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Date: 27 Sep 2007 15:08:39
From: Matt O'Toole
Subject: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers This proves what can happen when fresh, smart people like Ms. Yeager are put in charge of marketing, and allowed to try something different than the same tired old formulas (More carbon! Even fewer spokes!). This summer I spent 2.5 weeks in southern CA, where beach cruisers are back with a vengeance. Everyone is riding, and teenagers are again using bikes as their preferred mode of transportation. There seem to be 3x as many bike shops as 5 years ago, most of them selling beach cruisers and a few town/city bikes. Text of the article is below, for the Usenet archives, in case Wired eventually makes it unavailable. Matt O. *** "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show --LAS VEGAS -- Some people believe that, right now, a quiet revolution is taking place. In cities like London, San Francisco, Boston and New York, the ranks of bicycle riders are swelling with the rise of a new breed: the urban biker. Traffic snarls, soaring gas prices and worries about global warming have prompted a big boost in cycling, affecting even places like Los Angeles -- America's freeway capital -- that have traditionally given bicycles the cold shoulder. "What's really happened in the past year is a cultural shift," says Monica Howe, 31-year-old outreach coordinator for the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition. At Interbike 2007, the bicycle industry's giant annual trade show, the shift toward the urban rider is loudly evident. Fancy road and mountain bikes are clearly no longer king of the roost -- or road. It's the scads of fixed-gear, town, single-speed and other urban bicycles that are drawing the crowds. The rise of the urban biker is reflected in Specialized's 2008 catalog, which lists 34 different models of city bike to choose from. The company is even rolling out six different versions of its ultrapopular single-speed, fixed-gear Langster. Each model is named after a city that's on the urban biker radar: the four cities named above, plus Chicago and Seattle. The New York Langster has narrow handlebars for speeding through ranks of slow-moving cars, while the Seattle model is equipped with fenders. "People really gravitated toward bikes with that urban feel," says Travis Widder, an associate production manager at Specialized. "We wanted to give nods toward cities where that bike sold well, where people really embraced that category." Interbike 2007 is a lot less sporty than years past. Clothing manufacturers have more messenger bags on show. Jerseys and shorts are more urban, less multi-colored lycra. Swobo, the trendy clothing maker, recently launched its first line of three city bikes, and is just one of several companies showing new urban rides. If anyone gave birth to the urban biker movement, it's probably Sky Yaeger, Swobo's managing director. Yaeger was responsible for designing a slew of bikes during her time as production manager at famed Italian manufacturer Bianchi. Some of her designs, like the fixed-gear Pista, have been elevated to cult status. Thanks to the bike's simplicity, it became the favored transport of urbanites like skaters and surfers. "What happened is we crossed over the bike culture into skate, surf," she says. "The kids that are doing it now wouldn't have bought a bike five years ago. That's a huge delight to me -- because they're on bikes." In L.A., the bike revolution is helped by shops like the grassroots Bicycle Kitchen. "It makes it easy for anyone to put together a bike cheap," says Howe. "And it made it hip, which can't hurt." Volunteers at the Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective, a nonprofit that provides tools and training for riders to maintain their bikes, have experienced a huge bump in visitors. "It's gotten out of hand," says Michael Wise, the collective's treasurer. "We don't have enough volunteers to help the people coming in looking." San Francisco's trendy Mission District is a hotbed of bicycle activity. A bicycle lane running the length of Valencia Street is a major artery, as hipsters in hoodies and precisely rolled, tight-fitting jeans flow along the street. At Valencia Cyclery, which is often proclaimed the city's best bike store, sales associate Babs Brockaway says she's seen the number of customers leaving with shiny new fixed-gear ("fixie") and single-speed bikes skyrocket. The store stocks five or six choices, up from a single model two years ago. The simplicity appeals to neophyte riders overwhelmed by too much technology. "It's simple: You just pedal," she says. "This is shocking, but there are people who buy bikes with gears, who don't shift gears." Just across from Valencia Cyclery is Ritual Coffee Roasters, a popular coffeehouse often stuffed full of young hipsters glued to their MacBooks. It's also a favorite haunt of the urban biker. Outside, Matt McDonald, a 24-year-old photographer from Boston, talks about his fixie. "My friends in Boston were getting into these bikes, and it was just sort of appealing to me. It's like there's nothing to worry about, and they're just a blast to ride." ***
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Date: 02 Oct 2007 17:42:14
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Oct 2, 11:23 am, Paul O <first.d.l...@company.com > wrote: > frkry...@gmail.com wrote: > > On Oct 1, 5:16 pm, Paul O <first.d.l...@company.com> wrote: > > >> I miss my trusty old Staedtler-Mars electric eraser. I wonder where it > >> is now? > > > Well, I actually have one. NOS. Not sure about the brand, though. > > > If you're _really_ interested, let me know. > > > - Frank Krygowski > > Frank, > Nostalgia can be a funny thing. I remember how well my old electric > eraser worked. It did a quick, clean, and thorough job at erasing lines > on mylar and vellum. But the overall activity for which it was designed > to do was a PITA. > > A couple of years after I moved to the drawing board, my company > purchased a bunch of PC workstations and a site license for an early DOS > version of AutoCAD (AutoCAD 5?). Before long, all of my drafting tools > were gathering dust in the bottom of a desk drawer and my drafting board > became a big horizontal surface to hold print-outs, books, and catalogs. > The simple truth was that preparing drawings with a CAD program was much > easier, faster, and more accurate than doing it by hand. And I could > erase hundreds of lines with an "E" command and a few mouse clicks. > > That job ended and I moved on. I still have some of my drafting tools > but I never use them. And, I still use AutoCAD a fair amount (I'm up to > release 2008 now). So I probably would never use my old Staedtler-Mars > eraser even if I still had it. > > Thanks, but some things are better left in the past... Yep. I understand completely. Sometimes nostalgia isn't all it's cut out to be. Honestly, the real reason I have that electric eraser is that it (and a dozen clones) were being thrown out because CAD had made them obsolete. I thought: "Hmm. Electric motor, collet chuck - that might come in handy for _something_!" But it's languished in a drawer unused ever since. However, I note that for small, one-off drawings, I'm still faster drawing with pencil and paper than I am with AutoCAD or its competitors! - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 20:20:44
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Oct 1, 5:16 pm, Paul O <first.d.l...@company.com > wrote: > > > I miss my trusty old Staedtler-Mars electric eraser. I wonder where it > is now? Well, I actually have one. NOS. Not sure about the brand, though. If you're _really_ interested, let me know. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 02 Oct 2007 11:23:55
From: Paul O
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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frkrygow@gmail.com wrote: > On Oct 1, 5:16 pm, Paul O <first.d.l...@company.com> wrote: >> >> I miss my trusty old Staedtler-Mars electric eraser. I wonder where it >> is now? > > Well, I actually have one. NOS. Not sure about the brand, though. > > If you're _really_ interested, let me know. > > - Frank Krygowski > Frank, Nostalgia can be a funny thing. I remember how well my old electric eraser worked. It did a quick, clean, and thorough job at erasing lines on mylar and vellum. But the overall activity for which it was designed to do was a PITA. A couple of years after I moved to the drawing board, my company purchased a bunch of PC workstations and a site license for an early DOS version of AutoCAD (AutoCAD 5?). Before long, all of my drafting tools were gathering dust in the bottom of a desk drawer and my drafting board became a big horizontal surface to hold print-outs, books, and catalogs. The simple truth was that preparing drawings with a CAD program was much easier, faster, and more accurate than doing it by hand. And I could erase hundreds of lines with an "E" command and a few mouse clicks. That job ended and I moved on. I still have some of my drafting tools but I never use them. And, I still use AutoCAD a fair amount (I'm up to release 2008 now). So I probably would never use my old Staedtler-Mars eraser even if I still had it. Thanks, but some things are better left in the past... -- Paul D Oosterhout I work for SAIC (but I don't speak for SAIC)
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 19:58:55
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Paul O wrote: > > Manual chokes are very practical - if you have a carburetor. > I'll stick with my modern, more reliable fuel-injected engine. Thank you > very much. ;-) On a fuel injected engine, it's called a "fast idle knob" and it's just about as useful. Many diesel trucks still have them. Chalo
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 02:55:42
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46ff2358$0$26410$88260bb3@free.teranews.com >, "Tom \"Johnny Sunset\" Sherman" <sunsetss0003@iinvalid.com > writes: > Andrew Muzi mused: >>> >> Chalo wrote: >>> They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes >>> *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, >>> this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a >>> combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) >> >> Or just PCP and toluene?... > > Local knowledge? Around here, and especially at this time of year, "local knowledge" is about the best places in which to harvest mushrooms. And no, I'm not even gonna drop any hints. Mushroom-pickin' places are sacrosanct, 'n that's that. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 08:07:41
From: Tom \Johnny Sunset\ Sherman
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tom Keats wrote: > In article <46ff2358$0$26410$88260bb3@free.teranews.com>, > "Tom \"Johnny Sunset\" Sherman" <sunsetss0003@iinvalid.com> writes: >> Andrew Muzi mused: >>> Chalo wrote: >>>> They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes >>>> *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, >>>> this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a >>>> combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) >>> Or just PCP and toluene?... >> Local knowledge? > > Around here, and especially at this time of year, > "local knowledge" is about the best places in which > to harvest mushrooms. > > And no, I'm not even gonna drop any hints. > Mushroom-pickin' places are sacrosanct, > 'n that's that. Well, according to Mapquest it is 5½ miles from Andrew's shop to Pacific Cycles HQ (with the "avoid highways" option). -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia A Real Cyclist [TM] keeps at least one bicycle in the bedroom. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 18:30:44
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 29, 2:13 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > > I'm sure Frank Krygowski will chime in---but more lumens are better. Well, I don't want to disappoint you! ;-) But "more lumens are better" is a much too simplistic way of evaluating a headlight. Where you put those lumens is at least as important. I learned that after a friend bought a fairly expensive rechargeable halogen headlight set that was nowhere near as useful as my "nothing special" generator set. Others have talked of riding Paris-Brest-Paris using their SON/Lumotec sets and having the "rechargeable" brigade ride behind them, because they could see better by the SON's light. > The only case in which > dynamo lights would be superior, in my mind, is touring. Otherwise, a good > LED rechargeable system is going to give you more light. Now, if I was > touring, or going to be places without access to electricity for long > stretches, then I'd run the dynamo. I agree, I wouldn't tour without a dynamo light. (I made that mistake once or twice, and won't repeat it.) But for me, the dynamo is absolutely the most practical electricity source for a transportational bike like those being discussed. Would you really put up a rechargeable headlight system in any other transportation vehicle? "Sorry, honey, we'll have to walk home from the movie. I forgot to recharge my car's headlights." - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 22:31:28
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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<frkrygow@gmail.com > wrote in message news:1191115844.518640.197920@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com... > On Sep 29, 2:13 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> >> I'm sure Frank Krygowski will chime in---but more lumens are better. > > Well, I don't want to disappoint you! ;-) > > But "more lumens are better" is a much too simplistic way of > evaluating a headlight. Where you put those lumens is at least as > important. I learned that after a friend bought a fairly expensive > rechargeable halogen headlight set that was nowhere near as useful as > my "nothing special" generator set. > > Others have talked of riding Paris-Brest-Paris using their SON/Lumotec > sets and having the "rechargeable" brigade ride behind them, because > they could see better by the SON's light. > >> The only case in which >> dynamo lights would be superior, in my mind, is touring. Otherwise, a >> good >> LED rechargeable system is going to give you more light. Now, if I was >> touring, or going to be places without access to electricity for long >> stretches, then I'd run the dynamo. > > I agree, I wouldn't tour without a dynamo light. (I made that mistake > once or twice, and won't repeat it.) But for me, the dynamo is > absolutely the most practical electricity source for a > transportational bike like those being discussed. > > Would you really put up a rechargeable headlight system in any other > transportation vehicle? "Sorry, honey, we'll have to walk home from > the movie. I forgot to recharge my car's headlights." > > - Frank Krygowski That's why you always carry a spare set. I carry lithium AAs in my pack as backup, too. I will never be more than an hour's ride from home at night---on my commute, that is. Hey, maybe I'm simplistic, but I want to be as close to a motor vehicle's headlight/taillight as possible. The B&M Big Bang looks like the ultimate, but it's way too expensive and it looks like it weighs a ton. But, when I set up my touring bike---Schmidt SON and Lumotecs. Definitely.
