Who Commutes on a Fixed Gear?
#1
Who Commutes on a Fixed Gear?
When I began researching bicycles from the ambition of purchasing one, I briefly read about a type of bike called a "fixie." Momentarily, I mistakenly thought this is what I rode when I was younger (I later learned that was a single-speed), but, for a while, the idea seemed invitingly simple to not have to "worry" about shifting gears. The bike I'll most likely buy now will, indeed, have a range of gear settings, but I find myself wondering, who on this board does do most (or much) of his or her commuting on a fixed-gear bicycle.
I look forward to reading your responses —
.
I look forward to reading your responses —
.
#2
Been Around Awhile

Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 30,651
Likes: 1,973
From: Burlington Iowa
Bikes: Vaterland and Ragazzi
When I began researching bicycles from the ambition of purchasing one, I briefly read about a type of bike called a "fixie." Momentarily, I mistakenly thought this is what I rode when I was younger (I later learned that was a single-speed), but, for a while, the idea seemed invitingly simple to not have to "worry" about shifting gears. The bike I'll most likely buy now will, indeed, have a range of gear settings, but I find myself wondering, who on this board does do most (or much) of his or her commuting on a fixed-gear bicycle.
I look forward to reading your responses —
.
I look forward to reading your responses —
.
#4
At least half of my mileage is done on a fixed gear and one year almost all of my commuting and good deal of other riding was done on a fixed gear... over 12 months I rode 12,000 km fixed and the other 4000 km were done on a mix of bikes that were geared with anything from a 3 speed internal hub to my 24 speed hybrid.
For winter riding there is nothing better than a fixed gear and we get a lot of that.
For winter riding there is nothing better than a fixed gear and we get a lot of that.
#5
Senior Member
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,265
Likes: 2
From: Berkeley
Bikes: 2010 Tarmac SL, 2013 Fairdale Weekender, 2013 Fairdale Coaster, 1995 Specialized M2 Pro, 1972 Schwinn Heavy Duty, 2014 Surley Long Haul Trucker
Eh.... I commute by single speed or an older steel cross bike. Fixed gear makes no sense to me, and kinda like it that way.
#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.
I am selling my track bikes beffore i get killed. I am getting to old for all that. You tend to go fast as all hell and hate red lights (no brakes) so you blaze through them at speed, eh! Now days I tend to have a coffee in one hand and take my time if I want.
#8
I have commuted with old Raleigh singles speeds (coaster brakes) and "single speed" bikes with conventional hand brakes. I love it. One of my 10 speed 26" wheel bikes is permantly stuck in 2nd gear right now so it's kinda like a "single speed"...
As soon as our local "Crappy Tire" store (my fellow Canucks know what I mean) has their old school coaster brake bike on sale for $99 I am getting one for winter commuting. There aren't a lot of hills where I ride.

As soon as our local "Crappy Tire" store (my fellow Canucks know what I mean) has their old school coaster brake bike on sale for $99 I am getting one for winter commuting. There aren't a lot of hills where I ride.
#9
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 11,373
Likes: 8
From: Columbus, OH
Bikes: '08 Surly Cross-Check, 2011 Redline Conquest Pro, 2012 Spesh FSR Comp EVO, 2015 Trek Domane 6.2 disc
I converted an old Trek 400 road bike as my fixed/singlespeed commuter. Mid 80s sport-touring geometry, full fenders, rear rack, wide (28mm) tires, and most importantly: Front and rear brakes.
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"I feel like my world was classier before I found cyclocross."
- Mandi M.
"I feel like my world was classier before I found cyclocross."
- Mandi M.
#10
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
My '89 Trek 660 is set up as a fixed gear bike. Two brakes, fenders during the winter, and mellow gearing (73 in.).
It's just a road bike that happens to have a single gear that can't coast. Works perfectly for my riding situation.
It's just a road bike that happens to have a single gear that can't coast. Works perfectly for my riding situation.
#11
Not Track but Fixed



