I need a really light bike
hello everyone.
i need to buy a really light bike (like around 7kg) that's easy for handling (like easy removing of wheels for putting in a car).
i currently ride a KTM city bike for a few miles almost everyday.I can manage some 30km of riding (didn't try more) on that bike, but it is quite heavy and I bought it too small for my height so it can fit in an elevator.
i'm 174cm high and have around 65kg. i would like to buy a good bike which i can bring with me on a trip in a car an maybe later do some more cycling with it. I really like bikes that guys ride in Tour the France but don't know if that sort of professional bikes are appropriate for other things other than tour racing.
i know that bikes are expensive but i would like to invest in a good bike.
do you have some suggestions? I like Cervelo bikes but don't know if women can ride them. Maybe Focus?
i would appreciate some advice and sorry if my english is not the best.
Nina
Most any road bike will do.
Used to be poor but had a very light 16# Viscount road bike(c. '70's). I cycled most every weekend with a friend ten years my junior, in central Florida (headwinds, sand spurs, hurricanes, tourists, dehydration, water moccasins, gators, sunstroke, etc.). She rode a mountain bike. I kept up with her through sand and city riding for years, running with low pressure, knobbier road tires and reinforced tubes (forget type). I actually had an advantage in the sand because I used "Flickers" which drag lightly on the tires and knock off things like glass shards, nails and sand spurs--which puncture only after a number or revolutions drive them through the tire and into the tube. Surprisingly, she would have to stop immediately and use tweezers to pick sand spurs out of her knobby tires or risk a flat. My biggest riding problem occurred with cobblestone streets, which were a bit jarring, considering the short, stiff geometry of my frame. If you have strong rims you can do quite a few stunts on your road bike. Pedal clearance is the biggest issue then, but that only slowed me down occasionally. Popping curbs becomes a quick-stall-and-hop art form if you practice.