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 16:34:20
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <gTuLi.3314$6p6.3298@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net >, "Mike Jacoubowsky" <mikej1@ix.netcom.com > writes: >> At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. > > You can make fun of cup holders all you want, Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, electric card shufflers, etc. But Western Civilization really hit the skids with the advent of cable TV and handheld remote controls, so people could watch such pap as infomercials about auto-shifting bicycles. I /won't/ make fun of no-draft windows on cars, nor manual chokes. Those relics were actually practical. > but people sometimes decide > with $23k car to buy based on how many cupholders it has. They're nutz. We're all nutz. I'm inclined to buy the brand that has a picture of a lion or tiger or other feline on the packaging. How I sorely miss Standard Lager[*]! How I luv Tiger Sauce[tm]. How I'm now considering doing a run to the tobacconist's for a tin of Panter cigarellos, and maybe pick up a bottle of Chat Noir (both of which go quite well after a lasagna feeding frenzy.) The art of marketing is to circumvent peoples' sensibleness and appeal instead to their base instincts. The art of being a consumer is to (try to) remain sensible. Marketing/consuming is such an adversarial relationship. And there're the business folks like yourself -- clowns to the left of you, jokers to the right ... stuck in the middle of it. You have my utmost respect and my deepest condolences. Reconciling marketeering and consuming must be the most demanding art of all. > The bike industry > could do far worse than incorporate the means to easily carry your Starbucks > or Peets coffee back home. It's called a Thermos[tm]. They've been around awhile ;-) There're probably electrified/mechanised/motorized versions now. cheers, Tom [*] That stuff makes the best redeyes. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 18:45:48
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <sdnmdf.583.ln@vcn.bc.ca >, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <gTuLi.3314$6p6.3298@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net>, > "Mike Jacoubowsky" <mikej1@ix.netcom.com> writes: > >> At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. > > > > You can make fun of cup holders all you want, > > Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > electric card shufflers, etc. But Western Civilization > really hit the skids with the advent of cable TV and handheld > remote controls, so people could watch such pap as infomercials > about auto-shifting bicycles. The right electric toothbrush is a boon. I can get better results with less effort, the results measured by my dentists reports. The electric toothbrush gives me much better results, and I was doing good with the (properly chosen) manual toothbrush. I had always wanted an electric pencil sharpener, and the day I got it made me very happy. To this day using it makes me happy. Well worth it for me. -- Michael Press
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 17:16:28
From: Paul O
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Michael Press wrote: > In article <sdnmdf.583.ln@vcn.bc.ca>, > tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > >> In article <gTuLi.3314$6p6.3298@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net>, >> "Mike Jacoubowsky" <mikej1@ix.netcom.com> writes: >>>> At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. >>> You can make fun of cup holders all you want, >> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >> electric card shufflers, etc. But Western Civilization >> really hit the skids with the advent of cable TV and handheld >> remote controls, so people could watch such pap as infomercials >> about auto-shifting bicycles. > > The right electric toothbrush is a boon. I can get > better results with less effort, the results measured > by my dentists reports. The electric toothbrush gives > me much better results, and I was doing good with the > (properly chosen) manual toothbrush. > > I had always wanted an electric pencil sharpener, and > the day I got it made me very happy. To this day using > it makes me happy. Well worth it for me. > If an electric pencil sharpener makes you happy then an electric pencil eraser will bring you to a state of ecstasy. Back in the days when young dinosaurs (like myself) roamed the earth, I had a job working as a mechanical technician and a machinist. I often worked closely with the designer/draftsmen and I always found it amusing that the people on the drawings boards used motorized pencil erasers. I mean, how lazy do you have to be to need a electric eraser? Later, I moved inside and became a designer/draftsman my self. I quickly found out that a draftsman (especially one who is low on the totem pole) spends more time changing and revising existing drawings than working on new drawings. That is when I learned the real value of having a good electric eraser (and an eraser shield and a rosin bag). I miss my trusty old Staedtler-Mars electric eraser. I wonder where it is now? -- Paul D Oosterhout I work for SAIC (but I don't speak for SAIC)
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 11:03:17
From: Paul O
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tom Keats wrote: <snip > > I /won't/ make fun of no-draft windows on cars, nor > manual chokes. Those relics were actually practical. > <snip > > > cheers, > Tom > Manual chokes are very practical - if you have a carburetor. I'll stick with my modern, more reliable fuel-injected engine. Thank you very much. ;-) -- Paul D Oosterhout I work for SAIC (but I don't speak for SAIC)
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 22:58:58
From: Don Wiss
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >electric card shufflers, etc. Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric knives, though I've never used one. Don <www.donwiss.com > (e-mail link at home page bottom).
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 09:33:22
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com >, Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com > wrote: > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones that > >slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make fun of > >electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, electric card > >shufflers, etc. > > Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will > do a better job then you can do by hand. I looked this up once and found that most of the research indicated that a standard Oral-B toothbrush worked as well or better than electric toothbrushes, once the test subjects were taught proper brushing technique.
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 19:16:39
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <timmcn-61C3BF.09332230092007@news.iphouse.com >, Tim McNamara <timmcn@bitstream.net > wrote: > In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com>, > Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: > > > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > > > >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones that > > >slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make fun of > > >electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, electric card > > >shufflers, etc. > > > > Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will > > do a better job then you can do by hand. > > I looked this up once and found that most of the research indicated that > a standard Oral-B toothbrush worked as well or better than electric > toothbrushes, once the test subjects were taught proper brushing > technique. Depends on the user's dedication. I am dedicated, quite good with a manual toothbrush, better with an electric; and I have my dentist's reports to work with. I used the Oral B with the thick grippy grip and the longer bristles at the far end of the brush; the best manual I could find, and I looked. The Braun electric's characteristics makes it easier to do a good job, and does a better job with equal effort. -- Michael Press
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 01:05:33
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Don Wiss wrote: > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > >> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >> electric card shufflers, etc. > > Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the > other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric > knives, though I've never used one. > > Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). Electric knives are useful when cutting up things like turkeys or large roasts. Also good for cutting homemade bread without destroying the loaf.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 05:59:07
From: Ryan Cousineau
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com >, Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com > wrote: > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > >electric card shufflers, etc. > > Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the > other two you list, is electric can openers. I suspect electric can openers have their merits in industrial settings of some sort, and I suspect that there's a surprisingly large minority of people who don't have the manual dexterity to open a can by hand. The combination of arthritis and typical grip-strength degeneration in old age must be especially potent here. Can't speak to electric backscratchers, but electric card shufflers are generally way faster than humans. even some casinos use them; I've seen table games dealt with alternating decks, where the pre-shuffled second deck pops out of a hole in the table: http://www.proshuffler.com/products.html That's being sold as a consumer version, but the physical interface is essentially what I saw mounted into the table. If there was a LED display, it was not on the table, but I suspect it was in a dealer-visible area. More importantly, electric shufflers are fast. I'm not saying we should always strive to maximize throughput in our leisure activities, but surely shuffling the cards is one of the more tedious elements of most poker nights. I recall that the first time I played solitaire on a computer, I noted that the computer-speed shuffling and dealing essentially meant the game was better than playing with real cards. That said, I won't argue with such aesthetes who like the feel of real cards in their actual hands. -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@sfu.ca http://www.wiredcola.com/ "I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 20:56:43
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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A Muzi wrote: > > Bianchi also has an internal gear bike with the wrong ends and a > tensioner for 2008. Whatever for? Why, 'urban bike' with disc brake of > course. > O tempora, O mores. I see, I guess. That seems like a reason to use sliding dropouts (with caliper tabs), not vertical ones. One of the best things about using a gearhub IMO is a tidy, trouble- free chainline with no chain dumping and no great-balls-o'-filth pulleys. Chalo
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 10:11:04
From: Jay Beattie
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 29, 8:43 am, A Muzi <a...@yellowjersey.org > wrote: > > Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > >> are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line > >> model, the World Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. > Chalo wrote: > > They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes > > *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, > > this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a > > combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) > > Or just PCP and toluene? Sky Yaeger isn't at Bianchi any longer. > Bianchi also has an internal gear bike with the wrong ends and a > tensioner for 2008. Whatever for? Why, 'urban bike' with disc brake of > course. > O tempora, O mores. Well, the frame does give you the option to change over to a conventional derailleur arrangement if you like -- and as a manufacturer, you can use the same frame for a lot of models. It looks to me like Schwinn just took a hybrid frame and hung a bunch of trick stuff on it -- going the kludge route to use the internal geared hub. At that price point, personally, I would rather have a Pilot or a Portland. -- Jay Beattie.
