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-   -   Is it acceptable in the BMX "culture".... (https://www.bikeforums.net/bmx/515521-acceptable-bmx-culture.html)

steve-in-kville 02-28-09 05:07 AM

Is it acceptable in the BMX "culture"....
 
.... for us old guys to ride a 20"? Or are we supposed to graduate to the cruisers? I am *seriously* looking at 20 inchers... just for fun!!

minichamp31 02-28-09 07:27 AM

That's perfectly acceptable. It's actually cooler than old guys riding cruisers.

MY26INCHCRUISER 02-28-09 09:23 AM

Steve
Just do it
There is nothing wrong with riding a 20 inch.I bmx race 26 and 24 inch at the track.
I ride 20 inch on the street and in the parks.

martinus 02-28-09 10:26 AM

I still have my ( sweet, chorme ) dyno vfr, I used to commute to college & ride around campus/ downtown ... : o )


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midschool22 02-28-09 12:44 PM

I have a 20" flat bike and a 20" park bike. I also ride a road bike, mountain bike and I am now looking to get a fixie. Just ride what you like and don't a second thought to what others think. They are wrong.

MY26INCHCRUISER 02-28-09 12:58 PM

AH ,A fixie might be my next one

steve-in-kville 02-28-09 02:32 PM

Heh... I just bought a 1980's Bianchi road bike on ebay. Gonna convert it to a SS I think. Wanna buy a BMX first... my teenage years are calling me back!!

MY26INCHCRUISER 02-28-09 03:27 PM

Post pictures after the build

Ghostpunkkilla 03-03-09 07:10 PM

My Coworkers have been laughing at me cause I ride a 20", I don't care though.

dervish 03-03-09 08:38 PM

i ride from 20" to 700c and everything inbetween
be proud of what you ride and dont give it a second thought

CCC 03-04-09 10:45 AM

Nice. I like the "old guy" thread going on here. I just picked up my first bmx bike ever the other day and had a blast riding it around. I got a redline off craigslist for $5 from a storage unit that just wanted to get rid of it. I was just going to tinker with it and fix it up to resell it, but I had such a fun time riding it, I don't think I will be able to part with it easily.
Anyway, I feel the pains of an old guy wanting to ride bmx.

steve-in-kville 03-04-09 11:17 AM

Heh.... everyone in my area had a BMX when they were a kid. That's what everyone started on. Being a roadie is cool, but jumping dirt ramps is pure fun!!

OSBMX84 03-06-09 01:06 PM

I'm 6'1" 25y.o. 200lbs with a beard, and i ride a 20" EVERYWHERE while my $1,300 cannondale hangs from my ceiling gathering dust. I got a free 20" at the end of last summer and started having all these childhood flashbacks so even though a couple people insist i should get a 24" I just have SO MUCH fun on the 20" and I'm in no hurry to "size up"

*I did just learn though that it's unacceptable to have brakes or to put your seatpost any way other than completely bottomed out, i guess stopping is for sissys*

steve-in-kville 03-07-09 04:16 AM


Originally Posted by OSBMX84 (Post 8480727)
*I did just learn though that it's unacceptable to have brakes or to put your seatpost any way other than completely bottomed out, i guess stopping is for sissys*

I was told that for dirt racing the seat needs to be bottomed out or it gets in the way. The brake thing makes no sense to me... can anyone explain that??

Exit. 03-07-09 04:44 AM

If you're old enough to be older than most of the BMX scene, you're way too ****ing old to be giving a **** what others think of your choice of bicycle. Or any of your other choices, for that matter.

steve-in-kville 03-07-09 05:54 AM

True. Good point.

ascend 03-07-09 06:00 AM


Originally Posted by steve-in-kville (Post 8484483)
bottomed out

FYI, correct lingo is "slammed". It's partly to keep it out of the way, partly to save weight (only need a tiny seat post), and partly just cause that's how everyone else has theirs. :P

The no brakes thing seems to be mostly fashion, but most of the fashionistas will swear up and down it's a weight saving thing (how much does a brake weigh, seriously) or that it makes them flow better.

Some people do ride well without brakes, others mostly just scuff the **** out of their $200 shoes...

Ghostpunkkilla 03-07-09 07:18 AM

I tried stopping the other day without using my brakes for the first time. The shoe on the back tire method does seem to work pretty well, and I do like the brake less look a whole lot better, but honestly I can't see myself being able to pull off a panic stop if I need too. So I guess I'll be keeping my ugly/heavy gyro and rear brake. :P

martinus 03-07-09 07:31 AM

Buy a MTB, and make it a large BMX ... SS conversion & a rigid fork. ... maybe, a single rear v-brake. : o )

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MY26INCHCRUISER 03-07-09 08:43 AM

I have a 26 inch Bmx
But I am selling it because I will be using the money to build up my Fall Guy when it arrives

OSBMX84 03-08-09 08:31 PM


Originally Posted by ascend (Post 8484588)

Some people do ride well without brakes, others mostly just scuff the **** out of their $200 shoes...

exactly, as the guy who told me about riding with no brakes said. "You need a good shoe sponsor" so not too practical for casual riders

martinus 03-08-09 08:41 PM

Yeah, I remember going brakless in middle shool... it was dumb then, too ...

ascend 03-09-09 03:56 AM


Originally Posted by OSBMX84 (Post 8493363)
exactly, as the guy who told me about riding with no brakes said. "You need a good shoe sponsor" so not too practical for casual riders

aha that's awesome

Street rider 03-09-09 08:36 AM

whats the problem goin brakeless? mine broke and i was too lazy to replace em. i like this a lot better

minichamp31 03-09-09 04:51 PM

I don't see any problem with going brakeless. I'm always keeping my brakes though.

FuzzyRyder 03-09-09 10:11 PM

I rode brakeless when i was younger, just starting. and went back and forth with brakes. I ride brakeless now hand have for a few years again. I feel I have developed much better bike control and i can pritty much hop over, or quickly swerv to avoid anything i might hit. I have yet to crash into anything, and i feel i can stop just as fast by just puttin my feet down. You might feel sketchy at first with no brakes but you get used to it. I ride longboards down big hills and they have no brakes either so i guess that helps with the fear of going fast with no way to quickly stop haha. Ive been thinking about building up a more trails / racey kinda bike which i will throw brakes on. As for the streets and the parks. just helps you comit, and makes for a seamless simple to work on bike.

steve-in-kville 05-12-09 09:21 AM

This thread is a little dated.... but as an update, I saved enough bucks to buy me a 20". My local shop has some '08 left-overs he wants to move. So I might come home with a Redline by week's end. You never know.... I got 30-pounds I need to loose and this might be the hot set-up!!

(off to build me some quarter-pipe ramps!!)

rekall 05-12-09 12:59 PM

don't be like every other ******bag on your block - ride a 20" bmx, not a fixie.
it's a mark of distinction!

pipelineaudio 05-12-09 01:12 PM

37 here and 20"

Dont worry about bmx culture, most of the scene kids are trendorks anyhow. Once you bust moves on them they dont say jack. Just figure out what the "in coolguy trick of the week" is and dont do it.

You can tell the trendy tards because theyll have their seats so low they can't even pedal. Their range of tricks is so limited that a decent trick bag will put them in their place and theyll stop talking smack.

Jerry Garcia 05-12-09 06:39 PM

36 years old here and 20.5" for 4 years now. Just have fun.


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