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computers
Do any of yall use one of these? I'd like to know how fast I go sometimes and how far, but I don't like anything on my handlebars ( not even brake levers). Is there a way to mount it on your stem, or toptube?
Thanks. |
Sorry, absolutely no computers allowed on fixies.
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funny
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Get a cheapo discontinued wireless one (think Nashbar/Performance has the old Cateye Cordless for $35 or so), mount the sensor on your fork, then put the computer in your pocket...inconvenient for current speed, I suppose, but you can pull it out of your pocket at the end of the ride so you'll know how far you went.
At the risk of sounding like a total loser, then again perhaps I am, I'd love to have cadence available when I'm spinning down a hill. It's easy enough to look at a chart when I get home, but I'd like to know it in real-time without having to do math...."gee, if I spin just a bit faster I'll be at 150 rpm"...something along those lines. |
Y'all are elitist fixie bastards.
I run a computer, though I run it on my handlebars. It would be simple to run one on your stem or top tube, though it would be sideways. Can't be that hard to read. Or if you really want to be cool, get a wireless setup and mount the computer on a wristband so all you have is the goofy thing on the fork and nothing else on the bike. The one I'm running right now is a cateye (I think) and it uses a rubber band type thing to mount the computer so it comforms to a bunch of different tube sizes and would mount in a lot of places. Be creative and don't let any of these wank3rs tell you what to do. They all suck anyway. |
Forgot to mention that since you reside in Hawaii, you are absolutely allowed a computer on a fixie. If anyone gives you crap about it, it's the little-known "riding fixie on volcano" rule. Man, I miss that place. You should try that 32 mile downhill ride on the volcano (can't remember its name) in Maui. On your fixie. Maybe a 55 or 56 tooth in front and an 11 in back. No brakes, natch.
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Originally Posted by dabern
put the computer in your pocket...
-Elitist Fixie Bastard |
inkd: it's your bike, put a computer on if you want to. i (and most everyone else) down at the track use computers. i think if anyone has authority over what's "right" and what's not on a fixed gear / track bike, it's people who actually use these track bikes for their intended purpose. racing. not trying to look cool and impress others.
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I run an old Cateye Vectra comp on mine...It's old and matches the old bike well. It also was included with the $10 I spent on the bike. Currently it resides on the handlebars but it was previously mounted on the very back of the top tube or alternately on the seatpost and had the sensor on the rear wheel. It doesn't look pretty but I have a set amount of miles that I want to get each day with the intent of increasing my mileage and speed. Having to get off your bike and look under your seatbag isn't fun so it now is on the handlebars, where I can see my mileage. Of course this is a 25 year old Raleigh conversion. When I get my Cinelli (when I can save the money) I may refrain from putting a comp on it.
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Yes Sigma Sports has a stem mount kit you can get for their cyclometers. I guess you could mount it on your top tube but I think it would be difficult to see.
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Originally Posted by Schiek
No wireless computer -Elitist Fixie Bastard
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Originally Posted by fore
inkd:.....it's people who actually use these track bikes for their intended purpose. racing. not trying to look cool and impress others.
George |
Originally Posted by Fore
i think if anyone has authority over what's "right" and what's not on a fixed gear / track bike, it's people who actually use these track bikes for their intended purpose. racing. not trying to look cool and impress others.
Originally Posted by The Fixer
......hmmm... does that hold true for mountain bikes ridden on pavement or basketball shoes worn off-court, for instance? .... ;)
George Poseur fight!!! It has really been too long since we had one... |
Originally Posted by fore
it's people who actually use these track bikes for their intended purpose. racing. not trying to look cool and impress others.
And then you have insulted anyone who has ridden a track bike on the street and subverted your own cause for individuality. Tsk tsk... |
Originally Posted by lucklust
I hate to say it, but I agree with Schiek.
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Of course there is always the option of getting one of those schmancy Timex GPS/HRM things. This would give you your distance and speed and heart rate info without anything attached to your bike. Just don't let any fixed gear minimalists catch you wearing one. You might look silly if it was found out that you were wired up like Lee Majors under your urban cycling fatigues.
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Originally Posted by 165-48:17
And then you have insulted anyone who has ridden a track bike on the street and subverted your own cause for individuality. Tsk tsk...
Originally Posted by Aldous Huxley
Totalitarian regimes justify their existence by means of a philosophy of political monism, according to which the state is god on earth, unification under the heal of the divine state is salvation and all means to such unification, however intrinsically wicked, are right and may be used with out scruple. This political monism lead in practice to excessive privilege and power for the few and oppression of the many, to discontent at home and war abroad....
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I am a weanie!
I have and use my polar HRM with wireless cadence and velocity mount thingys. I really love it. Great way to monitor and keep track of all kinds of info. I set the display for heart rate and cadence. I don't really care about speed or that other stuff when I am on the bike. I only mount the watch when I am using my fixed for training. When I just cruise for fun I leave the watch off the bike. I still catch myself trying to see my heart rate and cadence occasionally. |
i guess I'm a weanie too. I've got the same set-up without the cadence thing. I've got about a 30 mile commute and it's really nice to know how much more or less work i have to do to get to my office on time.
I know it's not aesthetically pleasing, but it keeps me from getting yelled at work and without the bike mount and all the wires the stupid transmitter doesn't get in the way. |
Originally Posted by Schiek
Well, it's about effin' time.