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 15:28:28
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 28, 7:05 am, SMS <scharf.ste...@geemail.com > wrote: > > "Good" is such a relative term. > > Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these > commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. Of course the > integrated dynamo lights are the only dynamos you're going to see around > for commuters in most parts of the U.S., for technical and demographic > reasons. > > I wouldn't say they're good. They're adequate "being seen lights" though > the lack a standlight. They're probably good enough for riding slowly on > familiar streets. I'm amazed that professionals like Joe Breeze, the people at Specialized, the people at Shimano, etc. (not to mention hundreds of European manufacturers) don't bow to your authoritative knowledge! Somehow, they don't seem to recognize that you're the World's Greatest Authority on bike lighting. They think generator lights are a good idea, and they don't repeat all your dire warnings! > If some large company would make the effort to build a Cree based dynamo > light in large quantities then the cost of the components of that light > would come way down. This will happen. Patience. - Frank Krygowski
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 03:45:06
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <1191059996.664844.63450@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com > writes: > Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: >> >> are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line >> model, the World Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. > > They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes > *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! People like to screw around with stuff. That's why there are so many twisty-turny knobs on sound system equipment. > Are they on crack? (I mean, > this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a > combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) I think it's /customers/ of whom are being spoken. Whatever they're (we're) on is anybody's guess. Anyways, throw some features in, and up the price, and yer off 'n runnin'. At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 16:16:12
From: Mike Jacoubowsky
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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> At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. You can make fun of cup holders all you want, but people sometimes decide with $23k car to buy based on how many cupholders it has. The bike industry could do far worse than incorporate the means to easily carry your Starbucks or Peets coffee back home. --Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReactionBicycles.com "Tom Keats" <tkeats2005@hotmail.com > wrote in message news:ibaldf.dl2.ln@vcn.bc.ca... > In article <1191059996.664844.63450@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com> writes: >> Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: >>> >>> are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their >>> top-of-the-line >>> model, the World >>> Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. >> >> They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes >> *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! > > People like to screw around with stuff. > That's why there are so many twisty-turny > knobs on sound system equipment. > >> Are they on crack? (I mean, >> this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a >> combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) > > I think it's /customers/ of whom are being spoken. > Whatever they're (we're) on is anybody's guess. > > Anyways, throw some features in, and up the price, and > yer off 'n runnin'. > > At least it doesn't have slidy-outy coffee cup holders. > > > cheers, > Tom > > -- > Nothing is safe from me. > I'm really at: > tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 09:59:56
From: Chalo
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > > are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line > model, the World Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) Chalo
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 13:53:23
From: Konstantin Shemyak
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On 2007-09-29, Chalo <chalo.colina@gmail.com > wrote: >> http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. > > They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes > *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! It's not only "they". It's Shimano Alfine group: gear hub plus double crank (with a front derailer). Technically hardly justified, commercially - nice name makes for it, it sells. Konstantin Shemyak
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 10:43:58
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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> Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: >> are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line >> model, the World Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. Chalo wrote: > They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes > *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, > this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a > combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) Or just PCP and toluene? Sky Yaeger isn't at Bianchi any longer. Bianchi also has an internal gear bike with the wrong ends and a tensioner for 2008. Whatever for? Why, 'urban bike' with disc brake of course. O tempora, O mores. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 00:08:08
From: Tom \Johnny Sunset\ Sherman
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Andrew Muzi mused: >> > Chalo wrote: >> They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes >> *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, >> this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a >> combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) > > Or just PCP and toluene?... Local knowledge? -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia A Real Cyclist [TM] keeps at least one bicycle in the bedroom. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 23:10:59
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 10:43:58 -0500, A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org > wrote: >> Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: >>> are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line >>> model, the World Adventure-http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. > >Chalo wrote: >> They put vertical dropouts and a chain tensioner on a bike that comes >> *from the factory* with a gearhub?!?!! Are they on crack? (I mean, >> this is Pacific Cycle we're talking about, so it's probably a >> combination of betel nut and counterfeit Valium, but still... WTF?) > >Or just PCP and toluene? Sky Yaeger isn't at Bianchi any longer. >Bianchi also has an internal gear bike with the wrong ends and a >tensioner for 2008. Whatever for? Why, 'urban bike' with disc brake of >course. >O tempora, O mores. It's a case of "run what you brung" and they haven't built a frame with horizontal dropouts for quite some time - at least not the type of frame they are using for the "townies" Simpler to test the waters with a gearhub by installing a tensioner (gutted deraileur) than re-engineering the frames. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 02:30:17
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org >, Matt O'Toole <mattotoole@letterboxes.org > writes: > Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: > > http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers I've empirically observed a growing trend in more practical uses of bicycles than sports equipment, myself. I like it. But I also like that bicycles /can/ be sports equipment. Or recreational equipment. Or work vehicles. Bicycles are so versatile, it blows my mind. It's all too easy to get locked into a mindset about one's own style of cycling, and dismiss all the others. But I must admit I enjoy a certain pleasure in seeing sprouts of acceptance of cycling as a serious, true mode of transportation. I hope it thrives. Some people have taken issue with the nomenclature: "city bike", and I kinda feel the same way. I'm rather taken with the description of bicycling as "Folk Transportation". I suppose if one wants to be fancily Euro about it, they can get on their VolksFahrrad. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 01:54:10
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46fcee00$0$4065$bbae4d71@news.suddenlink.net >, "BobT" <RobertLeeTaylorCUT@THISSuddenLink.net > writes: > > "Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org> wrote in message > news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... >> Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: >> >> http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > >> "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show >> > > Oh no! > My commuter/touring bike and I might become hip! Not if you're over a certain age and your bike is under a certain age. Actually, I doubt touring bikes will ever become hip. But then, ya never know. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 10:38:50
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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>> "Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org> wrote: >>> Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: >>> http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers >>> "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show > BobT" <RobertLeeTaylorCUT@THISSuddenLink.net> writes: >> Oh no! >> My commuter/touring bike and I might become hip! Tom Keats wrote: > Not if you're over a certain age and your bike is > under a certain age. > Actually, I doubt touring bikes will ever become hip. > But then, ya never know. You missed it! That was so 1978. Another bike shop manager marvelled at the 'touring' fad at the time and commented to me "We could sell dog turds in plastic bags if they were marked 'touring'". -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 01:34:42
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46fcdb7a$0$28889$4c368faf@roadrunner.com >, "Gooserider" <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > writes: >> I think it's a matter of pricing. The reason the Schwinn World Avenue has >> done relatively well is because they priced it well. On sale, with the >> Team Performance discount, it goes for around $320, sometimes less. They >> can't keep it in stock. It's going to be very different for a $700-1000 >> commuter bike, even if it includes some dynamo lights. > > Cheaper is better for a dedicated commuter, I think. Of course, that depends > on the type of commute. But for something that may be locked to a rack all > day, or will be used for stops at the grocery store on the way home from > work---yes. They're making a big deal about the dynohub lights, but I don't > know how bright these lights will be. I know that there are good generator > lights(Lumotec, etc), but are these cheap ones good? The old Union U-100 headlights serve my purposes well, as they have done for decades. I'm sure the latest headlight profferings have improved on beam shaping etc. But after all, the ol' U-100 was specifically designed for bicycling purposes too. I luv that big, fat, shiny disc of glow that its lens displays to onlookers. I figure, it's not just how bright it is -- it's also how /big/ it is. I also have a plastic-shell'd cheap-o version of it, which performs just as adequately. And I have a couple of Tung-Lin headlights which are quite fancy but have a design flaw -- the bracket which attaches to the front brake bolt is just riveted onto the headlight shell, and under the weight of the headlight the rivets eventually loosen. Anyway, the guts of an efficient headlight is the Fresnel-ish lens, and they've been readily & inexpensively manufactured since Hector was a pup. Generator taillights also have some qualities I prefer over blinkies. For one thing, they don't disappear from a coming-from-behind drivers' view at certain angles as readily as many blinkies do. And they cast a sort of big, red aura in the air around them, much more than typical blinkie LEDs do. Generator taillights penetrate slight- >medium fog better than LEDs. Neither type of light penetrates really thick fog very well. Generator taillights can look sharp when fender-mounted. Mine doesn't; I kinda quick-&-dirtily kludged my jerry-built mounting. One of these days maybe I'll concoct some sort of streamlined housing built right into the fender (when I get a round tuit.) -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 09:02:16
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <1190946135.417846.117730@19g2000hsx.googlegroups.com >, landotter <landotter@gmail.com > writes: >> I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of >> commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very well. >> I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced out >> commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put that on >> the showroom floor and watch it sell. > > Nah, put a hip $500 3 speed with fenders and a rack on the floor and > it will sell. Except perhaps for the "hip" part, you just described the Raleigh Sport I had in my youth. Except for the $500 part, you just described my Raleigh Twenty. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 12:23:47
From: bluezfolk
