Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Commuting
Reload this Page >

Who Commutes on a single speed?

Search
Notices
Commuting Bicycle commuting is easier than you think, before you know it, you'll be hooked. Learn the tips, hints, equipment, safety requirements for safely riding your bike to work.

Who Commutes on a single speed?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 06-12-06 | 09:32 PM
  #151  
rykoala's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 2,013
Likes: 0
To those who understand, no explanation is neccesary.
To those who don't, no explanation is possible.
rykoala is offline  
Reply
Old 06-12-06 | 10:03 PM
  #152  
zorak8me's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 175
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by I-Like-To-Bike
Bye, Bye Jack. I agree, it would be better if all the other "suffering" Donkeys (who can't handle their precious beliefs being questioned without whining and crying wolf/troll) would assure that they only read the wisdom of fellow cult members/true believers. Then they wouldn't have to get their blood pressure up and all constipated because they can't come up with any reasonable response to reasonable doubt.
Why not just commute to work in a CAR? It's air conditioned, you've got a radio, you can drive faster, etc. Why on earth spend all that extra effort riding a bike?

Oh, and the car is soooo much easier on your knees!

ROFL!
zorak8me is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 07:59 AM
  #153  
I-Like-To-Bike's Avatar
Been Around Awhile
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,655
Likes: 1,974
From: Burlington Iowa

Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi

Originally Posted by rykoala
To those who understand, no explanation is neccesary.
To those who don't, no explanation is possible.
You mean like Scientology or Hare Krishna? Try it and you'll like it and never go back? Uh Huh, yea that's the ticket. One of the participants of this discussion wrote a sensible response, the rest go on as before about their special relationship with their magical fixed steed, and it's "unique" capabilities allegedly not found/known elsewhere in the cycling world.

Or as one so eloquently put it you either sing along with the trendy mantra or you are a no-nothing dud who should be driving a car.

Last edited by I-Like-To-Bike; 06-13-06 at 08:19 AM.
I-Like-To-Bike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 08:50 AM
  #154  
rykoala's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 2,013
Likes: 0
Nah I just wanted to post more "elitist" garbage so that you'd have something to spew your ignorance at. Peace out.

Somebody started a 3 speed thread, you should go spew there. [edit: I spoke too soon!]
rykoala is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 10:17 AM
  #155  
Sheldon Brown's Avatar
Gone, but not forgotten
Sheldon Brown Memorial - Titanium
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 2,301
Likes: 12
From: Newtonville, Massachusetts

Bikes: See: https://sheldonbrown.org/bicycles

Originally Posted by igloomaster
I ride a Redline 925. I didn't buy it to be hip (my brain isn't capable of thinking in that direction.)

For YEARS I rode a geared bike and always has a 'grass must be greener' mindset when observing SS bicycists. I wanted a ZEN bike to get from point A to point B and back, and not deal with crappy shifts, and the chain locking up or coming off the ring, and obsessively shifting to find the magic place. I also don't have a crapload of time to maintain the geared bike. Sick and tired. SICK AND TIRED. I was sick and tired of geared bikes. Sick AND tired. Both. Not just sick. Not just tired. Sick and tired. Truly sick and tired. Not just overusing the common phrase. I TRULY was sick and tired. If there was a phrasionary (dictionary of phrases) you could look up "sick and tired" and see a picture of me on a sidewalk trying to put my chain back on the ring while making a very ugly face. One might call it the Sick and Tired face.

Guess what? The grass IS greener! S/S works just fine! Sheldon Brown was right! I'm grateful! I'll never go back to a geared bike unless I move to San Fran or want to take up racing! I'm no longer Sick and Tired! I LIKE RIDING MY BIKE NOW! I LOOK FORWARD TO IT! SOMETIMES I SMASH POPSICLES ON MY SWEATY SKULL OUT OF SHEER JOY!!!

Try riding S/S. Just do it. Then decide what you like.
Now, flip the wheel around and try Fixed Gear! It's even more fun!

