I've seen this term used a lot here, but I can't figure out exactly what it means.
Does it mean any bike with a straight top-tube?
Does it mean any bike that's not a women's specific design?
Or something else?
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I've seen this term used a lot here, but I can't figure out exactly what it means.
Does it mean any bike with a straight top-tube?
Does it mean any bike that's not a women's specific design?
Or something else?
it's a bike that isn't woman's specific design. We coined that term right here on TE :)
:D :D :D
Ah, thanks for explaining. I don't ride a man-bike because mine is a WSD. The shop actually measured me and said because of my height and build I didn't need a WSD, but then they sold me one anyway.
At first I was offended because the WSD bike came standard with a triple, while the men's verson came with a double. That's highly insulting. But then I started riding some hills, and was very grateful for that granny gear. :)
A triple ring is definitely something I will be wanting to keep if at all possible when I'm able to upgrade to a road bike. I like my granny gear for the hills as well.
Granny gears rock--especially for those of us who've scaled the menopause mountain and need to be even kinder to our knees than when we were younger. :rolleyes:
I love my granny gears! This past week I was riding w/ a gal that had doubles, she could rock on the flats and the beginning of hills but as soon as we geared down to Granny we blew by her and our knees were the better for it
Man Bikes can also come with triples... as WSD bikes can be built or come with doubles. It's preference.
I'm also a member of the triple chainring gang. My guy friends all tease me about changing my triple to a double so I can suffer like them... I remind them they don't have to suffer - it's their choice - they can always ride with a triple.
PS I changed out the rear cassette and derailleur to XTR so I ride with a 30 - 34 - super granny!!!
I know it wasn't meant to be a derogatory term, but that term really rubs me the wrong way. Bikes are bikes, and they all have different geometry. Yes, there are bikes that are labeled WSD - which makes it easier for people (not only women) to find a bike that fits when the individual needs those proportions. Not all of us fit in that category though.Quote:
Man bikes?
I hope that women new to the cycling world don't assume that because they are women that they should be riding a WSD-frame and should not be riding what you are calling a "man bike".
this came up in conversations where people identified their own beloved bikes as manbikes. So i don't think anyone's going to think that they HAVE to have the WSG bikes, especially when they check the prices.
Yeah... I don't much like it either. But if someone wants to describe their own bike that way, that's okay. Just don't tell me I ride a man bike. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by DeniseGoldberg
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I ride Man Bikes (my body type does not work with WSD) so hopefully women won't think they must be on WSD - I've always used the term sort as a joke; a "funny" to explain what a WSD bike is. A Man Bike obviously doesn't mean it's just for men - it's generic as opposed to bikes for women only (although I guess men can ride a WSD bike but I know no man who has ever bought one - most have girlly colors, patterns and designs).Quote:
Originally Posted by DeniseGoldberg
Do any of you out there know of a guy who bought a WSD bike? I have a guy friend with "girly" geometry (long legs, shorter torso and arms) that refuses to buy WSD - he has his bikes built custom!
I don't ride a manbike or a womanbike, I ride mybike ;)
With a wonderful granny gear!
See I call my bikes Man bikes but I had no idea it would offend anybody. I just thought it was a funny way to explain it was not a WSD frame.
Sorry if it confused or offended just blame my wacky sense of humour.
Oh yep I forgot all my bikes have a triple. The bike shop tried to talk me into a compact double on my new bike but I refused. I must admit I do like the carbon cranks that were on the double but even though my triple may not be as pretty it rocks.:)
Speaking of triples vs doubles...thread drift warning
Today I did not allow myself to use my smallest gear - 24x27, as the new bike will not go that low. I am happy to say that I was able to still spin well up the two climbs on my ride today. More importantly - no knee pain yet. :)
It was hard mentally to not downshift to that easier gear. But I do wonder how much faster I'll be able to climb with new gearing. :D
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