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 27, 2:08 pm, Matt O'Toole <mattoto...@letterboxes.org > wrote: > Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: > > http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > > This proves what can happen when fresh, smart people like Ms. Yeager are > put in charge of marketing, and allowed to try something different than > the same tired old formulas (More carbon! Even fewer spokes!). > > This summer I spent 2.5 weeks in southern CA, where beach cruisers are > back with a vengeance. Everyone is riding, and teenagers are again using > bikes as their preferred mode of transportation. There seem to be 3x as > many bike shops as 5 years ago, most of them selling beach cruisers and a > few town/city bikes. > > Text of the article is below, for the Usenet archives, in case Wired > eventually makes it unavailable. > > Matt O. > > *** > > "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show > > --LAS VEGAS -- Some people believe that, right now, a quiet revolution is > taking place. In cities like London, San Francisco, Boston and New York, > the ranks of bicycle riders are swelling with the rise of a new breed: the > urban biker. > > Traffic snarls, soaring gas prices and worries about global warming have > prompted a big boost in cycling, affecting even places like Los Angeles -- > America's freeway capital -- that have traditionally given bicycles the > cold shoulder. > > "What's really happened in the past year is a cultural shift," says Monica > Howe, 31-year-old outreach coordinator for the Los Angeles County Bicycle > Coalition. > > At Interbike 2007, the bicycle industry's giant annual trade show, the > shift toward the urban rider is loudly evident. Fancy road and mountain > bikes are clearly no longer king of the roost -- or road. It's the scads > of fixed-gear, town, single-speed and other urban bicycles that are > drawing the crowds. > > The rise of the urban biker is reflected in Specialized's 2008 catalog, > which lists 34 different models of city bike to choose from. > > The company is even rolling out six different versions of its ultrapopular > single-speed, fixed-gear Langster. Each model is named after a city that's > on the urban biker radar: the four cities named above, plus Chicago and > Seattle. The New York Langster has narrow handlebars for speeding through > ranks of slow-moving cars, while the Seattle model is equipped with > fenders. > > "People really gravitated toward bikes with that urban feel," says Travis > Widder, an associate production manager at Specialized. "We wanted to give > nods toward cities where that bike sold well, where people really embraced > that category." > > Interbike 2007 is a lot less sporty than years past. Clothing > manufacturers have more messenger bags on show. Jerseys and shorts are > more urban, less multi-colored lycra. > > Swobo, the trendy clothing maker, recently launched its first line of > three city bikes, and is just one of several companies showing new urban > rides. > > If anyone gave birth to the urban biker movement, it's probably Sky > Yaeger, Swobo's managing director. > > Yaeger was responsible for designing a slew of bikes during her time as > production manager at famed Italian manufacturer Bianchi. Some of her > designs, like the fixed-gear Pista, have been elevated to cult status. > Thanks to the bike's simplicity, it became the favored transport of > urbanites like skaters and surfers. > > "What happened is we crossed over the bike culture into skate, surf," she > says. "The kids that are doing it now wouldn't have bought a bike five > years ago. That's a huge delight to me -- because they're on bikes." > > In L.A., the bike revolution is helped by shops like the grassroots > Bicycle Kitchen. "It makes it easy for anyone to put together a bike > cheap," says Howe. "And it made it hip, which can't hurt." > > Volunteers at the Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective, a nonprofit that > provides tools and training for riders to maintain their bikes, have > experienced a huge bump in visitors. > > "It's gotten out of hand," says Michael Wise, the collective's treasurer. > "We don't have enough volunteers to help the people coming in looking." > > San Francisco's trendy Mission District is a hotbed of bicycle activity. A > bicycle lane running the length of Valencia Street is a major artery, as > hipsters in hoodies and precisely rolled, tight-fitting jeans flow along > the street. > > At Valencia Cyclery, which is often proclaimed the city's best bike store, > sales associate Babs Brockaway says she's seen the number of customers > leaving with shiny new fixed-gear ("fixie") and single-speed bikes > skyrocket. The store stocks five or six choices, up from a single model > two years ago. The simplicity appeals to neophyte riders overwhelmed by > too much technology. > > "It's simple: You just pedal," she says. "This is shocking, but there are > people who buy bikes with gears, who don't shift gears." > > Just across from Valencia Cyclery is Ritual Coffee Roasters, a popular > coffeehouse often stuffed full of young hipsters glued to their MacBooks. > It's also a favorite haunt of the urban biker. > > Outside, Matt McDonald, a 24-year-old photographer from Boston, talks > about his fixie. > > "My friends in Boston were getting into these bikes, and it was just sort > of appealing to me. It's like there's nothing to worry about, and they're > just a blast to ride." > > *** Theres never been a shortage of bikes in lower Manhattan (NYC). Most seem to be low end mtb types. Just look at any traffic sign and see them all chained up, with no seats. Seems theft is a major problem, and people haven't found a good way of securing their seats (or maybe a seatless bike is just less attractive to thieves) Eric
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 07:06:29
From: BobT
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org > wrote in message news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... > Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: > > http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show > Oh no! My commuter/touring bike and I might become hip! What else will I need to do to become a hipster? Dye my hair green (after some Grecian formula as well)? Wear my old, out of style (I'm not very good at determing this) clothes rather than taking them to the Salvation Army? Get rid of my Rohloff hub and get a fixie hub (it will be easy to put it back on when the fad dies out)? Are my fenders and lights now cool? BobT
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:16:31
From: Dane Buson
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In rec.bicycles.misc BobT <RobertLeeTaylorCUT@thissuddenlink.net > wrote: > > "Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org> wrote in message > news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... >> Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: >> >> http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > >> "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show >> > > Oh no! > My commuter/touring bike and I might become hip! > What else will I need to do to become a hipster? > Dye my hair green (after some Grecian formula as well)? Nononono, Chromium *red* is the new green. Keep up in the back there. > Wear my old, out of style (I'm not very good at determing this) clothes > rather than taking them to the Salvation Army? That should work nicely! > Get rid of my Rohloff hub and get a fixie hub (it will be easy to put it > back on when the fad dies out)? Probably for the best, you don't really need gears for trackstand competitions and hanging at the coffee shop. > Are my fenders and lights now cool? Fenders, you might be able to squeak by with the really terrible clip-on ones. Lights - Bah! Hipsters are practically the new ninjas! Weaving silently through the darkness, invisible, silent (no brake squeals!), deadly (more to themselves than others though). -- Dane Buson - sigdane@unixbigots.org A Difficulty for Every Solution. -- Motto of the Federal Civil Service
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 13:24:26
From: BobT
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"BobT" <RobertLeeTaylorCUT@THISSuddenLink.net > wrote in message news:46fcee00$0$4065$bbae4d71@news.suddenlink.net... > > "Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org> wrote in message > news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... >> Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: >> >> http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > >> "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show >> > > Oh no! > My commuter/touring bike and I might become hip! > What else will I need to do to become a hipster? > Dye my hair green (after some Grecian formula as well)? > Wear my old, out of style (I'm not very good at determing this) clothes > rather than taking them to the Salvation Army? > Get rid of my Rohloff hub and get a fixie hub (it will be easy to put > it back on when the fad dies out)? > Are my fenders and lights now cool? > > BobT > > After reading my own post, I realized I made a mistake. I should have asked: Are my fenders and lights now really deck? BobT
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 23:43:55
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 27, 10:31 pm, "Mike Jacoubowsky" <Mi...@ChainReaction.com > wrote: > > I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a > > relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most > > importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, > > all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly > > Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because > > they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut > > it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to > > buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the > > battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive > > variety. > > It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've > stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. > We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available for > them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting systems > only go to those who already understand their value, not new converts to the > cause. > > It's possible that the new widespread awareness of global warming may have > an effect, along with a general feeling that we ought to do a better job of > protecting the planet for the next generation. But I'm skeptical. We, as an > industry, are relatively powerless. We don't control the media, or at least > the parts that influence the lives of everyday people. The bicycle industry > is finally beginning to band together for common marketing causes, of which > utility use bicycles is a big battle cry. The feeling is that, if we can get > utilitarian use of the bicycle seen as a mainstream activity, it will raise > sales of *all* types of bicycles, thus avoiding the pitfall of creating a > beast that becomes a non-profit commodity item. > > Would be nice that we actually had reason to be scared of creating such a > beast... > > --Mike Jacoubowsky > Chain Reaction Bicycleswww.ChainReaction.com > Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA Dear Mike, Chain guards, lights, pricing, global warming, all the media's fault, blah-blah-blah . . . Here's a hot new city bike that should scare us sissies, no fancy fenders, no silly clipless pedals, no high prices: http://www.pbase.com/kayakbiker/image/27685415 It's your basic 80-tooth front-sprocket 1907 fixie--simple, reliable transportation with head-light, tool-bag, sprung-seat, cruiser handlebars, and front suspension. (Okay, 40-tooth inch-pitch.) Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 02:55:37
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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SIZE: One; step-through available WEIGHT: 30.1 lb. FRAME: Aluminum alloy FORK: Single-crown steel COMPONENT HIGHLIGHTS: Shimano Nexus internal 3-speed hub, Revo shifter, 19t cassette; 700x38 tires the amsterdam weighs 30 pounds! giveum a 3 speed calloi with flourescent orange paint and a puke green fade anyway, are yawl sure these guys wanna sell to poor people?
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 02:22:15
From: landotter
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 27, 7:30 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > "Matt O'Toole" <mattoto...@letterboxes.org> wrote in message > > news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... > > > > > Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: > > >http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > > > This proves what can happen when fresh, smart people like Ms. Yeager are > > put in charge of marketing, and allowed to try something different than > > the same tired old formulas (More carbon! Even fewer spokes!). > > > This summer I spent 2.5 weeks in southern CA, where beach cruisers are > > back with a vengeance. Everyone is riding, and teenagers are again using > > bikes as their preferred mode of transportation. There seem to be 3x as > > many bike shops as 5 years ago, most of them selling beach cruisers and a > > few town/city bikes. > > > Text of the article is below, for the Usenet archives, in case Wired > > eventually makes it unavailable. > > > Matt O. > > I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of > commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very well. > I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced out > commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put that on > the showroom floor and watch it sell. Nah, put a hip $500 3 speed with fenders and a rack on the floor and it will sell. My LBS has been selling out of the Electra Amsterdams @ 550, and this is freaking Nashville Tennessee. Mind, it is in a pocket of weirdos, artists, and queers. The Amsterdam is quite nice, and has hit a big niche--but I think that there's a parallel niche for a more mildly retro/modern and less severe bike that's more like the standard modern utility bikes you see in Sweden, basically hybrid geometry, with North Road type bars and a gear hub.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 01:59:24
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 27, 9:18 pm, "Gooserider" <Gooseri...@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > "SMS" <scharf.ste...@geemail.com> wrote in message > > news:46fc4f3d$0$27212$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > > > > > > > Gooserider wrote: > > >> I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of > >> commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very > >> well. I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced > >> out commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put > >> that on the showroom floor and watch it sell. > > > But will the dealers put it on the showroom floor? Trek had some good > > commute bicycles but almost no dealers carried them. Specialized had the > > Globe, a very good deal (about the same price as the Raleigh), but only a > > couple of shops in my area carried them, and none close to me (one dealer > > in San Francisco, one in Palo Alto). They always say, "we can order it for > > you, just pay first." This is a recipe for failure. The dealers don't > > believe they will sell and don't want to use floor space for inventory > > that they can't move at a good margin. > > > At least the REI Transfer ("http://www.rei.com/product/744802") is a bike > > that you can actually try before you ride. > > The suggestion from manufacturers is that "things are different now" and > "the market is ready". Whether shop owners will commit to stocking them > remains to be seen----but the Raleigh has a much better chance of being > stocked than the Civia. > > That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. Selling > an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light it is!", or > "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a craftsman in > Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about the cutting edge > tech. > > How do you convince someone to spend $3000 on a Civia, a bike which is > pretty much single purpose? If I buy a Trek Portland, I can commute on it, > race cross on it, tour on it, or put light wheels on it and go fast. You > can't do that on a hybrid, realistically.- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - piker
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 19:10:26
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com > wrote in message news:1190944764.965404.76900@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com... >> > piker So which definition of this am I? n. Slang 1. A cautious gambler. 2. A person regarded as petty or stingy.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 01:58:04
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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sew? make a cereal type box with cardboard and packing tape then lay fabric over the box, double stick tape the fabric or spot glue then sew it up. or go green and tack it with thread and pins.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 06:39:55
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com > wrote in message news:1190944684.102691.41000@y42g2000hsy.googlegroups.com... > > > sew? make a cereal type box with cardboard and packing tape then lay > fabric over the box, double stick tape the fabric or spot glue then > sew it up. or go green and tack it with thread and pins. Guess you missed the part about "modern mounting hardware".