Sheldon "Coasting Is Bad For You" Brown
Santa Cruz, California (this week)
Sheldon Brown is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 10:28 AM
  #156  
I-Like-To-Bike's Avatar
Been Around Awhile
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,655
Likes: 1,974
From: Burlington Iowa

Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi

Originally Posted by rykoala
Nah I just wanted to post more "elitist" garbage so that you'd have something to spew your ignorance at. Peace out.
Nice circular argument. Post doo-doo and claim any negative response is ignorant. Perhaps you really meant to chant, "ahnahl nathrak, oothvas spethood, doCHiel nienvay."
I-Like-To-Bike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 10:55 AM
  #157  
rykoala's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 2,013
Likes: 0
Funny, coming from someone who poo-poo's people who spread the fixed gear love, who has never even tried one. That is the ignorance I speak of. You have NO room to talk about fixed gear. You have no room to talk about those who profess their appreciation for them. You have no room to talk! Why am I even talking to you. You're a waste of my time.
rykoala is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 11:02 AM
  #158  
jyossarian's Avatar
SERENITY NOW!!!
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,739
Likes: 2
From: In the 212

Bikes: Haro Vector, IRO Rob Roy, Bianchi Veloce

Originally Posted by Sheldon Brown
Now, flip the wheel around and try Fixed Gear! It's even more fun!

Sheldon "Coasting Is Bad For You" Brown
Santa Cruz, California (this week)
I've heard that this man knows what he's talking about. I forget where I heard it, but I heard it somewhere.

Fixies are fun. Geared bikes are also fun. I'm looking for a geary right now to serve as my "hill rider with built-in knee savers". And one of these days when I have a garage, I might even get a recumbent. Why? Cuz they look like fun too. And if I can ever lay my hands on a Ross Polo Bike w/ a banana seat and coaster brake, I'd get one of those too.
__________________
HHCMF - Take pride in your ability to amaze lesser mortals! - MikeR



We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
jyossarian is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 11:48 AM
  #159  
flipped4bikes's Avatar
ROM 6:23
 
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,713
Likes: 0
From: Coastal Maine

Bikes: Specialized Tricross Comp, Lemond Tourmalet, Bridgestone MB-5

Originally Posted by caloso
Try it? And then decide?!?! You must be joking.
Yeah, imagine how life would be if you didn't try anything...
flipped4bikes is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 11:48 AM
  #160  
Bye Bye
 
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 3,677
Likes: 2
From: Gone gone gone
Redline 925, when I actually ride the 1+ mile to my office.
Its a great town bike too - post office, credit union, coop.

Love it. SS. Haven't tried it fixed. I should... maybe tomorrow.
__________________
So long. Been nice knowing you BF.... to all the friends I've made here and in real life... its been great. But this place needs an enema.
bmike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 12:10 PM
  #161  
I-Like-To-Bike's Avatar
Been Around Awhile
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,655
Likes: 1,974
From: Burlington Iowa

Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi

Originally Posted by rykoala
Funny, coming from someone who poo-poo's people who spread the fixed gear love, who has never even tried one. That is the ignorance I speak of. You have NO room to talk about fixed gear. You have no room to talk about those who profess their appreciation for them. You have no room to talk! Why am I even talking to you. You're a waste of my time.
Yup I get it. Only those blessed with the spirit are welcome to the house of fixed gear to converse about worshiping the unique special qualities attributed to their esoteric choice for commuting. No one else has "room" to discuss UNLESS they agree or are willing to be baptized in the faith.

Last edited by I-Like-To-Bike; 06-13-06 at 01:47 PM.
I-Like-To-Bike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 12:13 PM
  #162  
I-Like-To-Bike's Avatar
Been Around Awhile
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,655
Likes: 1,974
From: Burlington Iowa

Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi

Originally Posted by jyossarian
I've heard that this man knows what he's talking about. I forget where I heard it, but I heard it somewhere.
He sure does. He provides one of the best (if not THE best) sources for good information about internal geared hubs on the Internet. You should read some of it.
I-Like-To-Bike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 01:51 PM
  #163  
jyossarian's Avatar
SERENITY NOW!!!
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,739
Likes: 2
From: In the 212

Bikes: Haro Vector, IRO Rob Roy, Bianchi Veloce

Originally Posted by I-Like-To-Bike
He sure does. He provides one of the best (if not THE best) sources for good information about internal geared hubs on the Internet. You should read some of it.
I have. And I'm contemplating an internal hub for a folding bike. Clean lines and less clutter to get in the way when packed. It weighs more, but there have to be some tradeoffs. And w/ horizontal dropouts, I can convert it to SS/FG.
__________________
HHCMF - Take pride in your ability to amaze lesser mortals! - MikeR



We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
jyossarian is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 02:59 PM
  #164  
Loooty's Avatar
Banned.
 
