 02:58 PM
114122
114123
114124
114125
'08 Schwinn Super Sport (from LBS), 1600+ miles and counting.
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 03:15 PM
http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/trekoffroad1.JPG
http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/trekoffroad5.JPG
terraskye
08-12-09, 03:22 PM
Our Hybrids..
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v487/faerie_cat/003-15.jpg
Of course now I'm thinking they should have been Treks after seeing everyone else:D:D:eek:
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 03:30 PM
Drop bars! Tourist!
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 03:31 PM
terra - Thanks for ruining the Trekfest... seriously.
How is the new bike running ?
(I'll be down at EBC tonight if you guys wanna tweak the bikes.)
wunderkind
08-12-09, 03:33 PM
I don't get it. Some of the bikes look like MTBs with slicks on. If that's the case, then mine can be a hybrid too?
terraskye
08-12-09, 03:41 PM
terra - Thanks for ruining the Trekfest... seriously.
How is the new bike running ?
(I'll be down at EBC tonight if you guys wanna tweak the bikes.)
LOL Bike is running great now and thanks again:) Hubby is out of town now until Friday night so I'm hoping we'll be over Monday Evening.
Mmmm I think I'll skip over to the Trek Website now for a looksie;)
Condorita
08-12-09, 04:15 PM
Radagast the Beige-and-Black is a comfort hybrid. Can I play, too?
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 04:33 PM
Drop bars! Tourist!
Flat bars are good for riding around the block and for shorter trips... when you spend 6-8 hours in the saddle you will want more hand positions.
Last Monday I did 100 km into a stiff headwind and still averaged 25 kmh... I came off the bike feeling great and could not have done that without the extra hand positions drop bars provide.
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 04:39 PM
I don't get it. Some of the bikes look like MTBs with slicks on. If that's the case, then mine can be a hybrid too?
Several of my mtb's have road tyres, touring geometry, and drop bars and by definition are also hybrids since they utilize multiple technologies.
From a marketing standpoint the term "hybrid" has a far narrower definition and most people associate hybrid with the types of bikes that have already been posted here.
KungPaoSchwinn
08-12-09, 04:39 PM
I don't get it. Some of the bikes look like MTBs with slicks on. If that's the case, then mine can be a hybrid too?
Hybrids ride on 700C tires,some are slicks and some have threads.
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 04:41 PM
Hybrids ride on 700C tires,some are slicks and some have threads.
Wheel size is not a determining factor as many hybrids run 26 inch wheels... especially those described as being comfort bikes.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 04:50 PM
Flat bars are good for riding around the block and for shorter trips... when you spend 6-8 hours in the saddle you will want more hand positions.
Last Monday I did 100 km into a stiff headwind and still averaged 25 kmh... I came off the bike feeling great and could not have done that without the extra hand positions drop bars provide.
You'll work up to it. Keep trying. You aren't a hybrid rider yet, but I appreciate your effort.
KungPaoSchwinn
08-12-09, 04:51 PM
Wheel size is not a determining factor as many hybrids run 26 inch wheels... especially those described as being comfort bikes.
DANG, i have a lot more to learn then,however,different bike manufactories have their own definition of " Hybrids", that i do know.Thanks.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 04:53 PM
I don't get it. Some of the bikes look like MTBs with slicks on. If that's the case, then mine can be a hybrid too?
Absolutely. Hybrids are flat bar road bikes and skinny tire mountain bikes. Even drop bars are allowed if the wheels are 26in.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 04:58 PM
Several of my mtb's have road tyres, touring geometry, and drop bars and by definition are also hybrids since they utilize multiple technologies.
From a marketing standpoint the term "hybrid" has a far narrower definition and most people associate hybrid with the types of bikes that have already been posted here.
Let me skew the demographic here...
My vintage Kuwahara mtb with road bars, road levers, road tyres, and a fixed drive.
http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/kuwietour2.jpg
That's more like it. Drop bar fixed mtb ftw.
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 05:13 PM
Absolutely. Hybrids are flat bar road bikes and skinny tire mountain bikes. Even drop bars are allowed if the wheels are 26in.
Really ?
http://www.trekbikes.com/images/bikes/2009/large/portland_darkmocha.jpg
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 05:16 PM
If only to illustrate that the definition of a hybrid encompasses a very wide range of bikes...
http://www.ravingbikefiend.com/bikepics/forrest09new2.JPG
Panthers007
08-12-09, 05:16 PM
65'er - Trek isn't calling the carboniferous 7.9 FX a Hybrid anymore. They finally figured it out: Their warranty would drown 'em in debt when people went off-roading on the carbon 7.9.