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 20:30:06
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Matt O'Toole" <mattotoole@letterboxes.org > wrote in message news:pan.2007.09.27.19.08.32.238598@letterboxes.org... > Wired has a nice article about how non-sport bikes are hot sellers again: > > http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/news/2007/09/interbike_urbanbikers > > This proves what can happen when fresh, smart people like Ms. Yeager are > put in charge of marketing, and allowed to try something different than > the same tired old formulas (More carbon! Even fewer spokes!). > > This summer I spent 2.5 weeks in southern CA, where beach cruisers are > back with a vengeance. Everyone is riding, and teenagers are again using > bikes as their preferred mode of transportation. There seem to be 3x as > many bike shops as 5 years ago, most of them selling beach cruisers and a > few town/city bikes. > > Text of the article is below, for the Usenet archives, in case Wired > eventually makes it unavailable. > > Matt O. > I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very well. I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced out commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put that on the showroom floor and watch it sell. The shocker for me? The $2000 Breezer "commuter" and the Civia Cycles line, especially the Civia. If I'm going to spend $1900 on a singlespeed, it had better be handmade or made out of some exotic material. But Taiwanese aluminum and a carbon fork? No thank you. I wondered about the security of locking a $2000+ commuter to a rack, and some folks have said that security is becoming less of a concern because so many employers provide secure storage. That's great---but what happens when you want to stop on the way home? Now you have to lock up the luxo-hybrid in front of the grocery store, bodega, bar, whatever. I have a road bike on which I commute. It goes from home to work and back. I also have a beater I shop with. Will people with luxo-hybrids eventually end up in the same boat? "I'll park the Civia and ride the Trek to shop"? LOL.
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 14:20:52
From: Hank Wirtz
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Oct 1, 11:56 am, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net > wrote: > In article <urlndf.9m3...@vcn.bc.ca>, > tke...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > > > > > > In article <rcousine-DD9952.22590529092...@news.telus.net>, > > Ryan Cousineau <rcous...@sfu.ca> writes: > > > In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kc...@4ax.com>, > > > Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: > > > >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > > >> >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > > >> >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > > >> >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > > >> >electric card shufflers, etc. > > > >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > > >> better job then you can do by hand. > > > That's a crock o' you-know-what, and you know it. > > No, it is not. I am good with a manual toothbrush > and better with the electric toothbrush. This is > not about convenience, it is my health. > > I work at brushing my teeth and discuss technique > with my dentist all the time. > > -- > Michael Press- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - I gotta say, this is about the least-surprising thing I've ever heard you say. I don't doubt your veracity for a second; it just sounds like a very Michael Press thing to say. :)
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Date: 02 Oct 2007 00:02:52
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <1191273652.140628.301510@50g2000hsm.googlegroups.com >, Hank Wirtz <hank@wirtznet.net > wrote: > On Oct 1, 11:56 am, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net> wrote: >> In article <urlndf.9m3...@vcn.bc.ca>, >> tke...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >>> In article <rcousine-DD9952.22590529092...@news.telus.net>, >>> Ryan Cousineau <rcous...@sfu.ca> writes: >>>> In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kc...@4ax.com>, >>>> Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: >>>>> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >>>>>>Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >>>>>>that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >>>>>>fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >>>>>>electric card shufflers, etc. >> >>>>> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a >>>>> better job then you can do by hand. >> >>> That's a crock o' you-know-what, and you know it. >> >> No, it is not. I am good with a manual toothbrush >> and better with the electric toothbrush. This is >> not about convenience, it is my health. >> >> I work at brushing my teeth and discuss technique >> with my dentist all the time. > > I gotta say, this is about the least-surprising thing I've ever heard > you say. It is good to hear that I keep it fresh. > I don't doubt your veracity for a second; it just sounds like a very > Michael Press thing to say. :) Thanks. -- Michael Press
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 18:31:17
From: Tom \Johnny Sunset\ Sherman
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Hank Wirtz wrote: > On Oct 1, 11:56 am, Michael Press wrote: >> ... >> I work at brushing my teeth and discuss technique >> with my dentist all the time. > > I gotta say, this is about the least-surprising thing I've ever heard > you say. > > I don't doubt your veracity for a second; it just sounds like a very > Michael Press thing to say. :) > I do not believe for a second that Michael Press discusses tooth brushing technique ALL the time with his dentist. [Exit pedantic mode] -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia A Real Cyclist [TM] keeps at least one bicycle in the bedroom. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 19:18:37
From: landotter
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Oct 1, 11:23 am, vey <jun...@ericvey.com > wrote: > Tom Keats wrote: > > > I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or > > cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified > > hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. > > Even Alton Brown, geek extraordinare uses an electric knife for certain > things. According to his book, the first electric knife was sold by > sporting goods stores for cleaning fish.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton_Brown OMG, He's a Baptist! How the heck did he get roped into that crap? He always struck me as a pantheist. Oh, Alton, how dare you!!
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:31:09
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46ff9170$0$26397$88260bb3@free.teranews.com >, "Tom \"Johnny Sunset\" Sherman" <sunsetss0003@iinvalid.com > writes: >> Maybe sometimes we should minimize throughput & turnover. >> We're not machines. Especially not minimum-wage machines. > > You Canuck Communist! ;) Actually it was my mom who was the Communist of the family. >> Humanity requires an human touch. >> >> As you know, bicycles respond to the human touch quite well, >> as do canoes & kayaks. > > No Segway in the Keats household? No Salad Shooter either. >> Remember dial telephones? Those responded to one's touch, too. >> At least, they appeared to. (Actually I remember party lines.) > > I like modern mobile phones better, since they allow you to confirm the > number and correct mistakes (without having to redial the whole number) > before placing the call. Yeah, I've got a big, chunky ol' Nokia unit myself. The kind construction workers use 'cuz they stand up to a little abuse. You can also load yer fist with it. The carry case has a belt hook. The phone doesn't take pix or play music. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:15:36
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <1191192642.662034.215550@57g2000hsv.googlegroups.com >, landotter <landotter@gmail.com > writes: >> I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or >> cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified >> hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. >> >> And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological >> advance. > > Yeah, right. I heard the story about you, the pork loin, the twin, and > the shellac. Ugly stuff. You'll think differently next time you go to > the deli, come home and get "salami arm" from the manual method. Hey, that wasn't shellac, that was ... never mind. But yeah, I sure rue that day. Anyways the deli slices the salami for me :-p Bagel slicers are a good invention. You'd be surprised at how many gory bagel-slicing accidents happen. I do /not/ need a Salad Shooter[tm]. I could use a Popeil Pocket Fisherman, for poaching pheasants (a corn kernel on the fishhook does the trick.) cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:02:35
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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[I finally got around to amputating rec.bicycles.marketplace] In article <1191205838.320349.264050@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com >, carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > On Sep 30, 3:59 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> >> I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or >> cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified >> hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. >> >> And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological >> advance. What I'm against is technological >> trivialization and gadgetification. Imposing those >> on bicycles is particularly egregious. >> >> cheers, >> Tom > > Dear Tom, > > You _roast_ the turkey before you eat it? > > Hmmm . . . I'll have to chew that technology over a bit. It's very good when barbecued on the rotisserie, too. (The electric rotisserie is a wonderful device.) And then there's mole poblano. And tandoori turkey might be a possibility. I dunno if electric tandoori ovens exist. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 21:22:06
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 20:02:35 -0700, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >[I finally got around to amputating rec.bicycles.marketplace] > >In article <1191205838.320349.264050@r29g2000hsg.googlegroups.com>, > carlfogel@comcast.net writes: >> On Sep 30, 3:59 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >>> >>> I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or >>> cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified >>> hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. >>> >>> And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological >>> advance. What I'm against is technological >>> trivialization and gadgetification. Imposing those >>> on bicycles is particularly egregious. >>> >>> cheers, >>> Tom >> >> Dear Tom, >> >> You _roast_ the turkey before you eat it? >> >> Hmmm . . . I'll have to chew that technology over a bit. > >It's very good when barbecued on the rotisserie, too. >(The electric rotisserie is a wonderful device.) > >And then there's mole poblano. And tandoori turkey >might be a possibility. I dunno if electric tandoori >ovens exist. > >cheers, > Tom Dear Tom, So the idea--I'm struggling here--is to take a perfectly edible turkey, hold it close to some sort of fire for a while, and then devour the imperfectly cremated remains after they cool? I'm not condemning what seems like pointless ritualization, but I wonder whether the gadgetry involved may have seduced you away from a more natural approach? Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 19:30:38
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 30, 3:59 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or > cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified > hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. > > And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological > advance. What I'm against is technological > trivialization and gadgetification. Imposing those > on bicycles is particularly egregious. > > cheers, > Tom Dear Tom, You _roast_ the turkey before you eat it? Hmmm . . . I'll have to chew that technology over a bit. Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 22:50:42
From: landotter
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 30, 4:59 pm, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <1191185560.276516.87...@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com>, > landotter <landot...@gmail.com> writes: > > > > > On Sep 30, 3:22 am, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > >> In article <46ff5877$0$70436$742ec...@news.sonic.net>, > >> SMS <scharf.ste...@geemail.com> writes: > > >> > Don Wiss wrote: > >> >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >> >>> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > >> >>> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > >> >>> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > >> >>> electric card shufflers, etc. > > >> >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > >> >> better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the > >> >> other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric > >> >> knives, though I've never used one. > > >> >> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). > > >> > Electric knives are useful when cutting up things like turkeys or large > >> > roasts. Also good for cutting homemade bread without destroying the loaf. > > >> It seems you don't know how to sharpen a kitchen carving knife, > >> nor the cooling stage at which to carve or cut cooked stuff. > >> It's an ancient, time-honoured skill which predates electric > >> gadgetry. > > > Nah, electric knives are the bomb! And I own several fancy sharpening > > stones and knives which you can literally shave with. The electric > > knife is good for filleting fish, carving up whole salamis, and > > slicing hams. It's for folks that want a deli slicer, but won't use it > > enough. Thrift stores always have one for $2 or so. > > I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or > cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified > hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. > > And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological > advance. Yeah, right. I heard the story about you, the pork loin, the twin, and the shellac. Ugly stuff. You'll think differently next time you go to the deli, come home and get "salami arm" from the manual method.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 14:59:16
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <1191185560.276516.87620@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com >, landotter <landotter@gmail.com > writes: > On Sep 30, 3:22 am, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> In article <46ff5877$0$70436$742ec...@news.sonic.net>, >> SMS <scharf.ste...@geemail.com> writes: >> >> >> >> > Don Wiss wrote: >> >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> >> >>> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >> >>> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >> >>> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >> >>> electric card shufflers, etc. >> >> >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a >> >> better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the >> >> other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric >> >> knives, though I've never used one. >> >> >> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). >> >> > Electric knives are useful when cutting up things like turkeys or large >> > roasts. Also good for cutting homemade bread without destroying the loaf. >> >> It seems you don't know how to sharpen a kitchen carving knife, >> nor the cooling stage at which to carve or cut cooked stuff. >> It's an ancient, time-honoured skill which predates electric >> gadgetry. >> > Nah, electric knives are the bomb! And I own several fancy sharpening > stones and knives which you can literally shave with. The electric > knife is good for filleting fish, carving up whole salamis, and > slicing hams. It's for folks that want a deli slicer, but won't use it > enough. Thrift stores always have one for $2 or so. I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. And I'm not a Luddite. I'm all for technological advance. What I'm against is technological trivialization and gadgetification. Imposing those on bicycles is particularly egregious. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 12:23:05
From: vey
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tom Keats wrote: > > I downright refuse to assault a roast turkey or > cross-rib or leg of lamb with a de-glorified > hedge-trimmer/chainsaw. Even Alton Brown, geek extraordinare uses an electric knife for certain things. According to his book, the first electric knife was sold by sporting goods stores for cleaning fish. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alton_Brown
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:52:40
From: landotter
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sep 30, 3:22 am, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <46ff5877$0$70436$742ec...@news.sonic.net>, > SMS <scharf.ste...@geemail.com> writes: > > > > > Don Wiss wrote: > >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2...@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >>> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > >>> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > >>> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > >>> electric card shufflers, etc. > > >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > >> better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the > >> other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric > >> knives, though I've never used one. > > >> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). > > > Electric knives are useful when cutting up things like turkeys or large > > roasts. Also good for cutting homemade bread without destroying the loaf. > > It seems you don't know how to sharpen a kitchen carving knife, > nor the cooling stage at which to carve or cut cooked stuff. > It's an ancient, time-honoured skill which predates electric > gadgetry. > Nah, electric knives are the bomb! And I own several fancy sharpening stones and knives which you can literally shave with. The electric knife is good for filleting fish, carving up whole salamis, and slicing hams. It's for folks that want a deli slicer, but won't use it enough. Thrift stores always have one for $2 or so.
