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I probably wouldn't lock it up anywhere, ever, which would prove very annoying I think. I'd only be using this for recreational rides and any triathlons or other races I do in the future--the types of rides that start and end at the same location. Buying this bike is going against most of what I believe bikes should be used for (besides the going really fast on open roads part), but I still would love to have it to go really fast!
Tony Adams said:I can't imagine spending $1200 on a bike. It seems insane to me. I would never want a bike that I'd be nervous about locking up anywhere or would be reluctant to take out in the rain or snow.
But you may be right. You may never be able to justify it or afford it again, and that sounds like reason enough to do it now while you can. The LBS, even if it is a Performance, could probably really use your money right now so dumping some cash into the local(ish) economy would be good for all of us. Go for it. As for selling the fixie, $200 seems to be on high end of what people are asking for conversions on CL. It seems a bit high, but having dumped > $400 into my Schwinn Continental conversion already (including the original $80 for the bike), if I was in the market for a cheap fixie and didn't enjoy the process of building one up, $200 would be a better deal than doing one myself. But somehow it still seems high. If someone just wanted a fixed gear bike and didn't want the joy and fun of doing the work themselves it seems like coughing up an additional $150 or so to get a bikesdirect bike would be a lot more sensible.
....As for the price, think about other items society is happy to fork over a thousand dollars for without thinking twice:
1) a large screen TV
2) a wedding ring
3) a cemetery plot
4) a car
Isnt a bike worth just as much if not more? In the end, you wont think about how much it cost, you will think about how much farther and faster it has taken you, and there is no price you can put on that experience.
>
Isnt a bike worth just as much if not more? In the end, you wont think about how much it cost, you will think about how much farther and faster it has taken you, and there is no price you can put on that experience.
Amen to that. Well put.
chixieonfixie said:....As for the price, think about other items society is happy to fork over a thousand dollars for without thinking twice:
1) a large screen TV
2) a wedding ring
3) a cemetery plot
4) a car
Isnt a bike worth just as much if not more? In the end, you wont think about how much it cost, you will think about how much farther and faster it has taken you, and there is no price you can put on that experience.
>
Ya, I noticed too late. Deleted my post.
Kelvin Mulcky said:I linked to that horrifying site in an earlier post.
Good call to skip on the Scat.
Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:
Sam, I encourage you to spend the dough and get it, but I would keep your fixie if you are worried about parking the road bike. ...
As for the price, think about other items society is happy to fork over a thousand dollars for without thinking twice: 1) a large screen TV 2) a wedding ring 3) a cemetery plot
4) a car
Isnt a bike worth just as much if not more? In the end, you wont think about how much it cost, you will think about how much farther and faster it has taken you, and there is no price you can put on that experience.
chixieonfixie said:Sam, I encourage you to spend the dough and get it, but I would keep your fixie if you are worried about parking the road bike. ...
As for the price, think about other items society is happy to fork over a thousand dollars for without thinking twice: 1) a large screen TV 2) a wedding ring 3) a cemetery plot 4) a car Isnt a bike worth just as much if not more? In the end, you wont think about how much it cost, you will think about how much farther and faster it has taken you, and there is no price you can put on that experience.
I agree that a bike is a better thing to have than anything on that list. But we are comparing Apples to stuff that isn't even fruit!
I have to protest the notion that one needs to spend $1k to go "farther and faster". This is not always true. Going faster or farther is more about the rider than the bike - especially the "farther" part. For example, I did my longest tour (> 2000 miles) on a $300 Ross hard-tail mountain bike. I've done all of my tours and my countless* centuries on bikes that cost $300 or less.
*countless because I have not kept track of such things.
Going faster or farther is more about the rider than the bike - especially the "farther" part. For example, I did my longest tour (> 2000 miles) on a $300 Ross hard-tail mountain bike. I've done all of my tours and my countless* centuries on bikes that cost $300 or less.
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