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Date: 19 Oct 2007 22:38:39
From: Gooserider
Subject: Thinking about a basket bike
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I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would make shopping easier. The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 or 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit expensive for its intended purpose. Gary Fisher showed the Simple City at Trek World ( http://arsbars.com/?p=203 ). Looks great, and they claim the geometry makes it comfortable and easy to ride with a full load. Low trail? Plus the optional basket looks really strong and is designed for the bike. No price is set yet, but several sites say $400 for the 3 speed and $800 for the 8 speed, with the basket being optional. Still, even if the basket is a hundred bucks that's cheaper than the Kogswell. BUT---Fisher showed the Simple City with a coaster brake at Trek World, and I don't like the idea of a coaster brake on a bike I ride in traffic. It does have a front caliper brake, but the coaster makes starting a hassle, b/c you can't just spin the cranks to get the pedal in a starting position. Schwinn has introduced the Coffee for the 2008 model year. It's a re-imagining of classic Schwinn commuter type bikes from the 60s. http://www.schwinnbikes.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=1027 Looks sturdy and stylish, plus it will look like an old bike so may keep thieves from being interested, not that I live in an area with any bike theft. But I'd have to rig up the big Wald. I think I'll probably go with the Fisher, even if it has a coaster brake. I've written the folks at Gary Fisher a letter asking them to spec the Simple City with two caliper or canti brakes, but we'll see what happens.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:27:24
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 20, 9:18 am, Ozark Bicycle <bicycleatel...@ozarkbicycleservice.com > wrote: > > IMO, the front basket is useful for the space-consuming yet sorta > lightweight stuff like produce, bread, etc. The heavy stuff goes in > the rear baskets. Also, the front basket is great for those "less than > 10 items"quicky trips without having to unfold the rear baskets. A > stretchy net type thing is a big help on a front basket, too. I'm revisiting the front load concept with that little front Nashbar rack I got. I keep a folded brown bag under the bungee--which is a neater way for potential aggregation of accumulated objects than a basket--and it doesn't invite you to overload it. If your bread gets crushed by the bungee--you're not buying crusty enough bread!
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:18:43
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 20, 9:10 am, landotter <landot...@gmail.com > wrote: > On Oct 19, 9:38 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com> wrote: > > > > > I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use > > a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An > > Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike > > seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would > > make shopping easier. > > > The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 or > > 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit > > expensive for its intended purpose. > > > Gary Fisher showed the Simple City at Trek World (http://arsbars.com/?p=203). Looks great, and they claim the geometry makes > > it comfortable and easy to ride with a full load. Low trail? Plus the > > optional basket looks really strong and is designed for the bike. No price > > is set yet, but several sites say $400 for the 3 speed and $800 for the 8 > > speed, with the basket being optional. Still, even if the basket is a > > hundred bucks that's cheaper than the Kogswell. BUT---Fisher showed the > > Simple City with a coaster brake at Trek World, and I don't like the idea of > > a coaster brake on a bike I ride in traffic. It does have a front caliper > > brake, but the coaster makes starting a hassle, b/c you can't just spin the > > cranks to get the pedal in a starting position. > > > Schwinn has introduced the Coffee for the 2008 model year. It's a > > re-imagining of classic Schwinn commuter type bikes from the 60s.http://www.schwinnbikes.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=1027 > > Good luck sourcing a "Coffee" or "Cream" till next year. They were two > of the biggest hits at interbike according to Scott and Dave down at > the shop. Which is terribly amusing as though they, yes, look like a > certain era when Schwinn filtered design through Raleigh--they > basically look like any standard north European bike. It's a design > that's been more or less standard for a hundred years--but upon the > introduction of motorbikes in America, and subsequent aping in bicycle > form by the fake tanked 'merican "cruiser" bike--it's a stupidly > obvious design that we only revisited in a small window of time > stateside, when Schwinn decided to do sensible British style. > > Yes the "Coffee" is what a standard bike should be shaped like--not > like a pathetic NEXT double boinger that the day laborers pollute my > local vistas with. I guess that's why the Interbike crowd was so > excited--it's like they'd been forced for fifty years to drink Folgers > from a cup with a handle on the bottom--and now somebody reintroduces > the Side-Handle Mug (tm) and the crowd goes wild! > > Anyways, if ya wanna haul--get any old bike and put dual Wald paperboy > baskets on the rear. You can put the front basket on as well--but I > find that more than 7-8kg up high like that makes the steering pretty > nasty. IMO, the front basket is useful for the space-consuming yet sorta lightweight stuff like produce, bread, etc. The heavy stuff goes in the rear baskets. Also, the front basket is great for those "less than 10 items"quicky trips without having to unfold the rear baskets. A stretchy net type thing is a big help on a front basket, too.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:14:54
