I really hate the term "Fixie".
Recently I came upon a nice Miele SLX frame and I thought I would set it up as a "Fixie" but I hate that term. Eventually I want to do it up with full Dura Ace but the prices are high and my funds are low.
Would it be wrong if I called it a Path Racer instead of a "Fixie"? |
Fixed gear. let'em look it up if it still confuses them.
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You can call it whatever you want... but it will still be a fixie.:D
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To me, it's not a fixie if it doesn't have at least one of these things:
Deep V's rattle-canned flat black paint flop&chopped bars or risers colored chain Ourys clown car color scheme Aerospoke |
You could always call it a ... Miele.
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Originally Posted by Clang
(Post 17943972)
To me, it's not a fixie if it doesn't have at least one of these things:
Deep V's rattle-canned flat black paint flop&chopped bars or risers colored chain Ourys clown car color scheme Aerospoke |
a "fixie" is what people who don't know any better call fixed gear bikes
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I've been calling them fixies a long time. Probably longer than most of the hipsters have been alive. The only of the "qualifiers" mine have are Velocity Aero rear rims. In recent years I standardized on those for a braking surface that is deep enough that I can slide the wheel forward and back almost two inches without playing with the brake blocks.
Ben |
Originally Posted by neamatoad
(Post 17944143)
a "fixie" is what people who don't know any better call fixed gear bikes
Ben |
Funny, the college I was at in the early 70's had a technical rock climbing instructor who rode his ah, bike daily to the school.
A buddy said, "Yeah, he's an animal, it's a track bike, one gear, fixed" "What do you mean fixed?" "Rear cog direct hub mount, no freewheel.....no brakes either" "Oh" FTFY |
Originally Posted by 79pmooney
(Post 17944171)
Probably longer than most of the hipsters have been alive.
hipsters are merely people that keep up with current lifestyle trends. the term isn't tied to a specific era. that's my nitpick for the week. besides, all the cool kids ride CX bikes these days. 'fixies' are so 2006. |
Originally Posted by neamatoad
(Post 17944205)
considering "hipsters" have been around since the '40s I'm not so sure about that. too often people lazily refer to the younger generation, or simply a group of folks they don't care for as "hipsters".
hipsters are merely people that keep up with current lifestyle trends. the term isn't tied to a specific era. that's my nitpick for the week. besides, all the cool kids ride CX bikes these days. 'fixies' are so 2006. Ben |
Originally Posted by 79pmooney
(Post 17944216)
But my tricycle was fixed and had no brakes.
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Originally Posted by neamatoad
(Post 17944143)
a "fixie" is what people who don't know any better call fixed gear bikes
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I'm indifferent to the term but I won't ride anything else anymore. Just love the FG feeling.
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I thought the monthly "fixie" rants were over....
The fixed gear craze of ten years ago never went away here in the Twin Cities. Still are everywhere. Of course so are every other type of bikes known to mankind. |
My son grabbed my Technium PRE frame off the wall and built a fixie. Heavy tires/wheels, it comes in at 22lbs. He loves it but still wants a geared bike for all the hills.
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Originally Posted by gomango
(Post 17944332)
The fixed gear craze of ten years ago never went away here in the Twin Cities.
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Originally Posted by Italuminium
(Post 17944370)
Are you a convert yet? :)
Had a nice old Colnago track bike that I rode everywhere until it was stolen from my Jeep. Nowadays, I can't. I have had three major knee surgeries on my left knee and I am risk adverse. Otherwise I would love to.......:) |
Originally Posted by gomango
(Post 17944375)
Actually, I was over thirty years ago.
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Originally Posted by Italuminium
(Post 17944379)
Haha, off course, the OG of the scene :)
Slightly off topic, but I have seen local frame builder Chris Kvale riding on river road on his way to work. Riding fixed and fast at that! A little blurb about this is at the end of his bio. A real source of inspiration I would say. About Chris |
Originally Posted by gomango
(Post 17944387)
:)
Slightly off topic, but I have seen local frame builder Chris Kvale riding on river road on his way to work. |
Originally Posted by Italuminium
(Post 17944404)
Never enough Kvale on this forum. Beautiful bikes and his paint is always a cut above - he seems to work with a different set of hues than most builders.
[IMG]https://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8427/7...582b4505_b.jpgIMG_0001 by gomango1849, on Flickr[/IMG] |
"fixie"? I don't much like the term either, but what's the point in calling it something else? It could be a track bike, but I don't ride it on the track, I don't aspire to riding it on the track, and I'm not about to pretend I do. People who understand bikes understand the term 'fixie.' If I'm going to the bother of talking to them, I might as well use terms they understand.
"Path racer"? No. |
We could be utter pedants and go archly British and insist they be called "Fixed-Wheel" bicycles ... though from what I read a few years back in my rambles through vintage cycling books, "fixed-gear" has been the dominant term in the U.S. for many many decades.
I understand the use of the term "fixie," though I have mixed feelings about it. It is the common term currently, though I rather suspect if you called it a fixed-gear in their presence they would understand what you were talking about. It could be worse. There are those people who insist on referring to a Gibson guitar as a "Gibby," or even worse those who talk of how something will "impact" something else, rather than have an impact. There are even those who cannot simply "head a committee" but must instead "head UP a committee ..." |
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