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Results 1 to 15 of 58

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Champaign, Illinois
    Posts
    63
    In January I bought my Trek 7100 Hybrid. I hadn't had a bike since my cousin's hand-me-down Schwinn when I was a kid (coaster bike with balloon tires). At 54 I wasn't ready for a road bike. I didn't ride much until the end of July when I finally got a bike rack and could drive to rides (I know that sounds weird, sorry). I have put over 300 miles on the bike in 5 weeks. So next year I will, at 55, buy a road bike. I am looking at the Trek Pilot 2.1.

    If my husband decides to buy a bike next year, we can ride around town on hybrids and I can ride with our local club on the road bike.
    You should never stop learning: :

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    CT Shoreline
    Posts
    17
    I've been thinking about this thread ever since I joined (maybe a week ago). You know wondering, since most of our riding is on the road maybe we should go to road bikes. But then the other day we were riding (the hubby and I) and we took a detour into an old rock quarry that has a bunch of dirt roads. We rode for a couple of miles and found some really cool places. It got me to thinking that I do like the ability to ride on or off road on a wim....maybe a road bike in addition to the hybrid, now that's the ticket!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    747
    I will point out one advantage to sticking with a hybrid instead of having a specific bike dedicated to any kind of riding you might ever want to do: right now, there are five road bikes in my living room. (Plus a trainer, two repair stands, an extra wheelset, and at least a dozen discarded saddles.) There are two more broken road bikes downstairs, plus a couple of mountain bikes and two townies.

    We had friends in town yesterday and we had to meet them at a restaurant because how do you invite people over when the bikes are blocking all the sofas? My husband keeps stacking bikes in front of the dogs' dishes, and the poor dogs know how much trouble they'll be in if they knock over a bike, so they just quietly starve. If we each just had a hybrid, the bikes could live in the basement and I could have a real house again.

    I need to build this man a garage.

    Pooks, I think that if you get to the point where you either wish you could ride faster/longer and you feel like your bike is holding you back, or find yourself avoiding rough trails just because your bike won't handle them, that is the point where you should consider adding another type of bike. Sometimes you will encounter snobbiness about hybrids, and I think it's a little unfair. When I bought mine, I had no idea what kind of riding I might want to do, so a hybrid was a good choice for me, and if I had chosen a better one I might have kept riding it forever. But even so, I had friends who were really obnoxious about my bike, who were openly snobby about it, like it wasn't a real bike. Those guys have $4,000 road bikes but they drive to places that are five blocks away. I don't think bike snobs are the people who get to decide what constitutes "real" riding!
    Last edited by xeney; 09-04-2006 at 07:52 AM.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by xeney
    I will point out one advantage to sticking with a hybrid instead of having a specific bike dedicated to any kind of riding you might ever want to do: right now, there are five road bikes in my living room. (Plus a trainer, two repair stands, an extra wheelset, and at least a dozen discarded saddles.) There are two more broken road bikes downstairs, plus a couple of mountain bikes and two townies.

    We had friends in town yesterday and we had to meet them at a restaurant because how do you invite people over when the bikes are blocking all the sofas? My husband keeps stacking bikes in front of the dogs' dishes, and the poor dogs know how much trouble they'll be in if they knock over a bike, so they just quietly starve. If we each just had a hybrid, the bikes could live in the basement and I could have a real house again.

    I need to build this man a garage.

    Pooks, I think that if you get to the point where you either wish you could ride faster/longer and you feel like your bike is holding you back, or find yourself avoiding rough trails just because your bike won't handle them, that is the point where you should consider adding another type of bike. Sometimes you will encounter snobbiness about hybrids, and I think it's a little unfair. When I bought mine, I had no idea what kind of riding I might want to do, so a hybrid was a good choice for me, and if I had chosen a better one I might have kept riding it forever. But even so, I had friends who were really obnoxious about my bike, who were openly snobby about it, like it wasn't a real bike. Those guys have $4,000 road bikes but they drive to places that are five blocks away. I don't think bike snobs are the people who get to decide what constitutes "real" riding!
    Boy,, Xeney
    you have a good point. I have just gotten my Bianchi, and bought fenders for it. My husband says; no, no, you need to use your (old) hybrid for your winter riding. I just want to have ONE BIKE! Think of all the gear I wouldn't
    have to buy if it was on just one bike.
    And yes, space. My husband talks with great enthusiasm of many ideas he has for the garage. The trouble is, IT IS FILLED with bikes!! (my sons each have 2 or 3 bikes too)
    Just one bike, a fine hybrid.
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Pacific Northwest
    Posts
    3,436
    Mimitabby, why can't you ride your Bianchi through the winter?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by salsabike
    Mimitabby, why can't you ride your Bianchi through the winter?
    I can Salsabarb; DH just didn't want me weighing it down with fenders.
    TOO LATE I ALREADY BOUGHT YELLOW ONES!!
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Pacific Northwest
    Posts
    3,436
    I expect the Bianchi will look very cool with its yellow fenders, and will work just fine for you all through the winter! Looking forward to seeing it.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Dallas
    Posts
    1,532
    Quote Originally Posted by xeney