Single

And Track
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This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
#13
long time visiter
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 654
Likes: 1
From: in the Northern Tundra
Bikes: 2005 Trek 6700 disc 2007 Orbea Onix 2009 Raleigh One Way
I have a Raleigh One-way single speed that I use for my commute. After a couple more months I'm going to switch it over to a fixie.
#15
FNG
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 877
Likes: 0
From: Quarry Stone
Bikes: Raleigh Special * Nishiki MTN Winter Commuter * Trek Soho 3 * Specialized Langster Seattle
#17
Wow. I didn't expect so many responses so fast. It seems plenty of people have experiences with fixies, and most of those are good.
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
#19
Low car diet
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 2,407
Likes: 4
From: Corvallis, OR, USA
Bikes: 2006 Windsor Dover w/105, 2007 GT Avalanche w/XT, 1995 Trek 820 setup for touring, 201? Yeah single-speed folder, 199? Huffy tandem.
Wow. I didn't expect so many responses so fast. It seems plenty of people have experiences with fixies, and most of those are good.
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
Without a hand-brake, one can slow down by--as you said--resist the forward motion of the pedals with back-pressure. To actually stop--at higher speed--folks will perform a skip-stop or skid.
We needn't enter the hand-brake vs no-hand brake debate.
As for me, I ride a converted mixte frame with a fixed gear and front brake for my 12.75 mile one-way commute. I chose a fixed gear for commuting b/c: 1) Relatively little can go wrong on the way to work maintenance/mechanics-wise, 2) the commute is relatively flat so I wouldn't need to change gears often anyway (why wear down just a couple cogs on an expensive cassette vs one stand-alone cog, 3) I like the feel of the fixed drivetrain vs a freewheel, and 4) I cannot do the skip-stop/skid thing at all, though I do like to be able to modulate acceleration and deceleration with just my legs and have the brake for actual stopping.
#20
Daily Commuter
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 387
Likes: 1
From: Pueblo, Colorado
Bikes: Surly Steamroller, Gary fisher wahoo
Wow. I didn't expect so many responses so fast. It seems plenty of people have experiences with fixies, and most of those are good.
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
That title is bugging me too.
#21
Senior Member
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 2,978
Likes: 4
From: Atlanta
Bikes: Cannondale T700s and a few others
Why not add WHERE they commute. Single speed or Fixed where it is flat is a LOT easier then hilly areas.
I'm still toying with making a set of "his an her's" single speeds (wife is use to grip shifts on a MTB not stem or down tube. I'm trying to warm her to drop bars and not ready to drop the coin on a bike with STI till I'm sure she is going to stick with it) for the rails to trail mup we ride. Mostly this is to slow me down to her speed. I averaged 15mph on a hilly metric 2 weeks ago. She runs along about 10mph on the flat Mup.
I have experimented with sticking too just one gear on my commute and weekend rides trying to figure out what gear to buy but I have a couple real booger hills on the way that would just plain suck on a 16(17)-40 gear selection of the bike I am thinking of converting. My touring bike that I commute with I am usually pumping 18-36 on the one hill.
I'm still toying with making a set of "his an her's" single speeds (wife is use to grip shifts on a MTB not stem or down tube. I'm trying to warm her to drop bars and not ready to drop the coin on a bike with STI till I'm sure she is going to stick with it) for the rails to trail mup we ride. Mostly this is to slow me down to her speed. I averaged 15mph on a hilly metric 2 weeks ago. She runs along about 10mph on the flat Mup.
I have experimented with sticking too just one gear on my commute and weekend rides trying to figure out what gear to buy but I have a couple real booger hills on the way that would just plain suck on a 16(17)-40 gear selection of the bike I am thinking of converting. My touring bike that I commute with I am usually pumping 18-36 on the one hill.
#23
Wow. I didn't expect so many responses so fast. It seems plenty of people have experiences with fixies, and most of those are good.
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
I don't remember reading fixed-gear bicycles don't have brakes. How does this work? Do you just "back-pedal" (or slow the crank with your feet) to come to a stop? If so, wouldn't it be useful to have conventional brakes, as well, just for added safety?
Personally, I run a front brake.
There is a large group that runs brakeless (probably not that many in this forum) and it's largely about style/image/etc.
#25
Member
Joined: Nov 2007
Posts: 35
Likes: 0
From: Odenton MD
Bikes: Orbea Onix, old Trek 520
I commute exclusively on one of my fixed gears, 4.5 miles each way. There are a couple of small hills along the way, but it helps make it more of a workout. I have a nice geared bike too, but I love riding my fixed gears. After riding a fixed-gear, it feels really weird to coast. I'm going to start riding to take classes that are ~17 miles away, so I may add a freewheel with lower gearing. Oh yeah, I have front brakes only, so I'll probably add some rear brakes when I add the freewheel.