The 7.9 FX is now a road-bike.
Wait a Boll-Weevil second - which Trek is that??
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 05:30 PM
panther - The 7.9 is now being marketed by Trek as a road bike while the drop bar Portland (as shown above) is being marketed as a high speed commuter.
And people wonder why the term hybrid is so confusing... the 7.9 is not in the strictest sense, a road bike, despite the fact it is made of carbon.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 05:37 PM
Tourist, folder. Those aren't hybrids and you know it.
qmsdc15
08-12-09, 05:41 PM
Radagast the Beige-and-Black is a comfort hybrid. Can I play, too?
Please, too many road bikes in here. Post picks of your hybrid. Thanks
cc_rider
08-12-09, 06:46 PM
Not the best photo, but the best I had with me.
20 year old+ TREK 750
Timber_8
08-12-09, 07:03 PM
Please, too many road bikes in here. Post picks of your hybrid. Thanks
I don't see any road bikes, Hybrids can run drops, I considered it myself before I went with aero bars, comfort bikes are Hybrids. I would also like to point out that Hybrids can be home grown.
Pictures of my hybrid:
This is my Trek 7300, taken at the lunch stop of my first metric century
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c282/panhead74/covered%20bridge%20metric%20century/100_0062-1.jpg
If you look to the front of the crusty, ratty Sportster (which is now much cleaner and is once again "in the wind"), you can see the 7300
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c282/panhead74/100_0109.jpg
avmanansala
08-12-09, 07:44 PM
My Cannondale "fitness bike": 2006 Road Warrior 500.
Current set up
http://photos-g.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc1/hs193.snc1/6490_117502154405_686679405_2122238_6082034_n.jpg
Previous set up
10-speed, with Paul Thumbies
http://images.nikonians.org/galleries/data/3759/Paul-Thumbies.jpg
9 speed with flat bar shifters and few non stock items...
http://images.nikonians.org/galleries/data/3759/DSCN7136a.jpg
Panthers007
08-12-09, 07:48 PM
Keep 'em coming! These are great! At long last - no one throwing charcoal at us!
Sold this one a few months ago - it was the Backup Hybrid to the Big Buzz which is now the Backup Bike to the 'bent. Need to get a new pic of the Buzz.
http://i189.photobucket.com/albums/z284/JanMM/DSC02165.jpg
droobieinop
08-12-09, 08:26 PM
Here is my '95 Trek 750 Multi Track in its second nonstock set up.
http://i32.tinypic.com/207waxz.jpg
And again, in its latest with, almost, with drops added back, RSX brifters and road double cranks.
http://i31.tinypic.com/2n0itz4.jpg
I've since found some RSX hubed wheels and have some 28's on order. I loved this so much that I wanted to build a fixie, but alas, verticle drops make for difficult proper chain tension, so that brought in the Timberlin City Slicker.
http://i26.tinypic.com/qquxd3.jpg
This then got turned into a SS for the wife when I found this performance tourer, which got turned into a fixed commuter capable of touring. Which is part of the reason that I got the 750 in the first place.
http://i27.tinypic.com/2gtrfw2.jpg
Sorry for taking up all this space, just wanted to share.
And yes, these have all been on the group rides from the shop at some point or other. As a matter of fact, I think I've mentioned before that I rode long and fast rides on the trek for a few years before I figured out that I was being droped because of my gearing.
Panthers007
08-12-09, 08:43 PM
Wow droobie - those are fine. I especially like the black one above to the right. It exudes a flavor of how fun it is to go good and fast and nimbly - while in the upright position. Too bad it's not outfitted with the gears - but that could be customized nicely! Anyone who took a spin on such a machine would bury the notion that these are, indeed, a new breed of riders.
One more shot here for now...
http://i424.photobucket.com/albums/pp323/nagognog/IMG_0481.jpg
Doohickie
08-12-09, 08:53 PM
I took this pic yesterday on the way home. The hues look a little odd I think because of the low sun angle. It's a 1994 Kent, WA, built Nishiki Sport XRS. I got it as a NOS bike (complete with original store price tag and tire nubbies) just about a year ago.
http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e341/Doohickie/09SportXRS/0811092001-00-1.jpg
I consider it a hybrid because:
. Traditional diamond frame geometry (albeit with a slight slope to the top tube)
. Fixed suspension
. 700x38C Kenda hybrid tires (smooth riding with a slightly aggressive tread)
. Flat handlebar (although I swapped in an Origin8 Space Bar)
. Lots of mounting lugs (two pair in the back, one in the front, plus two pair of bottle cage braze-ons)
. Mountain bike gearing with a triple front chain ring
The bike was built for versatility and perfectly fits the bill for the urban street and trail riding in my area. I wasn't looking for a hybrid, but now that I have one I realize a hybrid perfectly fits my transportation needs.
droobieinop
08-12-09, 09:04 PM
Wow droobie - those are fine. I especially like the black one above to the right. It exudes a flavor of how fun it is to go good and fast and nimbly - while in the upright position. Too bad it's not outfitted with the gears - but that could be customized nicely! Anyone who took a spin on such a machine would bury the notion that these are, indeed, a new breed of riders.