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 307
Likes: 0
Originally Posted by I-Like-To-Bike
Yup I get it. Only those blessed with the spirit are welcome to the house of fixed gear to converse about worshiping the unique special qualities attributed to their esoteric choice for commuting. No one else has "room" to discuss UNLESS they agree or are willing to be baptized in the faith.
Since this thread has been hopelessly derailed, I might as well add this.

I don't see how I-Like-To-Bike's repeated and redundant posts in this thread are anything but disruptive.

Here is the current measure of disruptiveness in bf.net policies:

"Posts which intend to disrupt the topic of conversation or steer the topic away from the focus of the forum and related news. Disruption can include harassment, multiple user profiles, multiple posting of the same post and posting completely off topic messages. Please do your best when it comes to grammar, punctuation and spelling. Excessive use of "AOL'ese" and "hAx0r" talk can be very disruptive so please keep it to a minimum."

It would be one thing if I-Like-To-Bike posted once or even twice in the thread mentioning that fixed/ss might be over hyped and that people should regard claims about riding these types of bikes skeptically.

However, he is not content to leave it at that and instead trolls repeatedly with the same type of personal attacks. Post after post with the sole intent of calling fixed gear riders or single speeders deluded, blinded by faith/fashion/machismo, or members of a cult, cannot be seen as contributing to a respectful debate.

Though I am doubtful that anything will change, I'd like to ask nicely that the back and forth stop. Make your point and then back off. I see this in meetings all the time and it is a horrible communication technique. If you are not heard the first time, or the second time, or the third time, don't expect that the 4th, 5th and 6th repetitions will be any more convincing.

Note, I am not speaking here of the merits of gears and their different forms, because that is not what this thread has become.
Loooty is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 04:30 PM
  #165  
Cosmoline's Avatar
Biscuit Boy
 
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,355
Likes: 0
From: Speeenard 'laska
I've thought about a ss or fixed gear, but my commute crosses over too much rough trail and steep hills, the worst being leftovers from the Good Friday earthquake. I don't need too many gears, but three are essential. I certainly use them every day.
Cosmoline is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 04:45 PM
  #166  
sfcrossrider's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 2,760
Likes: 0
From: San Francisco

Bikes: Steelman eurocross, Surly CrossCheck, IRO Rob Roy...

Great thread! I've had my CrossCheck built as a SS/fixed in the past. I've also got a fixed project that I've been working on since before God knows when. I'm a lazy pigman. I miss my fixed wheel.

BTW. The Fixer's bike is the $hit. Super sexy.
sfcrossrider is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 08:05 PM
  #167  
I-Like-To-Bike's Avatar
Been Around Awhile
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,655
Likes: 1,974
From: Burlington Iowa

Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi

Originally Posted by Loooty

It would be one thing if I-Like-To-Bike posted once or even twice in the thread mentioning that fixed/ss might be over hyped and that people should regard claims about riding these types of bikes skeptically.

However, he is not content to leave it at that and instead trolls repeatedly with the same type of personal attacks.

Yes that might be one thing; in fact it is the exact thing. But one post as you suggest brings down the wrath of the same individuals who apparantly cannot bear to read that one "thing' about the subject of hype and the object of their affection. And then they bombard the skeptic with insults and hypocritical wailing about personnal attack or troll (i.e who/what else would question their susceptibility to hype and fashion), followed by a dozen variations of repeating the hyped special attributes that could be applied to almost any bike that has a single rear cog.

You tell me - who is guilty of hijacking every thread about single speed or non derailler equipped bikes for commuting (which are common around the world for commuting) with relentless hyping of the special joy of jury-rigged fixed gear bikes used by a relative handful of cyclists for commuting.
I-Like-To-Bike is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 08:36 PM
  #168  
Bklyn's Avatar
Ex-Lion Tamer
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,152
Likes: 0
From: Brooklyn, N.Y.

