Fixed: predestined or personal change?
#1
Thread Starter
Traffic shark

Joined: May 2001
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From: California
Bikes: 2 fixies, 1 road, 29er in the works.
Fixed: predestined or personal change?
With a lot of the underlying commonality that fixed seems to have..
Fixed: predestined or personal change?
Fixed: predestined or personal change?
#2
72 & Sunny
Joined: Oct 2004
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From: Brooklyn
Bikes: '93 Yamaguchi Pursuit track bike, Alan Super Record
I don't believe in predestination, but I wouldn't be surprised if we found some personality traits that would render someone predisposed to riding fixed.
As soon as I discovered fixed gears, I knew it was for me.
so yea. predisposition not predestination.
As soon as I discovered fixed gears, I knew it was for me.
so yea. predisposition not predestination.
#4
72 & Sunny
Joined: Oct 2004
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From: Brooklyn
Bikes: '93 Yamaguchi Pursuit track bike, Alan Super Record
Originally Posted by PhillyBikePunks
i just fell in love with fixed gear riding, everything about it, the style, the feel, the control and the DIY mindset a lot of people have about it. personal change i would have to say.
#6
Beausage is Beautiful

Joined: Oct 2003
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From: Saitama, Japan
Bikes: Nabiis Alchemy
It fit me before I rode one. The concept clicked from the start.
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Yo. Everything I’m doing is linked on What’s up with Dave? but most of note currently is Somewhere in Japan.
Yo. Everything I’m doing is linked on What’s up with Dave? but most of note currently is Somewhere in Japan.
#7
I was riding mountain bikes before I went ss then fixed. I did actually go off-road riding so it felt right at the time. There came a long period when I started to commute and the mountain started to feel sluggish. I noticed messengers more around this time and met one or two.
Around the same time, al5 started showed me a photo of the 01 Pista. It was slick, and I was already thinking about getting a road bike for the speed and whatnot. But it clicked when I saw that Pista and started noticing the one gear thing with messengers. Found this site in '01 (damn I've been on here a while) as well before there was a SS/Fixed forum and was haunting the road forum for trips and whatnot. I got my first road bike then and started converting her into an SS.
Like most things in my life, I like them clean, simple and to work well. It's been that way ever since.
Around the same time, al5 started showed me a photo of the 01 Pista. It was slick, and I was already thinking about getting a road bike for the speed and whatnot. But it clicked when I saw that Pista and started noticing the one gear thing with messengers. Found this site in '01 (damn I've been on here a while) as well before there was a SS/Fixed forum and was haunting the road forum for trips and whatnot. I got my first road bike then and started converting her into an SS.
Like most things in my life, I like them clean, simple and to work well. It's been that way ever since.
#8
The first bike I ever put together, when I was 16 was a steel mountain/road hybrid which I built as an 8speed (one ring up front) for speedy riding around town and I guess this was at the beginning of my obsession with a simple, functional ride. I was definitely attracted to the DIY aesthetic of fixed gear riding and now its just who I am.
This thinking extends to all aspects of my life. Since I was about 16 I have sought to minimalise and simplify my life. Nothing useless can ever be truly beautiful. I can't remember who said that but its true!
So I guess I was predisposed to riding fixed.....
This thinking extends to all aspects of my life. Since I was about 16 I have sought to minimalise and simplify my life. Nothing useless can ever be truly beautiful. I can't remember who said that but its true!
So I guess I was predisposed to riding fixed.....
#10
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2004
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I like the challenge of riding hills with only one gear....it's do or die
I like the noise free divetrain........can't gear there with gears
I like the simple look.......no cables
I never dreamed I'd be riding one at my age.......51 and counting
I think it's probally destiny with a hint of perhaps a rebel personality
I like the noise free divetrain........can't gear there with gears
I like the simple look.......no cables
I never dreamed I'd be riding one at my age.......51 and counting
I think it's probally destiny with a hint of perhaps a rebel personality
#12
It's all about the dyslexic KISS principle: Keep It Stupid, Simple
#13
I did a fixed conversion for two reasons...
1) Training. I wanted to improve my pedalling form. It is, in fact, true that riding fixed helps with pedalling form.
2) I liked the idea of doing something interesting with an otherwise very boring bike.
I would have to say that there are some side benefits of riding fixed too. It seems to remove some of the psychological barriers about what gear "I need" for a particular incline.
1) Training. I wanted to improve my pedalling form. It is, in fact, true that riding fixed helps with pedalling form.
2) I liked the idea of doing something interesting with an otherwise very boring bike.
I would have to say that there are some side benefits of riding fixed too. It seems to remove some of the psychological barriers about what gear "I need" for a particular incline.
#15
I started mountain biking on a 24-speed rigid Rockhopper in November '03, and in May '04 I bought myself a big squishy 27-speed trailbike, so I gave my Rockhopper the SS treatment and used it mostly for commuting. I loved it because it was so simple, I never had indexing problems like with my FS bike, it was light and it looked cool. Then, when school started back up, I had to head across the country without my bikes, which made me so sad that I decided to purchase a new one. I didn't want another MTB, but I wanted to be able to ride with the school's Cycling Club, and use it as a commuter, so I decided that a fixed gear road bike would be cost-effective and fast enough for club rides. I ordered an IRO Jamie Roy, and rode 30 miles on it the day after receiving it with some guys from the club. I was instantly hooked. Now I try to convince my friends to ride fixed or at least singlespeeds. I feel weird using two brake levers, even weirder coasting, and shifting gears is seriously disorienting. I think that I was actually destined to ride fixed because when I'm climbing seated on a geared bike, I feel like I'm spinning too much and moving too slow, so I quickly get impatient, shift to a hard hard gear and stand and hammer my way up. I guess it just fits my riding style.
#16
Originally Posted by William Karsten
Does that answer the original question?
(13, 12, 11, 9............
(13, 12, 11, 9............
My answer is "personal change." I started riding a fixed gear bike because I wanted to be cool. And now I find out I'm a geek. Well, there's a waste of three years.
#17
wow, just three? Don't sell yourself short here bud...
Originally Posted by Schiek
Sorry....
My answer is "personal change." I started riding a fixed gear bike because I wanted to be cool. And now I find out I'm a geek. Well, there's a waste of three years.
My answer is "personal change." I started riding a fixed gear bike because I wanted to be cool. And now I find out I'm a geek. Well, there's a waste of three years.
#18
Originally Posted by [165]
wow, just three? Don't sell yourself short here bud...
#19
Thread Starter
Traffic shark

Joined: May 2001
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From: California
Bikes: 2 fixies, 1 road, 29er in the works.
Originally Posted by Schiek
Let me clarify. Three years wasted on the fixed gear=cool thing. I've wasted many more years trying to be cool in other ways.
#20
Originally Posted by William Karsten
Does that answer the original question?
(13, .............
(13, .............
Predestination-- to the extent that most cyclists give it try at one time or another (at least for training purposes).
Personal style-- if someone decides to ride fixed to the exclusion of all other forms.
#22
Originally Posted by MKRG
For me it was all about Lois Vuitton messenger bags.
oh, wait....
#23
Industry Maven

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From: Wherever good bikes are sold
Bikes: Thylacines...only Thylacines.
I'm not answering any more of your silly questions until you furnish us with pix of your pimped out Yellow Terror.
Oh, and Louis is spelt Louis, I believe.
Oh, and Louis is spelt Louis, I believe.





