Anyone ever buy from BikesDirect.com?
#26
Senior Member

Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 546
Likes: 200
From: Baltimore, MD
Bikes: Vilano Urbana, DownTube FS9, Montaque paratrooper, Nano mini-velo, Motobecane CX, Raleigh 20, MIFA folder, ROG Pony, Iverson Grand Touring folder, Exclusiv German folder
Bought a Motobecane CX and a Nano. Just realize you are buying a "sort of" assembled set of parts that will, when adjusted (best professionally), be a ride-able bicycle. Very happy with my purchases.
#27
Really 3 millimeters?? take the wheel to a Lbs, 5 bucks and 10 seconds... took me about 2 minutes, you would take it apart, repack it, bring back to FedEx, and hope it gets back wherever it came from in one piece. Too easy to true a wheel , to bother.
#28
Senior Member
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 4,400
Likes: 106
From: SF Bay Area
Bikes: Bianchi Infinito (Celeste, of course)
On something brand new, I'd rather go directly to the manufacturer first, than immediately break out the tools.
I'm honestly surprised it was that far off. Several co-workers have BD bikes, all with good results, so probably more of a one-time QC issue.
#29
Probably 50% of the wheels on brand-name bikes are like that out of the box IME. That's what's great about shops, we can fix them all when we build them.
#30
Banned
Joined: May 2017
Posts: 384
Likes: 0
Not to scare you off, but my buddy bought a dual suspension mountain bike from them. Needless to say he got an earful from a local mechanic for "not supporting local shops" when he brought it in for service. It was very unprofessional on the mechanic's part to say the least.
Dave
Dave
More often than not, you're dealing with all three at once in the course of shopping for, buying and getting the bike serviced.
It is infinitely easier and less expensive dealing with a direct order retailer. All you need are the most basic of wrenching skills and you can save yourself hundreds of dollars, and sometimes thousands.
Or, you can ship it back, wait two weeks for a refund, and then go through a second round of bike shopping again.
Then, your 2nd new bike has a rear mech that's out of adjustment, so you ship THAT one back for a third, and the next bike has a scratch on the seatpost....
#32
Banned
Joined: May 2017
Posts: 384
Likes: 0
These are bicycles. This is established, tried and true technology. Rubber tires. Aluminum rims. Rubber inner tubes. Aluminum frames. Threadless headsets. SRAM or Shimano cassettes. SRAM or Shimano groupsets. Carbon or aluminum forks. Some steel frames and forks. Maybe a hi ten fork here and there. Steel and aluminum chainrings. Cartridge bearings. Pedals, chains, reflectors, cables and so on.
You need to be able to screw on pedals, tighten a headset, insert a seatpost, clamp a couple of brake cables, and MAYBE adjust derailleurs, true wheels and adjust the brakes and levers.
You need 2 or 3 allen keys, a pedal wrench, a cable cutter, spoke wrenches, and some grease. $50 will get you a good starter bike toolkit and will serve you for a long time.
If you want to be thorough and careful, a full initial assembly and adjustment will take you 2-3 hours from unboxing to completion. If you are ok with getting the bike rideable but not perfectly adjusted, or are very proficient, half that.
You need to be able to screw on pedals, tighten a headset, insert a seatpost, clamp a couple of brake cables, and MAYBE adjust derailleurs, true wheels and adjust the brakes and levers.
You need 2 or 3 allen keys, a pedal wrench, a cable cutter, spoke wrenches, and some grease. $50 will get you a good starter bike toolkit and will serve you for a long time.
If you want to be thorough and careful, a full initial assembly and adjustment will take you 2-3 hours from unboxing to completion. If you are ok with getting the bike rideable but not perfectly adjusted, or are very proficient, half that.
#34
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 108
Likes: 1
To be clear, an lbs doesn’t actually build any bike. They assemble them. It’s a rooky doing the work frequently. Most people can do it and can easily learn to tune their bike.
#36
No bike shop worth its salt will snarl at your for bringing in a bike they didn't sell you.
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pablosnazzy
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09-19-10 08:07 PM






