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I actively look for yard-sale bikes---I don't browse CL because there aren't enough things I want that don't require a long drive to investigate (and someone with no car needing a cheap bike for transport isn't going to drive around looking at CL offerings.) Yard-sale finds ... I have found Two exactly in three decades. Yeah, I have gotten decent bikes at yard sales ... for parts ... but as for ride-ready (or nearly) bikes in my size, that were actually a decent value? hard to find, and it takes luck. The guy who needs a bike by Friday probably can't even get to the nearest CL offering ... he has no transport. But he can probably take a bus to Wal-mart and ride home. If a person had $275 or $325 and a week to wait, I would recommend the Nashbar flat-bar road bike----I have done so many many times here. if a person had $150 max and needed a working bike by the end of the weekend ... Hey, if the Wal-mart bike lasts six months, the person can save up for a better bike. No Wal-mart bike, no paycheck, nothing. |
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There's generally a WalMart/Target/Meijer/KMart/your favorite big box store close to most, which stock a fairly consistent stock of bikes. |
The big box store bikes have a limited market for the occasional rider, beginner or someone low on funds. Better to ride a cheap bike than no bike at all.
Besides, riding a Walmart bike will allow you to get stronger faster than a modern CF bike, teach you bike repair skills and give you time to decide if cycling is the right sport for you. |
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- so , no don't buy one. The OP never said he was in a big hurry for immediate cheap transportation. I think he gave up on this thread a while ago.... |
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If you extrapolate your logic that Wal-Mart bikes are unsafe as-is and should be excluded, so are most $150 CL finds. If one is unable to spot Wal-Mart assembly problems, one is probably not going to be overhauling their CL find. That was my point, not that the Trek/Ross/Schwinn options was a worse choice than the Wal-Mart options. |
Somebody said that the best bike is the bike that you ride. If a bike from Walmart is the bike you'll actually ride, then get it. Maybe one day it'll stop being the bike you want to ride. Maybe not.
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If the buyer can't tell if the forks are backwards, how could s/he tell which CL bike was a hazard? If a person knows Nothing about bikes Wal-Mart is probably the safest source, because if nothing else one could threaten a lawsuit, or get an exchange or a refund. Buy a bad bike on CL and then what? |
MY son just got out of a rehab and wanted to try bike riding with me. I bought a pair of cheap Walmart low end front suspension only mountain bikes. We have been riding them about 200 miles, no issues and 2 KOM's!
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I never see these hot deals on CL myself, at least for road bikes. About the cheapest ever is $300. Looked just now, and the only exception is a GMC Denali asking $175.
I suspect most of the Walmart bikes never see more than 100 miles and do just fine for that. scott s.. |
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It was shoved in the back of a garage until 2012 when she asked if she could ride it. I adjusted the shifting as best I could. She could and she rode it all around the yard and out on the dead end road we lived on. In the spring of 2013 with the 4 feet of snow in the yard finally melted, I found the bike. The chain was completely rusted frozen around the gears and through the derailleurs. I broke it all free with PB Blaster and she rode it around the yard all summer. At the end of summer I had decided to use it to try to get a little exercise in. I rode that Walmart mountain bike 580 miles during August, September, and October. It was put away after October as the snow started flying again. I bought the Giant Escape in the spring of 2014. That junk Walmart mountain bike allowed me to ride 60 mile rides just about every weekend this summer with a great group of friends because without it, I probably never would have gone out and bought a "good" bike and started riding. |
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My boys have the Walmart mountain bikes. These bikes are great for them. They can beat them up, park them wherever they like, and basically treat them like kids treat their bikes. I don't worry because they aren't expensive to replace.
I look on the local CL every once in a while although I will admit it's not very often. I have never really found any super deals on used bikes. I do see quite a few lightly used, almost new bikes that are going for close to new bike prices though. |
Used bike prices have gone up the last couple years or so. The Fujis & Univegas I used to see for $100 - $150 are now $200 - $250. Oh well. Whatever. You can always try to talk them down on price. It's easier to get a reduced price after it sits on CL for a month.
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10 years ago when money was tight, I bough 2 Schwinn Avenue hybrid bikes from Walmart. The frames were aluminum which was a great selling point. I didn't expect much but thought that for the price, about $225 a piece, they would be decent trail bikes for my wife and I. They were nothing flashy. My kids rode them and often left them out in the weather. They rusted a bit, but in those 10 years of abuse, rarely did those bikes fail me. I'm guessing that each bike had about 4 or 5,000 miles on them when it was all said and done. I got my money's worth.
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as somebody who built bikes at walmart for 3 years before getting hired to work at a bikeshop. just stay far far away from any bike sold at walmart, Target, Dicks sporting goods, toys r us, or any other store like it.
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I just purchased this bike from WallMart for $199
https://www.walmart.com/ip/29-Kent-M...-Blue/40572011 Been DECADES since I have ridden a bike. Just want to get the body moving again. No serious off roading, no jumps or stunts. 80% street / 20% well graded dirt roads/paths is my plan. Just got it delivered, and setting up as we speak. So far just a couple quick rides around the neighborhood as I have been adjusting the breaks and derailleurs before attempting a longer ride. So far so good. Plan to keep the forum updated with MY PROGRESS, but also the Bikes. |
In Ukraine them called "Aushan-bike" on named store where they saled. Very cheap china bikes make it from trash parts, which out of order almost imediatelly. Following their bad quality- weight. they very hard. and number 3 bad quality- they are not safe
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For the crowd that rides less than 500 miles a year, anything with handlebars and two semi-inflated tires is probably good enough. |
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Even less likely is that there is anything but an infinitesimally small percentage of the entire bicyclist population that commutes 30 miles a day on a bike or needs a bike set up for such enthusiastic riding, and they all seem to post on the BF Commuting Forum.:) |
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Still my beater/muddy trail condition bike. |
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