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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Portland , OR
    Posts
    244

    just a comment(stolen bikes)

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    Since I had my bike stolen ,I'm on various lost bike sites ,and they send me info on bikes that have been stolen ,or ones that may match my description....Anyway ,this morning I got Email of the bikes that were stolen yesterday ,and one was a brand new 2007 TREK 4500 ,and the guy was at work on the Riverfront (those of you from Portland ),and watched as they took it. How awful, Maybe I was nieve before ,but there are some real bad people in this world. That POOR guy. He had just bought his new bike. I didn't realize how many bikes are stolen in a day ,and how gutsy the people are who steal them.
    On a good note...The Bike Gallery tweaked my husbands bike for me ,so I can ride while I'm waiting for my new Trek 2.1 WSD to arrive (4 weeks). WOOOOOOOOOO WHOOOOOOOO I will never let it be un attended If I can figure out how to but pictures in post Ill send pictures when I get it. ;; ).
    Suzie

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411
    Woo-HOOOO!!!!! She's riding again, didn't even skip a beat! PLUS, she's getting a NEW BIKE soon!!! Yay!!!
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Washington, D.C.
    Posts
    12
    Bravo on the upcoming new bike!

    After your experience, I was so paranoid about my bike being on my car at the shop yesterday that I took it into the waiting room with me.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    195
    One tip I learned from driving my F250 Crew Cab Diesel pickup for 100,000 miles, if you have something on the back of your car (or in the bed of a really big truck) back into whereever you park. Back close enough to a wall or car behind you so the tail gate can't be opened or a bike can't be easily removed from a rear rack.

    Another car can leave so that's why you should try and back it all the way up against a wall, post, etc. Won't make the bike impossible to steal but makes it a less easy target.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Paradise
    Posts
    696
    oh yeh - post pics.... you must be so excited!
    ~Petra~
    Bianchiste TE Girls

    flectere si nequeo superos, Achaeronta movebo

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    One tip I learned from driving my F250 Crew Cab Diesel pickup for 100,000 miles, if you have something on the back of your car (or in the bed of a really big truck) back into whereever you park. Back close enough to a wall or car behind you so the tail gate can't be opened or a bike can't be easily removed from a rear rack.
    Doesn't anyone else lock their bike to the rack? I have a rack that folds down and I run a cable through the bikes and attach the cable plus lock to the rack in a convenient hole. I also lock the rack to the hitch with a hitch pin lock. I know there are racks that hang off the back with straps and can't be locked onto the vehicle...but you could at least lock the bike to the rack and slow up the theives that way.

    Karen

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Portland , OR
    Posts
    244

    locks

    I have the rack that comes down ,and I ran a kryptonite cable through the bike and they just snipped it in half,and took the bike.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    195
    Yeah, my comment assumed that a person would only leave a bike on a car rack while locked. Locks don't take much to foil, but the physical difficulty of getting the proper leverage, and room to actually remove the bike would be an additional deterent.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    830
    Quote Originally Posted by suzieqtwa View Post
    I have the rack that comes down ,and I ran a kryptonite cable through the bike and they just snipped it in half,and took the bike.
    WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE WHO WALK AROUND WITH CUTTERS!!!!! And what truly amazes me is that nobody ever catches them in the act? I don't buy it. They just don't want to "get involved." I saw a show on tv about a guy stealing bikes. They showed him stealing them and there were all these people just walking by, looking at him but not saying a thing. So sad.........
    As we must account for every idle word, so must we account for every idle silence." ~Benjamin Franklin

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Ontario
    Posts
    178
    I keep my bicycle not only in my house, but in my room--my locked door is harder to get through than the front door, and my student housing is such a crack shack I'm thinking and thief crazy enough to think there might be anything valuable in here would give up shortly after they fell through the hole at the top of the stairs.

    If the bike's in my van, I cover it with a blanket.

    If for some reason I take it to campus, it enters every classroom with me, and you'd better bet I drag that thing into the bathroom, too!

    Sucks that you have to be so paranoid... I've had a bike stolen before and it's just terrible. I was a kid and it was my only way to get to school.

    The bike I actually commute with is probably worth about $10. I don't even lock it half the time, half-hoping someone WILL take it off my hands--but then I remember I paid a good $20 for the fenders and try to hold onto it.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    pleasant hill, ca
    Posts
    52
    [QUOTE=run it, ride it;140876]
    If for some reason I take it to campus, it enters every classroom with me, and you'd better bet I drag that thing into the bathroom, too!
    QUOTE]

    i thought i was the only one at school dragging their bike into the bathroom as a girl leaving gives me a sneer...

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Western Massachusetts
    Posts
    352
    In the spring of 2005 I came home from work and found my mountain bike out in my back yard, sans the two Kryptonite locks I kept on it in our apartment building's storage area. I was furious. Turns out my then cheesy-butt landlord had allowed his even cheesier-butt handyman/slacker buddy to "borrow" it and he used bolt cutters to cut the locks. He "replaced" my lock with an enormous, rusted chain & padlock, which was wrapped around the seat stem (I guess he didn't take into account that I could flip the lever under the seat, remove it and the offending chain). I don't live in one of the better neighborhoods and nobody in their right mind would leave a bike out in the open like that. I'm lucky & grateful that it wasn't stolen. Despite the fact that I had had knee surgery just days earlier, I ended up having to haul the bike up to my second floor apartment while trying to balance on crutches.

    Why, yes, I am still peaved about that.
    Last edited by nancielle; 11-06-2006 at 10:19 AM. Reason: Proofreading is your friend.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Gaithersburg, MD
    Posts
    24

    stolen bikes...

    Whatever happened to the days when you didn't even need to lock your doors at home???? I now have such distrust in people, that when I use a public facility (yes, bathroom) during my rides, I take my bike in with me if it's not being occupied by others.
    Lynda

    Stay flexible, and you won't get bent out of shape.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Portland , OR
    Posts
    244
    This weekend I was riding, (my husbands bike I had adjusted for me) ,and I stopped at a Porta potty I saw in a industrial area. I was so nervous about leaving it alone ,even though there was no one around ,I opened the door slightly and had one hand on the handle bar as I was using the bathroom. Sad HUH!!!! I kept thinking about the girl who wrote she stopped at a friends to fill a water bottle for just a couple of minutes,and came back and her bike was gone. I should be getting my new road bike in a week or so ,and it will never leave my site. My husband asked me what kind of lock I would be getting this time. Heck ,I don't think it will ever be left alone to even need a lock.
    Suzie

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Looking at all the love there that's sleeping
    Posts
    4,171
    Quote Originally Posted by suzieqtwa View Post
    This weekend I was riding, (my husbands bike I had adjusted for me) ,and I stopped at a Porta potty I saw in a industrial area. I was so nervous about leaving it alone ,even though there was no one around ,I opened the door slightly and had one hand on the handle bar as I was using the bathroom. Sad HUH!!!! I kept thinking about the girl who wrote she stopped at a friends to fill a water bottle for just a couple of minutes,and came back and her bike was gone. I should be getting my new road bike in a week or so ,and it will never leave my site. My husband asked me what kind of lock I would be getting this time. Heck ,I don't think it will ever be left alone to even need a lock.
    Suzie
    When in that situation (or, when I wanted to pop into a store in the middle of nowhere), I've actually removed the front wheel, and carried the wheel in with me, and/or used my helmet strap to "lock" up the bike's rear wheel. Yeah, it's not super safe, but it just might delay someone long enough so they're aren't about to ride off with it.

 

 

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