Urban uglification
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 2,124
Likes: 2
From: NYC
Bikes: All 70s and 80s, only steel.
Urban uglification
It's your $1500 track bike, but you want to ride it in Manhattan. What're your tricks to disguise yer purty purty. Best one's I've seen are the super-thrashed, old school Selle Italia saddle missing a chunk off of the nose. Sitting on top of a very nice but inconspicuous vintage Italian steel-frame roadbike.
Give me your tips!
Give me your tips!
#2
How about not spending $1500 on a bike you are leaving on the street. Spend $1300 for your nice bike and $200 for the daily rider.
__________________
I'm not one for fawning over bicycles, but I do believe that our bikes communicate with us, and what this bike is saying is, "You're an idiot." BikeSnobNYC
I'm not one for fawning over bicycles, but I do believe that our bikes communicate with us, and what this bike is saying is, "You're an idiot." BikeSnobNYC
#3
hang up your boots
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,574
Likes: 0
From: San Francisco
Bikes: 84 Pinarello, Trek Liquid 30, Torker CX 24, Gromada Track
clean it with a dirty diaper!
#8
Just riding
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 651
Likes: 0
From: Exeter, UK
Bikes: Cannondale Bad Boy / Mercian track / BOB trailer / Moulton recumbent project
It's like the 21st century remix of 80s-style drilling. Urban *and* retro. Tres chic.
If you're going to put duct tape on it, just one layer, please. Know a guy who put two pounds of tape on his frame and wondered why it felt dead. No, really.
If you're going to put duct tape on it, just one layer, please. Know a guy who put two pounds of tape on his frame and wondered why it felt dead. No, really.
#11
Shiftless bum

Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 2,693
Likes: 1
From: Ottawa, Ontario
Bikes: Apollo fixed winter bike, Gazelle Cross, Baboe Cargo bike, Linskey Rouleur Road, Bridgestone Picnica, Tern C7, 2nd gen Strida
I wrap a layer of innertube around various bits followed by electrician's tape. It's practical too 'cause it protects the fragile paint on my italian job...
#12
The Silver Hammer

Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 787
Likes: 0
From: Philadelphia
Bikes: Surly Steamroller, Specialized Hardrock, Lynskey Cooper
peeeee on it....mark your territory
potenital theives will be intimidated by your essense, while females will be thrust into heat searching for the man who marked that bike.....sweet
potenital theives will be intimidated by your essense, while females will be thrust into heat searching for the man who marked that bike.....sweet
#13
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 2,124
Likes: 2
From: NYC
Bikes: All 70s and 80s, only steel.
Okay, to clarify, I don't have a $1500 track bike; I don't even have a track bike. I was just looking for ideas for my girlfriend's shiny, $300 city hybrid.
And plus, I thought there might be something new and creative out there
.
And plus, I thought there might be something new and creative out there
.
#15
just don't lock it anyplace dumb (empty streets, overnight anywhere, bushwick, etc), lock it well (both wheels, frame, krypto chain), take some precaution to prevet theft of easily removable parts like the seatpost and stem (epoxy/glue/wax/glued BBs in the allen bolt holes), and don't be too paranoid about it.
you can wrap the tubes up, but i'm of the opinion that while most any bike will get stolen, many thieves know what they're stealing and are not just monkeys who think "hey, it looks shiny."
sometimes i think wrapping the tubes draws even more attention to a bike than riding something with no logos at all.... as if to say, "i'm hiding something!"
you can wrap the tubes up, but i'm of the opinion that while most any bike will get stolen, many thieves know what they're stealing and are not just monkeys who think "hey, it looks shiny."
sometimes i think wrapping the tubes draws even more attention to a bike than riding something with no logos at all.... as if to say, "i'm hiding something!"
#16
flaneur
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 591
Likes: 0
From: ankle deep in the gowanus canal
Bikes: IRO Mark V
just lock your bike up on west broadway just below canal. there's always a steamroller locked up there with a dinky little hardware store chain and padlock. the thief will surely grab that one first. most likely by biting through the chain with his teeth.
#19
Junior Member
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 22
Likes: 0
pull some condoms out of the trash and drape them feng-shui-ishly on your bike.
but seriously ppl who know what they are doing usually dont take bikes that look like messengers bikes. i mean messers usually never leave bikes for more than five minutes, plus if you do steel one, they are all over, and they have radios. a messenger in DC got his bike stolen adn they found it and the guy in two days.
but seriously ppl who know what they are doing usually dont take bikes that look like messengers bikes. i mean messers usually never leave bikes for more than five minutes, plus if you do steel one, they are all over, and they have radios. a messenger in DC got his bike stolen adn they found it and the guy in two days.
#20
Wher'd u Get That Jacket?
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 1,317
Likes: 0
From: Somewhere in the Tubes
Bikes: Calfee Dragonfly, Lemond Poprad, Airborne Manhatten Project, Calfee Luna Fixie
Originally Posted by chzman
just park it next to a nicerer bike with a smaller lock
For example, my dad chains his car up. He parks it in the parking garage where he lives and it has been stolen in the past (different car - they burned that one). So he has this long chain that wraps around a pillar of the garage, and he locks the car to it through the towing eye. Now, somebody could cut the chain, but wouldn't they just steal the other car next to it instead, all other things being equal?
#21
phillip africa
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 105
Likes: 0
From: west philadelphia
Bikes: Casati Monza
Originally Posted by flythebike
That is really the best strategy. Any bike can be stolen, but if you make it more difficult to steal than the next bike, the thief will just take the easy way out.
For example, my dad chains his car up. He parks it in the parking garage where he lives and it has been stolen in the past (different car - they burned that one). So he has this long chain that wraps around a pillar of the garage, and he locks the car to it through the towing eye. Now, somebody could cut the chain, but wouldn't they just steal the other car next to it instead, all other things being equal?
For example, my dad chains his car up. He parks it in the parking garage where he lives and it has been stolen in the past (different car - they burned that one). So he has this long chain that wraps around a pillar of the garage, and he locks the car to it through the towing eye. Now, somebody could cut the chain, but wouldn't they just steal the other car next to it instead, all other things being equal?
#22
phillip africa
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 105
Likes: 0
From: west philadelphia
Bikes: Casati Monza
Originally Posted by Cynikal
How about not spending $1500 on a bike you are leaving on the street. Spend $1300 for your nice bike and $200 for the daily rider.
when it comes down to it... i cant resist the nicer bike unless the weather is just awful. unless i start playing bike polo any time soon i'm just going to sell that beater, one bike is all i can handle.
#25
...but how can you get to know and love your bike when you're not riding it every day?
I say this: quelch your rampant consumer lust and buy a sensible fixed gear. Something you love and appreciate, something with respectable quality-- but something you won't lose sleep over. A bike whose beautiful finish you don't have to tape / tube over. A bike you actually use, as opposed to a bike that just looks cool.
I find that owning really nice stuff can be a pain in the ass. Use it, love it, or sell it to someone who will. Perhaps that means your track bike will finally see the track...
I say this: quelch your rampant consumer lust and buy a sensible fixed gear. Something you love and appreciate, something with respectable quality-- but something you won't lose sleep over. A bike whose beautiful finish you don't have to tape / tube over. A bike you actually use, as opposed to a bike that just looks cool.
I find that owning really nice stuff can be a pain in the ass. Use it, love it, or sell it to someone who will. Perhaps that means your track bike will finally see the track...