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 20, 8:51 am, Ozark Bicycle <bicycleatel...@ozarkbicycleservice.com > wrote: > On Oct 20, 8:39 am, cmcanulty <cmcanu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I use 2 townie baskets on rear rack from Nashbar, each hold a paper > > grocery bag and they fold flat when empty > > IMO, that arrangement, in concert with one of those easily detachable > front baskets from Wald, etc. (which can be taken off the bike and > used for shopping in a farmers market, etc.), is just about perfect > for a shopping/errand bike. Sub Wald folding baskets and it's optimum. The cloth baskets are way too floppy for my tastes.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:10:05
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 19, 9:38 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use > a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An > Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike > seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would > make shopping easier. > > The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 or > 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit > expensive for its intended purpose. > > Gary Fisher showed the Simple City at Trek World (http://arsbars.com/?p=203). Looks great, and they claim the geometry makes > it comfortable and easy to ride with a full load. Low trail? Plus the > optional basket looks really strong and is designed for the bike. No price > is set yet, but several sites say $400 for the 3 speed and $800 for the 8 > speed, with the basket being optional. Still, even if the basket is a > hundred bucks that's cheaper than the Kogswell. BUT---Fisher showed the > Simple City with a coaster brake at Trek World, and I don't like the idea of > a coaster brake on a bike I ride in traffic. It does have a front caliper > brake, but the coaster makes starting a hassle, b/c you can't just spin the > cranks to get the pedal in a starting position. > > Schwinn has introduced the Coffee for the 2008 model year. It's a > re-imagining of classic Schwinn commuter type bikes from the 60s.http://www.schwinnbikes.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=1027 Good luck sourcing a "Coffee" or "Cream" till next year. They were two of the biggest hits at interbike according to Scott and Dave down at the shop. Which is terribly amusing as though they, yes, look like a certain era when Schwinn filtered design through Raleigh--they basically look like any standard north European bike. It's a design that's been more or less standard for a hundred years--but upon the introduction of motorbikes in America, and subsequent aping in bicycle form by the fake tanked 'merican "cruiser" bike--it's a stupidly obvious design that we only revisited in a small window of time stateside, when Schwinn decided to do sensible British style. Yes the "Coffee" is what a standard bike should be shaped like--not like a pathetic NEXT double boinger that the day laborers pollute my local vistas with. I guess that's why the Interbike crowd was so excited--it's like they'd been forced for fifty years to drink Folgers from a cup with a handle on the bottom--and now somebody reintroduces the Side-Handle Mug (tm) and the crowd goes wild! Anyways, if ya wanna haul--get any old bike and put dual Wald paperboy baskets on the rear. You can put the front basket on as well--but I find that more than 7-8kg up high like that makes the steering pretty nasty.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 06:51:24
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 20, 8:39 am, cmcanulty <cmcanu...@gmail.com > wrote: > I use 2 townie baskets on rear rack from Nashbar, each hold a paper > grocery bag and they fold flat when empty IMO, that arrangement, in concert with one of those easily detachable front baskets from Wald, etc. (which can be taken off the bike and used for shopping in a farmers market, etc.), is just about perfect for a shopping/errand bike.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 13:39:24
From: cmcanulty
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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I use 2 townie baskets on rear rack from Nashbar, each hold a paper grocery bag and they fold flat when empty
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:55:40
From: Tom Sherman
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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Gooserider wrote: > I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use > a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An > Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike > seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would > make shopping easier.... How about a genuine English trades bike: <http://www.pashley.co.uk/products/delibike.html >? You could paint "Gooserider" on the sign space. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia Beer - It's not just for breakfast anymore!
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 07:14:49
From: Ron Hardin
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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A lot of mass far from the steering axis makes the bike hard to control, on the front. So it would be pretty unpleasant if you loaded it up. Low front panniers, more aligned with the steering axis, would give you a larger front load capability. Check out the Nashbar wicker bike basket, which works fine, and carries about all the mass you'd want to put on the front... Hmm.. I don't see the wicker one any longer. Never mind. Glad I bought three while they had them. A Delta Mega Rack on the rear is good for 40 pounds. Put a milk crate on it (supported when it hangs off the back by a strip of scrap wood). -- rhhardin@mindspring.com On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 08:17:33
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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"Ron Hardin" <rhhardin@mindspring.com > wrote in message news:4719E329.171F@mindspring.com... >A lot of mass far from the steering axis makes the bike hard > to control, on the front. So it would be pretty unpleasant > if you loaded it up. Low front panniers, more aligned with > the steering axis, would give you a larger front load capability. > Well, that's why the Simple City and the Kogswell are in my list. The Kogswell is designed to carry heavy front loads, and all indications are the Simple City is too. My current townie is a flat bar road bike with tight road bike geometry, and I know that putting front load on it would make it squirrely. The basket appeals to me for its ease of use.
