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-   -   Commuter Bicycle Pics (https://www.bikeforums.net/commuting/49471-commuter-bicycle-pics.html)

Doohickie 11-30-09 06:31 PM


Originally Posted by jputnam (Post 10092343)

Celeste-painted fenders ftw! :love:

Stryver 11-30-09 08:55 PM

That is a sweet looking ride.

jlc 11-30-09 10:51 PM

http://i846.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/P1010057.jpg

Well I have a vintage 1976 Schwinn Speedster (Chicago made). The bike is all original except for the tires..... (had to replace due to dry rot). It is not light but is amazing to ride... Ride it more days than not.... I am currently building a single speed from an old 84 Trek to be my commuter so that the Schwinn can be my 'sunday driver'

jputnam 12-01-09 11:34 PM


Originally Posted by Doohickie (Post 10092471)
Celeste-painted fenders ftw! :love:

Those Italians do seem to know style! The Celeste fenders and chainguard are stock, though I shortened the front of the front fender so it fits bus bike rack hooks better.

commander_taco 12-02-09 02:12 AM


Originally Posted by chrism32205 (Post 10028550)

What bag and rack are these? I very much like this setup, nice bike.

Deshi 12-02-09 02:20 AM


Originally Posted by jputnam (Post 10092343)
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3089/...9017175db9.jpg

Bianchi Milano retrofitted with zero-rise van Dessel mustache bars and a Persons-Majestic leather saddle.

8sp internal gearing is great for low-maintenance commuting -- clean and oil the chain every 5,000 miles, grease the rear brake once or twice a year.

We had one of these in the shop this year. I told my boss I would buy it if it didnt sell by the end of the season. To bad it sold. I liked it alot.

daaxix 12-02-09 10:25 AM

It is decent except for one of my pet peeves.

Why O why do you hipsters put riser bars on a negative stem?!

It is not only a kludge, it looks awful!

You have two brakes though, very respectable!
Israel


Originally Posted by Deshi (Post 10065569)
Here is my sorry excuse for a commuter. I am in the process of working on trying to fit some fenders in there with my brakes and 35c tires. Not workin to well. Ill get an updated pic to you soon. Iv got my lights and whatnot on there now.

http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/DSCN0195.jpg
http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/DSCN0196.jpg


TwoHeadsBrewing 12-02-09 10:51 AM

That's a great bike! A coworker bought one of these and I had the chance to ride it...very nice riding position and super comfortable. On his model, I think there was an dynamo hub on the front which powered both a headlight and taillight under the seat. How's that saddle treating you?


Originally Posted by jputnam (Post 10092343)
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3089/...9017175db9.jpg

Bianchi Milano retrofitted with zero-rise van Dessel mustache bars and a Persons-Majestic leather saddle.

8sp internal gearing is great for low-maintenance commuting -- clean and oil the chain every 5,000 miles, grease the rear brake once or twice a year.


accordionfolder 12-02-09 10:52 AM


Originally Posted by daaxix (Post 10098582)
It is decent except for one of my pet peeves.

Why O why do you hipsters put riser bars on a negative stem?!

It is not only a kludge, it looks awful!

You have two brakes though, very respectable!
Israel


Well if it's your only stem, why get another? His appears to be maxed out in height anyways. Why try to classify people, eh? Anyone who rides a bike is cool with me, that's one less car to me. :thumb:

Heather H 12-02-09 12:37 PM

http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127339
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127338
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127340

My commuter bike, and a pic of the internally geared hub and one of my panniers. If you want to read more and see more pics they're here

Andy_K 12-02-09 12:43 PM


Originally Posted by HardyWeinberg (Post 10090659)
my fixie making a rare sunny day appearance

Nice. What size tires are you using?

nwmtnbkr 12-02-09 01:00 PM


Originally Posted by Heather H (Post 10099152)
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127339
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127338
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127340

My commuter bike, and a pic of the internally geared hub and one of my panniers. If you want to read more and see more pics they're here

That is a beautiful bike. I love those rims, too. Thanks for sharing the pics.

Deshi 12-02-09 02:06 PM


Originally Posted by daaxix (Post 10098582)
It is decent except for one of my pet peeves.

Why O why do you hipsters put riser bars on a negative stem?!

It is not only a kludge, it looks awful!

You have two brakes though, very respectable!
Israel

Ok, first and foremost, I am not a hipster. I do not wear skinny jeans, big sunglasses, vinyl shoes and I dont smoke so im ruled out as a hipster.

Second, I tried using a more flat stem with this application. the ID of the fork steerer is less than 22.2mm so my other stem did not fit. This is the stem that came with the bike originally. I used what worked.

Third, I built ths bike for $80 using found parts and stuff from my bucket. It was not ment to be anything but a project to keep a smile on my face while its freezing outside. I ended up liking the bike in the end.

Forth, I like it so thats all that matters.

Im not trying to sound like a dick but just saying there is a reason I built it like that.

Deshi 12-02-09 02:09 PM

I know its not a "commuter bike" but i figured you might guys might like to see it anyway. I think it looks good. Just built it last night.

http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/IMG_0595.jpg

Chris Chicago 12-02-09 03:13 PM


Originally Posted by Deshi (Post 10099554)

Im not trying to sound like a dick but just saying there is a reason I built it like that.