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Wonder what the original poster is thinking now? He comes in looking for a way to put a computer anywhere but on his bar and starts a real poopstorm. Inkdwheels, if you're still with us, screw it, just do whatever you want. You can smile smugly in your beautiful Hawaiian surroundings knowing full well how fast and how far you just pedaled through paradise. It's not like anyone here is gonna' bust you with, gasp, electronics on your fixie. Cheers.
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Poopstorm? Here? I'll believe it when I see it.
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The DeeBo is back...
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Ha! I think i'll get a wireless one. I've been trying to stay off the kool-aid. Since i commute and i don't have a car, I figure i have to pick function over style sometimes.
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Maybe a license plate on the seat, so as to draw attention away from the handlebar faux pas.
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Originally Posted by dobber
faux pas.
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Originally Posted by The Fixer
......hmmm... does that hold true for mountain bikes ridden on pavement or basketball shoes worn off-court, for instance? .... ;)
Originally Posted by 165-48:17
yes it isn't. look back to the history of the bicycle and fixed gears before you make another statement like this. While they didn't have computers, they were used on the street.
Originally Posted by 165-48:17
And then you have insulted anyone who has ridden a track bike on the street and subverted your own cause for individuality. Tsk tsk...
see, i got my start riding fixed because i wanted to race on the track. i think it's absolutely the most pure form of bicycle racing there is. there are very few things these days that'd make me happier than going down to the track when the season starts and seeing the number of people racing double. and the number of spectators quadruple. everyone and their brother these days are riding track bikes, or a fixed-gear conversion, but it's always the same people showing up to race. i'm not saying that everyone who buys a track bike has to race it. i'm just saying it'd be nice if they'd at least try it. a mantra for the fixed-gear community could easily be "form follows function." evident in the cries of "less maintenance!" and "there's nothing to break!" well, guess what. the function of a track bike is to be ridden on a velodrome. i laugh at people who build up a fixed gear, buy a messenger bag, start drinking PBR, and conform to a couple dozen other stereotypes i can name while at the same time snubbing others for doing what they want to do. be it wear lycra or put a computer on their bike. |
Yeah, I figure whatever floats your boat. I ride a fixed gear and i use a messenger bag. But, I was a messenger up untill a few weeks ago. So now im a commuter that looks like a messenger. I think my kool-aid tastes funny.
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First of, yes I drink PBR but I think that has more to do with being from Montana.....
I don't have a bike computer on any of my fixies, because I find it distracting. If the computer is there, I tend to pay more attention to my current MPH or Cadence, than the road and cars around me. Henceforth since I ride brakeless most of the time, the last thing I need are more distractions. I have a bunch of computers sitting around in my bike room right now, just collecting dust. But really why should we care what other people do when they are on their bikes, the important thing is that they ARE on bikes and not in a H2 or some similar beast. http://www.fuh2.com/ |
Originally Posted by fore
the only time my mountain bike sees pavement is on the way to the trail. (or when my the rest of my bikes aren't ridable.) as far as shoes, i can't stand basketball shoes. too gaudy these day
Originally Posted by fore
they rode fixed gears because they had nothing else.
Originally Posted by fore
i poke fun at people who buy track bikes
Originally Posted by fore
but you can bet your ass that every tuesday night i was racing my legs off in kenosha
Originally Posted by fore
see, i got my start riding fixed because i wanted to race on the track. i think it's absolutely the most pure form of bicycle racing there is
Originally Posted by fore
there are very few things these days that'd make me happier than going down to the track when the season starts and seeing the number of people racing double. and the number of spectators quadruple.
Originally Posted by fore
everyone and their brother these days are riding track bikes, or a fixed-gear conversion, but it's always the same people showing up to race..
Originally Posted by fore
i'm just saying it'd be nice if they'd at least try it...
Originally Posted by fore
well, guess what. the function of a track bike is to be ridden on a velodrome.
this narrowing of function on any bike can be applied to any accessory on a bike too then. the logic here is absent. if this is your own opinion, that's cool. but I have never seen a book of "How and Where to Ride Your Track Bike." Or one called "Why You Can't Put a Cycling Computer on Your Track Bike." I think the point here is a clear.
Originally Posted by fore
i laugh at people who build up a fixed gear, buy a messenger bag, etc.
Originally Posted by fore
Start drinking PBR.
Originally Posted by fore
and conform to a couple dozen other stereotypes i can name while at the same time snubbing others for doing what they want to do. be it wear lycra or put a computer on their bike.
Overall fore: I do understand your position, I just don't agree with it as it smacks of the same elitism that can be displayed in here (and on the roads too) about fixed gear/track on the streets. I joke around a lot and most people in here know when I am kidding around and when I am serious; if I confused you anywhere before, let me know and I clarify my statements. In the long run, people will do what they want. Asking someone if they have a preferred manner of mounting a computer on a track bike is a valid question. I am suprised you didn't find out where this bike was going to be ridden (Hmm...does Hawaii have a velodrome?). Lastly, your signature baffles me (okay - this is where I begin kidding around): "I ride bikes" How are we to understand this? Can you tell us which bikes you ride where. We want to make sure we are doing it right. ;) I am always happy to wake up to a good 'forum converasation'...it makes cheap coffee (uh-oh, is that too hip for me to have cheap coffee? ;) ) go down easier. Cheers! :beer: (I think they are toasting with Schlitz) |
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