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Date: 20 Oct 2007 03:36:07
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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In article <47196a2f$0$26372$4c368faf@roadrunner.com >, "Gooserider" <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > writes: > I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use > a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An > Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike > seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would > make shopping easier. > > The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 or > 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit > expensive for its intended purpose. This magazine article might be of interest to you: http://www.momentumplanet.ca/gear/shopping-bike cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 19 Oct 2007 20:00:04
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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On Oct 19, 9:38 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I use > a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. An > Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket bike > seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would > make shopping easier. > > The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 or > 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit > expensive for its intended purpose. > > Gary Fisher showed the Simple City at Trek World (http://arsbars.com/?p=203). Looks great, and they claim the geometry makes > it comfortable and easy to ride with a full load. Low trail? Plus the > optional basket looks really strong and is designed for the bike. No price > is set yet, but several sites say $400 for the 3 speed and $800 for the 8 > speed, with the basket being optional. Still, even if the basket is a > hundred bucks that's cheaper than the Kogswell. BUT---Fisher showed the > Simple City with a coaster brake at Trek World, and I don't like the idea of > a coaster brake on a bike I ride in traffic. It does have a front caliper > brake, but the coaster makes starting a hassle, b/c you can't just spin the > cranks to get the pedal in a starting position. > > Schwinn has introduced the Coffee for the 2008 model year. It's a > re-imagining of classic Schwinn commuter type bikes from the 60s.http://www.schwinnbikes.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=1027 > Looks sturdy and stylish, plus it will look like an old bike so may keep > thieves from being interested, not that I live in an area with any bike > theft. But I'd have to rig up the big Wald. > > I think I'll probably go with the Fisher, even if it has a coaster brake. > I've written the folks at Gary Fisher a letter asking them to spec the > Simple City with two caliper or canti brakes, but we'll see what happens. Have you thought about just putting a basket on the front of your current townie/grocery bike and splitting the bigger loads front and rear? I have a front basket and twin rear folding "townie baskets" on my errand bike (an early 80s Schwinn World Sport fitted with a flat bar, fenders, kickstand, mirror, etc. etc.) and that works out great. Two or three grocery bags is handled with ease.
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Date: 19 Oct 2007 23:40:01
From: Bellsouth Ijit 2.0 - Global Warming Edition ®
Subject: Re: Thinking about a basket bike
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"Ozark Bicycle" <bicycleatelier@ozarkbicycleservice.com > wrote in message news:1192849204.077313.233310@q3g2000prf.googlegroups.com... > On Oct 19, 9:38 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> I am thinking about a basketed bike for use as a townie/grocery bike. I >> use >> a flat bar road bike with rear panniers now, but my capacity is limited. >> An >> Xtracycle would be great but my storage space is limited, so a basket >> bike >> seems good. Being able to carry 2 or three bags of groceries easily would >> make shopping easier. >> >> The first thing that comes to mind is to build up a Kogswell P/R with a 3 >> or >> 8 speed hub and a big Wald basket on a front rack, but that's a bit >> expensive for its intended purpose. >> >> Gary Fisher showed the Simple City at Trek World >> (http://arsbars.com/?p=203). Looks great, and they claim the geometry >> makes >> it comfortable and easy to ride with a full load. Low trail? Plus the >> optional basket looks really strong and is designed for the bike. No >> price >> is set yet, but several sites say $400 for the 3 speed and $800 for the 8 >> speed, with the basket being optional. Still, even if the basket is a >> hundred bucks that's cheaper than the Kogswell. BUT---Fisher showed the >> Simple City with a coaster brake at Trek World, and I don't like the idea >> of >> a coaster brake on a bike I ride in traffic. It does have a front caliper >> brake, but the coaster makes starting a hassle, b/c you can't just spin >> the >> cranks to get the pedal in a starting position. >> >> Schwinn has introduced the Coffee for the 2008 model year. It's a >> re-imagining of classic Schwinn commuter type bikes from the >> 60s.http://www.schwinnbikes.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=1027 >> Looks sturdy and stylish, plus it will look like an old bike so may keep >> thieves from being interested, not that I live in an area with any bike >> theft. But I'd have to rig up the big Wald. >> >> I think I'll probably go with the Fisher, even if it has a coaster brake. >> I've written the folks at Gary Fisher a letter asking them to spec the >> Simple City with two caliper or canti brakes, but we'll see what happens. > > Have you thought about just putting a basket on the front of your > current townie/grocery bike and splitting the bigger loads front and > rear? I have a front basket and twin rear folding "townie baskets" on > my errand bike (an early 80s Schwinn World Sport fitted with a flat > bar, fenders, kickstand, mirror, etc. etc.) and that works out great. > Two or three grocery bags is handled with ease. > > Which is what I would do also, and have done. Slapped a front basket and a rear rack with a large plastic milk crate ziptied to the rack on an old steel Trek hybrid for runs to farmer's market and food co-op. Buying a whole new bike as a grocer seems a bit lavish, but the new commuters coming out of the big bike companies do seem very interesting.
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