Thanx.
As I said, that black one (Timberlin City Slicker) is now the wife's and she loves to ride it, when she does its for a short commute to work. It doesn't go far, but it can go quick, and she has a mtb if she wants gears. And I just found a Peugeot road bike, if she wants to ride farther.
Sixty Fiver
08-12-09, 11:25 PM
Tourist, folder. Those aren't hybrids and you know it.
hybrid: anything of mixed origin, unlike parts
The Raleigh Twenty was designed as the folding version of the shopper, an upright bike designed for handling everything the urban landscape could throw at it.
It is a comfort bike with smaller wheels.
Originally fitted with a chain guard, fenders, and an internal gear hub it was well suited for running in the wettest weather aside from the fact their braking was very poor.
My Twenty is no longer an upright bicycle as it has been hybridized with road bars and brakes, the wheels are some robust bmx wheels with a fixed drive, the smaller stock crank was replaced with a lighter road crank, and the brake is also from a bmx.
Despite the changes it has seen it is still an excellent urban bike that now has greater capabilities when it comes to riding longer distances.
It is also a fixed gear and a most capable day tourer and followed the same evolutionary process as my Kuwahara mountain bike in that it was adapted to better suit the needs of it's owner.
MilitantPotato
08-13-09, 01:08 AM
Here's mine. It's my foul weather, needs left outside, kid towing, and commuting bike. Why trek? It was the only 25" frame I could get for around $500.
My then 5 y/o son helped with the reflective tape, he did the artistic (wiggly) bits.
http://i39.photobucket.com/albums/e186/MilitantPotato/bars2ff3.jpg
RespectTheWheel
08-13-09, 01:34 AM
I love that first Gary Fisher Posted.
How do you like the ride?, Im in the market for a bike and found a Gary Fisher for sale.
PrestonNg
08-13-09, 02:07 AM
2005 Trek 7200FX
http://img228.imageshack.us/img228/6896/dsc03989a.jpg
Sixty Fiver
08-13-09, 02:41 AM
Very nice.
baldsue
08-13-09, 03:29 AM
I went 41.6 mph on this yesterday. Fastest I've gone on any bike yet, including my road bikes with 700c wheels.
cc_rider
08-13-09, 06:47 AM
Here is my '95 Trek 750 Multi Track in its second nonstock set up......
And yes, these have all been on the group rides from the shop at some point or other. As a matter of fact, I think I've mentioned before that I rode long and fast rides on the trek for a few years before I figured out that I was being droped because of my gearing.
Good to see more 750's out there. I love the old steel feel.
Never thought of it as a "vintage" bike, but the ones from 80's seem to be considered that. I've had people come up to me admiring my bike and more than a few have asked if I'd be willing to sell it.
I've had the same thing happen on group rides. On the downhills and flats I can keep up with the B riders, but on the hills I slow to a C speed. But I don't care. Perfectly happy riding solo.:D
Trek Valencia used for commuting. Love it so far. My longest commute will be 20 miles RT so this can definitely handle it. Also ride some gravel roads. Wanted something lighter than my 820, with a 700c wheel, disc brakes, and no front suspension. I like flat bars too. To each their own.
norwood
08-13-09, 10:05 AM
From back in the days when there weren't very many hybrids around.
http://www.cyclofiend.com/cc/images08/cc576-1CC5.jpg
http://www.cyclofiend.com/cc/images08/cc576-2CC4.jpg
Doohickie
08-13-09, 10:35 AM
From back in the days when there weren't very many hybrids around.
Those twist shifters work well in that location? I've considered putting drop bars on mine but figured I would need either new shifters would would have to figure out how to mount the existing ones.
Siu Blue Wind
08-13-09, 11:02 AM
http://i123.photobucket.com/albums/o286/Flycrow/newbike2.jpg
norwood
08-13-09, 11:42 AM
Those twist shifters work well in that location? I've considered putting drop bars on mine but figured I would need either new shifters would would have to figure out how to mount the existing ones.
They work great and I love 'em.
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