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 07:30:34
From: anth
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 22:58 -0400, Don Wiss wrote: > On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > >electric card shufflers, etc. > > Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the > other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric > knives, though I've never used one. My grandmother thinks her electric can opener is great. Thanks to arthritis she can't open a can without it.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 01:22:53
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46ff5877$0$70436$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net >, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > writes: > Don Wiss wrote: >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> >>> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >>> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >>> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >>> electric card shufflers, etc. >> >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a >> better job then you can do by hand. One thing that is useless, like the >> other two you list, is electric can openers. And then maybe electric >> knives, though I've never used one. >> >> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). > > Electric knives are useful when cutting up things like turkeys or large > roasts. Also good for cutting homemade bread without destroying the loaf. It seems you don't know how to sharpen a kitchen carving knife, nor the cooling stage at which to carve or cut cooked stuff. It's an ancient, time-honoured skill which predates electric gadgetry. -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 01:13:50
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <rcousine-DD9952.22590529092007@news.telus.net >, Ryan Cousineau <rcousine@sfu.ca > writes: > In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com>, > Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: > >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> >> >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >> >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >> >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >> >electric card shufflers, etc. >> >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a >> better job then you can do by hand. That's a crock o' you-know-what, and you know it. > > More importantly, electric shufflers are fast. I'm not saying we should > always strive to maximize throughput ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I work in a logistics centre. Maximizing throughput is largely what retaining my job is all about. Throughput & turnover. How nice it is, to get home, kick off the workboots, and forget about throughput and turnover, and just be a human bean. Albeit tired, worn-out, and having sore feet and various other maladies like a plantar callus right behind the little piggie who didn't have roast beef, around which we must surround with Dr Scholl's sticky O-rings. Maybe sometimes we should minimize throughput & turnover. We're not machines. Especially not minimum-wage machines. Humanity requires an human touch. As you know, bicycles respond to the human touch quite well, as do canoes & kayaks. Remember dial telephones? Those responded to one's touch, too. At least, they appeared to. (Actually I remember party lines.) cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 18:56:21
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <urlndf.9m3.ln@vcn.bc.ca >, tkeats@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <rcousine-DD9952.22590529092007@news.telus.net>, > Ryan Cousineau <rcousine@sfu.ca> writes: > > In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com>, > > Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: > > > >> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > >> > >> >Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones > >> >that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make > >> >fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, > >> >electric card shufflers, etc. > >> > >> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a > >> better job then you can do by hand. > > That's a crock o' you-know-what, and you know it. No, it is not. I am good with a manual toothbrush and better with the electric toothbrush. This is not about convenience, it is my health. I work at brushing my teeth and discuss technique with my dentist all the time. -- Michael Press
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 07:57:51
From: Tom \Johnny Sunset\ Sherman
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tom Keats wrote: > In article <rcousine-DD9952.22590529092007@news.telus.net>, > Ryan Cousineau <rcousine@sfu.ca> writes: >> In article <q24uf39689fdgfv88gcvveb682pk0kcolc@4ax.com>, >> Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote: >> >>> On Sat, 29 Sep 2007, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >>> >>>> Thank you, I will. At least, the mechanised/motorized ones >>>> that slide out like a CD player tray. I also like to make >>>> fun of electric toothbrushes, electric backscratchers, >>>> electric card shufflers, etc. >>> Actually electric toothbrushes can be useful as they generally will do a >>> better job then you can do by hand. > > That's a crock o' you-know-what, and you know it. > > >> More importantly, electric shufflers are fast. I'm not saying we should >> always strive to maximize throughput > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > I work in a logistics centre. Maximizing throughput is largely what > retaining my job is all about. Throughput & turnover. > > How nice it is, to get home, kick off the workboots, and forget > about throughput and turnover, and just be a human bean. Albeit > tired, worn-out, and having sore feet and various other maladies > like a plantar callus right behind the little piggie who didn't > have roast beef, around which we must surround with Dr Scholl's > sticky O-rings. > > Maybe sometimes we should minimize throughput & turnover. > We're not machines. Especially not minimum-wage machines. You Canuck Communist! ;) > Humanity requires an human touch. > > As you know, bicycles respond to the human touch quite well, > as do canoes & kayaks. No Segway in the Keats household? > Remember dial telephones? Those responded to one's touch, too. > At least, they appeared to. (Actually I remember party lines.) I like modern mobile phones better, since they allow you to confirm the number and correct mistakes (without having to redial the whole number) before placing the call. -- Tom Sherman - Holstein-Friesland Bovinia A Real Cyclist [TM] keeps at least one bicycle in the bedroom. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 23:11:14
From: Don Wiss
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007, Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > wrote: >The shocker for me? The $2000 Breezer "commuter" Huh? Breezer's most expensive "town" bike is the Uptown 8. It goes for $850. Don <www.donwiss.com > (e-mail link at home page bottom).
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 06:42:57
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Don Wiss" <donwiss@no_spam.com > wrote in message news:o2sof39dio6951iq2jp2oujppon59sv7in@4ax.com... > On Thu, 27 Sep 2007, Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: > >>The shocker for me? The $2000 Breezer "commuter" > > Huh? Breezer's most expensive "town" bike is the Uptown 8. It goes for > $850. > > Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). Ya need to keep up with what's going on at Interbike. http://commutebybike.com/2007/09/26/the-ultimate-commuter-bike/ $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:22:47
From: Dane Buson
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > > "Don Wiss" <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote in message > news:o2sof39dio6951iq2jp2oujppon59sv7in@4ax.com... >> On Thu, 27 Sep 2007, Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> >>>The shocker for me? The $2000 Breezer "commuter" >> >> Huh? Breezer's most expensive "town" bike is the Uptown 8. It goes for >> $850. >> >> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). > > Ya need to keep up with what's going on at Interbike. > > http://commutebybike.com/2007/09/26/the-ultimate-commuter-bike/ > > $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. $1900 and no chain guard? Fail. -- Dane Buson - sigdane@unixbigots.org XML is like violence -- if its not solving your problem, use more.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 21:38:43
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Dane Buson" <dane@unseen.edu > wrote in message news:7ve0t4-33q.ln1@curare.zuvembi.homelinux.org... > In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> >> "Don Wiss" <donwiss@no_spam.com> wrote in message >> news:o2sof39dio6951iq2jp2oujppon59sv7in@4ax.com... >>> On Thu, 27 Sep 2007, Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >>> >>>>The shocker for me? The $2000 Breezer "commuter" >>> >>> Huh? Breezer's most expensive "town" bike is the Uptown 8. It goes for >>> $850. >>> >>> Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). >> >> Ya need to keep up with what's going on at Interbike. >> >> http://commutebybike.com/2007/09/26/the-ultimate-commuter-bike/ >> >> $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. > > $1900 and no chain guard? Fail. No chain guard. No cargo carrying capacity. Crappy light. So you spend this much money on a "turn key" solution, then the dealer hits you up again. Kinda defeats the purpose, no?