Bikes: 1982 Lotus Legend (steel-frame touring bike); 1982 Fuji S10S (converted to a singlespeed: 46x16); Specialized Crossroads hybrid (the child taxi).

ILTB:
You're starting to sound like the Fundamentalist who rails so violently about *****ecshuls. You're protesting a little too much. Why do you care? At all?
Bklyn is offline  
Reply
Old 06-13-06 | 09:28 PM
  #169  
huhenio's Avatar
Barbieri Telefonico
 
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 3,522
Likes: 2
From: Albuquerque, New Mexico

Bikes: Crappy but operational secondhand Motobecane Messenger

not again ... not again ..... my head is about to explode
__________________
Giving Haircuts Over The Phone
huhenio is offline  
Reply
Old 06-14-06 | 06:42 AM
  #170  
Sammyboy's Avatar
The Legitimiser
 
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 4,849
Likes: 6
From: Southampton, UK

Bikes: Gazelle Trim Trophy, EG Bates Track Bike, HR Bates Cantiflex bike, Nigel Dean fixed gear conversion, Raleigh Royal, Falcon Westminster.

There are lots of different kinds of bikes. I have lots of different kinds of bikes. I like riding them all, at different times, in different ways, for different purposes. Some of them are more naturally suited to commuting than others, perhaps, but I might well be prepared to put up with some less-than-optimalism on the commuting front, in order to get a little of a different type of fun.

If fixed gear or SS sounds like a good idea to you, on the basis of what you've read, why not try it? You might like it, and if you don't, all the other types of bike in the world will still be there. If you don't like the sound of it, then why try it? Why even think about it? If you've found your nirvana, and it's internal geared hubs, fenders, and flat bars, then I rejoice to the universe for you. May you ever enjoy your perfect bike, and leave others to enjoy theirs.
Sammyboy is offline  
Reply
Old 06-14-06 | 06:45 AM
  #171  
brunop's Avatar
hell's angels h/q e3st ny
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,582
Likes: 0
From: boston area/morningside heights manhattan

Bikes: surly steamroller, independent fabrication titanium club racer, iro jamie roy--44/16, independent fabrication steel crown jewel--47/17, surly karate. monkey (rohloff speed hub), unicycle

ride what ya can. if ya can ride a fixed gear you'll be happy!!
brunop is offline  
Reply
Old 06-14-06 | 08:12 AM
  #172  
jyossarian's Avatar
SERENITY NOW!!!
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,739
Likes: 2
From: In the 212

Bikes: Haro Vector, IRO Rob Roy, Bianchi Veloce

Q: Who Commutes on a single speed?
A: At least four complete strangers I saw on the West Side Hwy MUP this morning. Dunno if they're BF'ers.
__________________
HHCMF - Take pride in your ability to amaze lesser mortals! - MikeR



We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
jyossarian is offline  
Reply
Old 06-15-06 | 06:48 AM
  #173  
brunop's Avatar
hell's angels h/q e3st ny
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,582
Likes: 0
From: boston area/morningside heights manhattan

Bikes: surly steamroller, independent fabrication titanium club racer, iro jamie roy--44/16, independent fabrication steel crown jewel--47/17, surly karate. monkey (rohloff speed hub), unicycle

i rode in to work today (as on all days) on a fixed gear. i have 2 of 'em. they are my sons.
brunop is offline  
Reply
Old 06-15-06 | 06:49 AM
  #174  
brunop's Avatar
hell's angels h/q e3st ny
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,582
Likes: 0
From: boston area/morningside heights manhattan

Bikes: surly steamroller, independent fabrication titanium club racer, iro jamie roy--44/16, independent fabrication steel crown jewel--47/17, surly karate. monkey (rohloff speed hub), unicycle

. . .but i want a "3-speed". yo i like to bike! what's the best one?
brunop is offline  
Reply
Old 06-15-06 | 06:56 AM
  #175  
Senior Member
 
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 75
Likes: 0
me too

42 * 16 (hills). 13 miles each way on a fixie.
feefifofum is offline  
Reply


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.