    Pooks, I think that if you get to the point where you either wish you could ride faster/longer and you feel like your bike is holding you back, or find yourself avoiding rough trails just because your bike won't handle them, that is the point where you should consider adding another type of bike. Sometimes you will encounter snobbiness about hybrids, and I think it's a little unfair. When I bought mine, I had no idea what kind of riding I might want to do, so a hybrid was a good choice for me, and if I had chosen a better one I might have kept riding it forever. But even so, I had friends who were really obnoxious about my bike, who were openly snobby about it, like it wasn't a real bike. Those guys have $4,000 road bikes but they drive to places that are five blocks away. I don't think bike snobs are the people who get to decide what constitutes "real" riding!
    Our hybrids are in the living room. (The garage is filled with 20 years of other stuff, sigh.)

    I bought the hybrid for the same reason as you, more or less. I knew nothing about the different bikes (still don't -- I mean what is the difference between urban, comfort and hybrid -- I thought there were three kinds -- mountain, road and hybrid). We're taking ours camping this fall and that's where I'll figure out whether we really will use them on dirt; around here there isn't any, except for the mud in the street I had to ride through a few days ago.

    I have been dissatisfied with m bike almost since I got it, because of us ordering them online and not getting fitted to them. I have no idea what is right, how they're supposed to feel. A lot of guys on bikejournal talked shaft drives down, said that they were too heavy, etc. And I knew how much trouble I was having riding -- and my bike weight about 34 pounds, the tires aren't slicks or skinny and I kept thinking, I'm riding on streets, why am I making this so hard?

    So the idea of getting a lighter, faster bike was very appealing.

    Plus, I kept thinking about the LIVESTRONG we're riding in Austin and how that 40 miles would be easier on a road bike, so why do I have this hybrid, and this shaft drive?

    HOWEVER -- while I still foresee wanting a road bike at some point in the future, as I get stronger and we approach cooler temps I realize that my struggle with riding has been as much about my lack of conditioning and inability to handle heat as it was about the bike -- actually more. Plus I'm really glad I'm not having to deal with chains and grease and stuff. The bike cost $600 which I now realize is entry-level, not expensive, and I'm coming around to the attitude that this is a pretty nice way to start riding for somebody like me with no knowledge of gears, chains, bikes, etc.

    Thanks for the advice, Xeney -- I see exactly what you're saying, and am beginning to feel like even though I would like a road bike eventually, I'm now seeing that as something in the future, not as immediate as I was feeling even two weeks ago.

    Once I get a road bike, I'll probably kit out the hybrid to be really more useful for shopping trips, etc.

    Oh, forgot to say -- there are no bike snobs in my circle of friends. The only guy who cycles regularly rides 35-40 miles at a time, but feels like he spent a lot when he recently spent $800 on a bike.

    Other than him, the others are amazed that we ride any distance that can be calculated in miles rather than blocks. (Of course, as out of shape as I am, I sometimes am amazed at the same thing.)

    Edited to add: Well duh, maybe some of my doubts about the shaft drive were due to bike snobs. Heh.
    Last edited by pooks; 09-04-2006 at 09:22 AM.

    “Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Champaign, Illinois
    Posts
    63
    I would not discourage anyone from getting a hybrid. I managed a long ride with hills, using mine yesterday. But for long rides you do work harder than riders using lighter bikes. You can put on thinner tires for longer rides and that will help.

    No one has made fun of my bike. In fact, I get a lot of positive feedback on riding with the hybrid. I think bike choice is very personal and depends on where and how far you want to ride.
    You should never stop learning: :

 

 

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