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 19:02:57
From: Andreas Oehler
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:38:43 -0400, Gooserider: >>> $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. >> >> $1900 and no chain guard? Fail. > >. Crappy light You don't know, what you are talking about. The Lumtec Fly IQ used here is the brightest and best-shaped light for hub dynamos you can find. Will beat most 20 W halogen lights! Andreas
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 14:04:29
From: BobT
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Andreas Oehler" <andreas.oehler@gmx.de > wrote in message news:470b84e7.963311759@n.nabendynamo.de... > Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:38:43 -0400, Gooserider: > >>>> $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. >>> >>> $1900 and no chain guard? Fail. >> >>. Crappy light > > You don't know, what you are talking about. The Lumtec Fly IQ used here is > the brightest and best-shaped light for hub dynamos you can find. Will > beat most 20 W halogen lights! > > Andreas Your comment stimulated me to look at the B&M site. Looks like a really great light. I might want to replace my Schmidt E6 and B&M Lumotec N Plus halogen lights with this LED light depending on the price. Do you know anything about when and where I could buy one of these lights. I live in the U.S.A.. Searching the B&M site and Peter White's site didn't help answer this question. BobT
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Date: 04 Oct 2007 22:07:54
From: Andreas Oehler
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Sun, 30 Sep 2007 14:04:29 -0500, BobT: > >Your comment stimulated me to look at the B&M site. Looks like a really >great light. I might want to replace my Schmidt E6 and B&M Lumotec N Plus >halogen lights with this LED light depending on the price. > >Do you know anything about when and where I could buy one of these lights. >I live in the U.S.A.. Searching the B&M site and Peter White's site didn't >help answer this question. The Fly IQ in its different versions will be available in german shops around the end of october AFAIK. It usually will take another month or so until the lights might also be sold in other countries. Prices are in the 60-75 Euro range. With the weak US-$ and the small quantities exported to the US prices have to be higher abroad. Andreas
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 14:13:36
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Andreas Oehler" <andreas.oehler@gmx.de > wrote in message news:470b84e7.963311759@n.nabendynamo.de... > Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:38:43 -0400, Gooserider: > >>>> $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. >>> >>> $1900 and no chain guard? Fail. >> >>. Crappy light > > You don't know, what you are talking about. The Lumtec Fly IQ used here is > the brightest and best-shaped light for hub dynamos you can find. Will > beat most 20 W halogen lights! > Will it beat the DiNotte 200L? The NiteRider Minewt? I'm sure Frank Krygowski will chime in---but more lumens are better. The only case in which dynamo lights would be superior, in my mind, is touring. Otherwise, a good LED rechargeable system is going to give you more light. Now, if I was touring, or going to be places without access to electricity for long stretches, then I'd run the dynamo. The high-end luxury hybrid commuter is a product desperately seeking a market. Trek lost a LOT of money trying that. I remember seeing Trek L200s being blown out for $350. Bike shops aren't going to play that game again.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 11:33:02
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Gooserider wrote: > Will it beat the DiNotte 200L? The NiteRider Minewt? I'm sure Frank > Krygowski will chime in---but more lumens are better. The only case in which > dynamo lights would be superior, in my mind, is touring. Otherwise, a good > LED rechargeable system is going to give you more light. Now, if I was > touring, or going to be places without access to electricity for long > stretches, then I'd run the dynamo. The problem with most of the dynamo lights is they are a _big_ compromise in terms of optics. They illuminate a very limited area very well, but don't have sufficient peripheral illumination. They do the best they can with the limited available power from the dynamo. I was pleased to see the SolidLights 1203D ("http://www.solidlights.co.uk/products/1203d.php") which appears to be the first dynamo LED light with sufficient power, and optics which provide an optimal beam for cycling. For touring, if you plan to to long amounts of night riding then I guess a dynamo light is a good idea, but most touring is daytime riding. Since you have to carry a flashlight anyway then you may as well get a better light that can serve two purposes. I'd be more interested in a commute bicycle with a 3W Cree LED light (or two for the Son hub dynamo), than a touring set-up.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 15:36:05
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <46ffeb8a$0$70461$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net >, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: > The problem with most of the dynamo lights is they are a _big_ > compromise in terms of optics. They illuminate a very limited area > very well, but don't have sufficient peripheral illumination. They do > the best they can with the limited available power from the dynamo. You keep saying that over and over and over, as if mere repetition constitutes proof. But your claim is simple bullshit. It would seem from your many posts that you ought to be seeing an ophthalmologist about your vision problem.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 16:58:13
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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> SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: >> The problem with most of the dynamo lights is they are a _big_ >> compromise in terms of optics. They illuminate a very limited area >> very well, but don't have sufficient peripheral illumination. They do >> the best they can with the limited available power from the dynamo. Tim McNamara wrote: > You keep saying that over and over and over, as if mere repetition > constitutes proof. But your claim is simple bullshit. It would seem > from your many posts that you ought to be seeing an ophthalmologist > about your vision problem. But Tim, can't he see you about the attitude problem? -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:58:12
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <13g06t5e69jfbde@corp.supernews.com >, A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org > wrote: > > SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: > > >> The problem with most of the dynamo lights is they are a _big_ > >> compromise in terms of optics. They illuminate a very limited area > >> very well, but don't have sufficient peripheral illumination. They > >> do the best they can with the limited available power from the > >> dynamo. > > Tim McNamara wrote: > > You keep saying that over and over and over, as if mere repetition > > constitutes proof. But your claim is simple bullshit. It would > > seem from your many posts that you ought to be seeing an > > ophthalmologist about your vision problem. > > But Tim, can't he see you about the attitude problem? LOL!
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 14:01:19
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tim McNamara wrote: > You keep saying that over and over and over, as if mere repetition > constitutes proof. See "http://nordicgroup.us/s78/experts.html".
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 19:43:27
From: Andreas Oehler
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Sat, 29 Sep 2007 14:13:36 -0400, Gooserider: >"Andreas Oehler" <andreas.oehler@gmx.de> wrote in message >> Fri, 28 Sep 2007 21:38:43 -0400, Gooserider: >> >>>>> $1900 Breezer Finesse. You're welcome. >>>. Crappy light >> >> You don't know, what you are talking about. The Lumtec Fly IQ used here is >> the brightest and best-shaped light for hub dynamos you can find. Will >> beat most 20 W halogen lights! >> > >Will it beat the DiNotte 200L? The NiteRider Minewt? I haven't had the possibility to try out those lamps - so I won't call them "crappy"... But I presume they have the usual cheap and simple rotational symmetric optics, which are by principle far from optimal for illuminating the road ahead in an efficient way. > more lumens are better. Only if you shape the beam in an appropriate and efficient way. A laser pointer with as much lumens as you might get won't help you much - similar a naked 200 Watt bulb... Rotational symmetric optics in most cases mean half of the lumens is wasted up into the sky and the eyes of uncoming cyclists. It also often means too bright light nearby disturnbing your night vision for illuminated object further away. > The only case in which >dynamo lights would be superior, in my mind, is touring. Touring is mostly done during the day and the extra hassle of a battery lamp is no problem because yoi have all the time in the world. If you are carrying a tent you might also have the advantage of using the battery lamp to read after dark. I use a dynamo-chraged battery lamp for touring. But here in town I have other things to care for than to look after my lights. If I always have to mount and dismont the lamps on every stop (shopping at three differnt shops, going to the library, restaurant, friends, sport, ...) I would go cracy! >Otherwise, a good >LED rechargeable system is going to give you more light. I don´t think so. Where are all the battery powered LED lights with newest technology LEDs and well engineered optics? I just know stupid pocket torches with inappropriate optics (for road riding) and inefficient electronics. > Now, if I was >touring, or going to be places without access to electricity for long >stretches, then I'd run the dynamo. How do you handle your usual dayly ways (shopping, visiting friends, etc.) in regard of lights? Fidling with the lights 5 times per day? >The high-end luxury hybrid commuter is a product desperately seeking a >market. Fully equipped hybrids (in the 750-2000 Euro price range) are a big market here in germany. They are at least as important as racing bikes now. On the road lower-end hybrids (equipped with Alivio to Deore or 7-speed hub-gears) are dominant. Every morning I see the mayor of my city riding the 3 km to his office in the town hall on his hybrid... > Trek lost a LOT of money trying that. Trek owns the german manufacturer Diamant - and they more or less only make hybrids. I don't think they are loosing money. >I remember seeing Trek L200s >being blown out for $350. Bike shops aren't going to play that game again. It might take a few years until people (and especially city planners) in the US recognise, that it is better to overcome the old strategy of separating habitation, work and shopping so much. Andreas
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 15:34:19
From: Tim McNamara
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <4706d793.1050012678@n.nabendynamo.de >, Andreas Oehler <andreas.oehler@gmx.de > wrote: > It might take a few years until people (and especially city planners) > in the US recognise, that it is better to overcome the old strategy > of separating habitation, work and shopping so much. Good luck with that. 60-100 km "commutes" are not that unusual here in the US.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 13:57:15
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Tim McNamara wrote: > In article <4706d793.1050012678@n.nabendynamo.de>, > Andreas Oehler <andreas.oehler@gmx.de> wrote: > >> It might take a few years until people (and especially city planners) >> in the US recognise, that it is better to overcome the old strategy >> of separating habitation, work and shopping so much. > > Good luck with that. 60-100 km "commutes" are not that unusual here in > the US. The problem is more that you can't plan your life around one company that will stay in the same place forever. I've worked for companies that have moved five times in the five years I've worked for them. You can't move every time your job changes or your company moves, and with two-job couples it's even more difficult. It complicates things even more with the vast disparities in quality of life and quality of schools in different communities, plus in California you have a tax code that discourages people from moving close to their jobs because you lose your Prop. 13 tax protection every time you move. What would work better is to spend more on infrastructure for alternative means of personal transportation, or combinations of public/personal transit. Bicycle/train commutes are popular where I live. A small investment in improved bicycle routes would encourage more cycle commuting, which many people see as too dangerous. If city bikes could at least get people to ride 1 mile to the store for a gallon of milk, rather than driving, it would be a big accomplishment. But this isn't going to happen with $700 city bikes. It'll happen when the city bike is the default mass market bicycle like in the Netherlands and China, and in much of Japan. The city planners, in many cases, are owned lock, stock, and barrel by developers. They'll advocate high-density housing because it's so profitable for the developers, but they have no interest in advocating for transit, retail, schools, parks, etc., to serve these developments. Where I live, we defeated two condo complex rezoning attempts because the developers had no plans at all, other than to sell the units then get out of town. One councilwoman, owned by the building trade unions, was proud because she had convinced the developer to provide bus passes to the future residents for one year. Later this year, she was instrumental in drastically cutting bus service to our city, proclaiming in her usual idiocy, 'the important thing is that people won't be seeing half-empty buses on the roads anymore.' Too many people have been brainwashed by the developers and certain environmental organizations to accept the buzz words of "smart growth," "mixed-use," etc., without making even the slightest effort to understand the implications. They actually believe that if you allow a developer to build high-density housing that somehow existing green space in other places will be safe from development. Very naive.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 17:49:18
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Gooserider wrote: > I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of > commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very well. > I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced out > commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put that on > the showroom floor and watch it sell. But will the dealers put it on the showroom floor? Trek had some good commute bicycles but almost no dealers carried them. Specialized had the Globe, a very good deal (about the same price as the Raleigh), but only a couple of shops in my area carried them, and none close to me (one dealer in San Francisco, one in Palo Alto). They always say, "we can order it for you, just pay first." This is a recipe for failure. The dealers don't believe they will sell and don't want to use floor space for inventory that they can't move at a good margin. At least the REI Transfer ("http://www.rei.com/product/744802") is a bike that you can actually try before you ride.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 23:09:09
From: Don Wiss
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 17:49:18 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: >But will the dealers put it on the showroom floor? Trek had some good >commute bicycles but almost no dealers carried them. Because Trek did not sell them in the US. Those were their world models. Don <www.donwiss.com > (e-mail link at home page bottom).
