Bunny Hopping
#1
Bunny Hopping
There are several curbs, potholes and sections of crappy asphalt on my route; generally I try to ride around them, but that's not always possible; half the time I end up slowing down and slowly rolling over them.
My cross bike has Alex da-28 rims with 32 spokes and 700x32 tires, and I weigh ~120lbs. Would bunny hopping potentially damage the wheels or bike at all? Heck, would the wear/tear associated with learning to bunny hop damage them? I've seen threads where people put their wheels out of true, broke a hub, etc, but they likely weigh much more than 120.
My cross bike has Alex da-28 rims with 32 spokes and 700x32 tires, and I weigh ~120lbs. Would bunny hopping potentially damage the wheels or bike at all? Heck, would the wear/tear associated with learning to bunny hop damage them? I've seen threads where people put their wheels out of true, broke a hub, etc, but they likely weigh much more than 120.
#3
At 120, I don't see your weight coming down on those wheels with enough force to cause damage. I bunny hop off of some TALL curbs on my road bike and as long as you aren't reckless with it, you should be fine.
#4
Rumblefish

Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 687
Likes: 0
From: Austin Texas
Bikes: 1973 Crescent Pepita Single Speed,1978 Raleigh Competition G.S.,1976 Raleigh Super Course MKII,1970's Motobecane Super Touring Fixed Gear, 1980's Denti Road Tech Five,Gary Fisher Hoo Koo E Koo,1973 Atala Giro,Cheap MTB Tandem,Schwinn World Sport
Seems like riding over curbs has to be as bad or worse than bunny hopping them.
#6
Senior Member
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 260
Likes: 0
From: In school again.
Bikes: Trek 7200fx, Surly LHT
At 235, I bunny hop obstacles in the road all the time, with no damage to my wheels or anything else. This was true even on my racer (when I had one). Like others have said, once you know how, it's probably a lot better than rolling over the curbs.
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#7
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 781
Likes: 0
From: Downtown Detroit, Mi.
Bikes: Surly LHT, 94 Cannondale track bike, 80's Cannondale track bike, 60's Raleigh 5 speed, 1888 Eldridge wood wheel track bike and my old 76 DG BMX from when I was a kid.
you have to be going super fast to clear say,,, a pot hole. If not? you will catch the other side on the way down with all you have! What I do most of the time is sort of "pop" my front wheel up and "hop" the back one over and let my legs take it so it feels smooth. This is sort of fun but hard on a fixed gear to time it.
#12
Rumblefish

Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 687
Likes: 0
From: Austin Texas
Bikes: 1973 Crescent Pepita Single Speed,1978 Raleigh Competition G.S.,1976 Raleigh Super Course MKII,1970's Motobecane Super Touring Fixed Gear, 1980's Denti Road Tech Five,Gary Fisher Hoo Koo E Koo,1973 Atala Giro,Cheap MTB Tandem,Schwinn World Sport
Damage?...probably not, but I do occasionally drop a chain when hopping curbs, usually due to bad technique.
#14
The Lone Commuter
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 14
Likes: 0
From: Alabama
Bikes: Surly LHT 62cm & FELT V85
I bunny hop my Stock Surly LHT almost daily, there are some bridges around my house with a very high lip never but a tape on them but I wouldn't be suprised if some were two inches. So It's either bunny hop it, ram over it, or slow down to a crawl.
#15
Senior Member
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 260
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From: In school again.
Bikes: Trek 7200fx, Surly LHT
#16
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,013
Likes: 0
From: Sacramento
I am 155lbs and bunny hop on 24 spoke Front and 28 spoke Rear wheels all the time with no ill effects. I say go for it. I bunny hop speed bumps at full speed so I don't have to slow down like cars do.... and this I do on a daily basis.
#17
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 40,863
Likes: 3,115
From: Sacramento, California, USA
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
A bunnyhop is nothing more than a Z-axis swerve. Good skill for any cyclist, including commuters. See also riding no-handed, trackstanding, and riding a skid.
#18
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 135
Likes: 0
i weigh 125 and i still really have to take it easy on the bunny hopping. it will bend your rims. i always always carry a spoke wrench. i rode bmx as a kid and could bunny hop over peoples trashcans on trashdays lol. i would get a mountain bike with skinnier tires and rigid fork if i had your commute (just my opinion!). mountain bikes handle bunnyhopping really well. do you ride a road bike? that i wouldnt recommend.. unless absolutely necessary. if you have to do it try not to land at an angle
#19
Biker, Lover, Fighter
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 414
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From: CA
Bikes: My own hand built frames
Part of the fun of cycling to me is curb hopping and bunny hopping. I try not to think too much, just takes the joy out of it.
Hasn't hurt my wheels yet. If it does it's worth it to me, but then again I do this on a bike with relatively cheap wheels.
Hasn't hurt my wheels yet. If it does it's worth it to me, but then again I do this on a bike with relatively cheap wheels.
#21
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 40,863
Likes: 3,115
From: Sacramento, California, USA
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
i weigh 125 and i still really have to take it easy on the bunny hopping. it will bend your rims. i always always carry a spoke wrench. i rode bmx as a kid and could bunny hop over peoples trashcans on trashdays lol. i would get a mountain bike with skinnier tires and rigid fork if i had your commute (just my opinion!). mountain bikes handle bunnyhopping really well. do you ride a road bike? that i wouldnt recommend.. unless absolutely necessary. if you have to do it try not to land at an angle
#22
Senior Member
Joined: May 2008
Posts: 260
Likes: 0
From: In school again.
Bikes: Trek 7200fx, Surly LHT
I would think that if you bend a rim or frame by bunny hopping something (with in reason, no arials off of cars thank you), you have a defective product.
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#23
Senior Member
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 135
Likes: 0
i see, maybe my rims are just crappy. i bent mine the first second and third days i rode my road bike when i first got it..... until i learned to take it easy. i hear up above^^^^ about two inch bunny hops i think those would be fine. i think it just depends how you do it. personally i wouldnt hop anything over about 6 to 8 inches tho lol it just ends up badly on a road bike imo. i guess i will now here from many 200+ pound roadies who bunny hop every day. maybe i need stronger wheels=/