My bike had a negative stem with slight riser bars for similar reason...everthing was free , it was the stem i had and i didnt like the drop bars. but then i felt like a hipster and could feel people staring at me, i just knew they were talking about me, so i put flat bars on there.:eek:

just kidding, flat bars are on there bc the risers snapped. i kind of miss the risers though and may have to get another set if i decide to raise my seat. i can see (now) how it might make a serious cycler scratch his head though.

Deshi 12-02-09 03:47 PM


Originally Posted by Chris Chicago (Post 10099787)
My bike had a negative stem with slight riser bars for similar reason...everthing was free , it was the stem i had and i didnt like the drop bars. but then i felt like a hipster and could feel people staring at me, i just knew they were talking about me, so i put flat bars on there.:eek:

just kidding, flat bars are on there bc the risers snapped. i kind of miss the risers though and may have to get another set if i decide to raise my seat. i can see (now) how it might make a serious cycler scratch his head though.

I do admit that it looked cheesy to me at first. Then it started to grow on me. I tried it out and it was comfortable. Yes a tight wearing rodie might look at it and go WTF but who cares. I rode flat bars first and slowly made my transition to risers. I own 3 bikes right now. Each one has a different bar. I have my Schwinn with risers, my Pake with drop bullhorns, and my Pinarello with drops. They all serve a different purpose.

Amani576 12-02-09 03:49 PM

Pardon... but there's nothing negative about that stem. it has 0 rise or fall from a traditional 7 shape. Unless you're counting that it's technically a -17 degree stem. And there's nothing bad or kludgy looking about it. That style stem was used for decades with so many different types of bars it could blow your mind.
-Gene-

1nterceptor 12-02-09 04:29 PM

http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127359Hi, new member here. I'm very happy with my Planet Bike SPEEDEZ Road fenders (25mm tires). They have a hybrid version to fit 35mm tires:

http://ecom1.planetbike.com/7015.html





Originally Posted by Deshi (Post 10065569)
Here is my sorry excuse for a commuter. I am in the process of working on trying to fit some fenders in there with my brakes and 35c tires. Not workin to well. Ill get an updated pic to you soon. Iv got my lights and whatnot on there now.

http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/DSCN0195.jpg
http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/DSCN0196.jpg


lbear 12-02-09 05:22 PM


Originally Posted by Deshi (Post 10099565)
I know its not a "commuter bike" but i figured you might guys might like to see it anyway. I think it looks good. Just built it last night.

http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w...s/IMG_0595.jpg

Nice clean look. What frame did you start with?

Deshi 12-02-09 05:26 PM


Originally Posted by 1nterceptor (Post 10100066)
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127359Hi, new member here. I'm very happy with my Planet Bike SPEEDEZ Road fenders (25mm tires). They have a hybrid version to fit 35mm tires:

http://ecom1.planetbike.com/7015.html

Welcome to the forums. Thanks for the suggestion. Ill look into them.


Originally Posted by lbear (Post 10100236)
Nice clean look. What frame did you start with?

I started with a Pake frameset in deep purple.

jputnam 12-02-09 09:43 PM


Originally Posted by daaxix (Post 10098582)
It is decent except for one of my pet peeves.

Why O why do you hipsters put riser bars on a negative stem?!

It is not only a kludge, it looks awful!

To my eye it looks entirely appropriate to the age of the bike. Level stems were used on everything from sit-up-and-beg roadsters to racers.

The aesthetic of the era was for the stem and top tube to both be parallel to the ground on "men's" bikes -- sloping top tubes were for women and children.

The only real "negative" stems way back when were deep-drop track stems that put the bar clamp lower than the top stack of the headset.

A standard 7-shaped stem would have been considered zero-rise, not negative.

It took a long time for people to get used to these funky modern stems with non-level extensions. The first time I brazed up a 90-degree stem for my touring bike, rather than a 7-shaped stem with a long quill, you wouldn't believe the insults it received from traditionalists.

jputnam 12-02-09 09:47 PM


Originally Posted by TwoHeadsBrewing (Post 10098683)
That's a great bike! A coworker bought one of these and I had the chance to ride it...very nice riding position and super comfortable. On his model, I think there was an dynamo hub on the front which powered both a headlight and taillight under the seat. How's that saddle treating you?

The saddle is great -- as comfortable as a Brooks, but with a modern hex socket tension adjuster instead of the traditional Brooks nut configuration. (My other bikes are still mostly Brooks -- they last forever, so I only end up buying new saddles when I expand the fleet.)

I have a Schmidt dynamo hub on my touring bike, haven't gotten around to putting one on my commuter yet since most of my commuting is so well lit a basic LED helmet light is perfectly adequate.

hairlessbill 12-03-09 12:19 PM

The ice/snow commuter machine - a 1995 Klein Fervor with Nokian Mount and Ground tires:
http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127461http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=127462

Andy_K 12-03-09 01:50 PM


Originally Posted by Deshi (Post 10099565)
I know its not a "commuter bike" but i figured you might guys might like to see it anyway. I think it looks good. Just built it last night.

Thats a sweet looking bike, but I think now you need to go buy some skinny jeans, big sunglasses and vinyl shoes. ;)

Deshi 12-03-09 03:06 PM


Originally Posted by Andy_K (Post 10103541)
Thats a sweet looking bike, but I think now you need to go buy some skinny jeans, big sunglasses and vinyl shoes. ;)

Ill put that on my list for my next mall run!


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