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 21:45:31
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Don Wiss wrote: > On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 17:49:18 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: > >> But will the dealers put it on the showroom floor? Trek had some good >> commute bicycles but almost no dealers carried them. > > Because Trek did not sell them in the US. Those were their world models. > > Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). They sold them at Bike Gallery in Portland. Presumably other dealers could have gotten them if they wanted to.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 21:18:11
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"SMS" <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote in message news:46fc4f3d$0$27212$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > Gooserider wrote: > >> I've been watching the news from Interbike, and there sure are a lot of >> commuter-centric bikes available. Some, I think, are going to do very >> well. I think Raleigh has a hit with it's Detour Deluxe. Fully specced >> out commuter(rack, fenders, dynohub, front and rear lights)--$710. Put >> that on the showroom floor and watch it sell. > > But will the dealers put it on the showroom floor? Trek had some good > commute bicycles but almost no dealers carried them. Specialized had the > Globe, a very good deal (about the same price as the Raleigh), but only a > couple of shops in my area carried them, and none close to me (one dealer > in San Francisco, one in Palo Alto). They always say, "we can order it for > you, just pay first." This is a recipe for failure. The dealers don't > believe they will sell and don't want to use floor space for inventory > that they can't move at a good margin. > > At least the REI Transfer ("http://www.rei.com/product/744802") is a bike > that you can actually try before you ride. The suggestion from manufacturers is that "things are different now" and "the market is ready". Whether shop owners will commit to stocking them remains to be seen----but the Raleigh has a much better chance of being stocked than the Civia. That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. Selling an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light it is!", or "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a craftsman in Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about the cutting edge tech. How do you convince someone to spend $3000 on a Civia, a bike which is pretty much single purpose? If I buy a Trek Portland, I can commute on it, race cross on it, tour on it, or put light wheels on it and go fast. You can't do that on a hybrid, realistically.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 19:38:06
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Gooserider wrote: > That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. Selling > an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light it is!", or > "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a craftsman in > Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about the cutting edge > tech. I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive variety.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 04:31:48
From: Mike Jacoubowsky
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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>> That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. >> Selling an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light >> it is!", or "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a >> craftsman in Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about >> the cutting edge tech. > > I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a > relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most > importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, > all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly > Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because > they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut > it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to > buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the > battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive > variety. It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available for them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting systems only go to those who already understand their value, not new converts to the cause. It's possible that the new widespread awareness of global warming may have an effect, along with a general feeling that we ought to do a better job of protecting the planet for the next generation. But I'm skeptical. We, as an industry, are relatively powerless. We don't control the media, or at least the parts that influence the lives of everyday people. The bicycle industry is finally beginning to band together for common marketing causes, of which utility use bicycles is a big battle cry. The feeling is that, if we can get utilitarian use of the bicycle seen as a mainstream activity, it will raise sales of *all* types of bicycles, thus avoiding the pitfall of creating a beast that becomes a non-profit commodity item. Would be nice that we actually had reason to be scared of creating such a beast... --Mike Jacoubowsky Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReaction.com Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA "SMS" <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote in message news:46fc68ba$0$27210$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > Gooserider wrote: > >> That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. >> Selling an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light >> it is!", or "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a >> craftsman in Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about >> the cutting edge tech. > > I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a > relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most > importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, > all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly > Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because > they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut > it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to > buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the > battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive > variety.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:17:36
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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>> Gooserider wrote: >>> That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. >>> Selling an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light >>> it is!", or "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a >>> craftsman in Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about >>> the cutting edge tech. > "SMS" <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote >> I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a >> relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most >> importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, >> all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly >> Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because >> they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut >> it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to >> buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the >> battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive >> varietyMike Jacoubowsky wrote: >>> That being said, selling an expensive hybrid commuter is difficult. >>> Selling an expensive road bike is relatively easy. "Hey, feel how light >>> it is!", or "Hey, check out those lugs. That bike is hand made by a >>> craftsman in Wisconsin.". Selling an MTB is easy, too---it's all about >>> the cutting edge tech. >> I think Performance had the better plan with the World Avenue. Sell a >> relatively low priced commute bicycle with racks, fenders, and most >> importantly a chain guard. I wish they'd included a hub dynamo too. OTOH, >> all of the factory hub-dynamo equipped bicycles I see around here (mainly >> Joe Breeze and REI Transfer) have additional lights installed because >> they're used in an environment where the included dynamo lights don't cut >> it. If the owners knew about the SolidLight for dynamos, and had a way to >> buy it here for $150 or so, I'd think it'd sell reasonably well, since the >> battery powered systems on these bikes are always of the expensive >> variety. >Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've > stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. > We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available for > them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting systems > only go to those who already understand their value, not new converts to the > cause. > > It's possible that the new widespread awareness of global warming may have > an effect, along with a general feeling that we ought to do a better job of > protecting the planet for the next generation. But I'm skeptical. We, as an > industry, are relatively powerless. We don't control the media, or at least > the parts that influence the lives of everyday people. The bicycle industry > is finally beginning to band together for common marketing causes, of which > utility use bicycles is a big battle cry. The feeling is that, if we can get > utilitarian use of the bicycle seen as a mainstream activity, it will raise > sales of *all* types of bicycles, thus avoiding the pitfall of creating a > beast that becomes a non-profit commodity item. > > Would be nice that we actually had reason to be scared of creating such a > beast... Yet the same guy who walks past those bikes will spend a few hundred _more_ badly accessorizing a lesser bike (with much tedium) over the span of a year or two... -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 21:49:07
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've > stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. > We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available for > them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting systems > only go to those who already understand their value, not new converts to the > cause. I think it's a matter of pricing. The reason the Schwinn World Avenue has done relatively well is because they priced it well. On sale, with the Team Performance discount, it goes for around $320, sometimes less. They can't keep it in stock. It's going to be very different for a $700-1000 commuter bike, even if it includes some dynamo lights.
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:30:49
From: Mike Jacoubowsky
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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>> It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've >> stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. >> We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available >> for them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting >> systems only go to those who already understand their value, not new >> converts to the cause. > > I think it's a matter of pricing. The reason the Schwinn World Avenue has > done relatively well is because they priced it well. On sale, with the > Team Performance discount, it goes for around $320, sometimes less. They > can't keep it in stock. It's going to be very different for a $700-1000 > commuter bike, even if it includes some dynamo lights. I really don't think it's a pricing issue, since the bike we set up as a "proof of concept" machine was built around a $260 model, so the whole thing ready to go was only around $400. Schwinn's present entry-level "commute" bike is the World GS, which is a basic hybrid with only fenders and a rear rack added, no lights. http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=981. In fact, there are no lights supplied until you get all the way up to their top-of-the-line model, the World Adventure- http://www.schwinnbike.com/products/bikes_detail.php?id=954. If these bikes are selling well, it's not due to price & spec, but because Performance has gotten behind them. If so, more power to them! They're doing a much better job (given the apparent success) than I've been able to do. But suitability to task? In my opinion, a commute bike should be tough as nails, and part of that is keeping things simple. I'd ditch the suspension fork immediately, although I admit there are some environments where even the crude forks such bikes come with might add some degree of comfort. --Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReactionBicycles.com
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 20:54:46
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <fgp0g3hj9ius20noeakm2lju02tr70lnqb@4ax.com >, carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > Dear Tom, > > So the idea--I'm struggling here--is to take a perfectly edible > turkey, hold it close to some sort of fire for a while, and then > devour the imperfectly cremated remains after they cool? > > I'm not condemning what seems like pointless ritualization, but I > wonder whether the gadgetry involved may have seduced you away from a > more natural approach? Dear Carl, (hey, that feels downright down-home 'n friendly-like,) for a better understanding of my position, please Google on the combined key phrases: "Dr Who" and "never trust gimmicky gadgets". It's probably better to actually watch that particular episode. Anyways, I wouldn't consider a raw turkey as "perfectly edible." A stove/hob oven is not a gadget, nor is a rotisserie. That thing George Foreman flogs on TV /is/ a gadget. Microwave ovens -- I dunno, I guess they're borderline. Rice cookers can at least be converted into pot stills. Good, heavy-duty Mix-Masters are da bomb. But the In-The-Eggshell-Egg-Scrambler is a gadget. I remember the last episode of James Burke's "Connections" series, in which he ponders about what would happen if all the electrical and fossil-fuel power we daily take for granted was to be suddenly shut off -- yanked like a carpet from beneath our feet. We'd be surrounded with a bunch of once-useful devices, and a plethora of silly gadgets. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 06:46:19
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"SMS" <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote in message news:46fc876f$0$27182$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net... > Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > >> It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've >> stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. >> We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available >> for them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting >> systems only go to those who already understand their value, not new >> converts to the cause. > > I think it's a matter of pricing. The reason the Schwinn World Avenue has > done relatively well is because they priced it well. On sale, with the > Team Performance discount, it goes for around $320, sometimes less. They > can't keep it in stock. It's going to be very different for a $700-1000 > commuter bike, even if it includes some dynamo lights. Cheaper is better for a dedicated commuter, I think. Of course, that depends on the type of commute. But for something that may be locked to a rack all day, or will be used for stops at the grocery store on the way home from work---yes. They're making a big deal about the dynohub lights, but I don't know how bright these lights will be. I know that there are good generator lights(Lumotec, etc), but are these cheap ones good?
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Date: 01 Oct 2007 09:24:25
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Gooserider wrote: > Cheaper is better for a dedicated commuter, I think. Of course, that depends > on the type of commute. But for something that may be locked to a rack all > day, or will be used for stops at the grocery store on the way home from > work---yes. They're making a big deal about the dynohub lights, but I don't > know how bright these lights will be. I know that there are good generator > lights(Lumotec, etc), but are these cheap ones good? Many of the so-called commuter bikes lack a chain guard. This is an omission you'd never see on a commuter bike in the Netherlands or in China. It's nearly impossible to add a chain guard after the fact. Hebie in Germany sells some, but you can't easily buy them. "http://www.hebie.de/pdf/hebie_web_katalog_en.pdf" page 30-51). A multi-speed bicycle that you can just get on and ride, in your regular clothes, to the market or to a friend's house, that costs less than $400. The components don't have to be top of the line, and it doesn't have to weigh 20 pounds. When you take it home from the store, it already has the fenders, rack, and chain guard installed, they are not retail priced add-ons that add $75-100 to the price. The lights are an issue as the cheaper dyno lights aren't all that great, and even the expensive ones aren't bright enough for a lot of commute situations. But you can always supplement the included dynohub lights with more powerful lights if the situation demands it. Performance has done well, apparently, with their Schwinn World Avenue, which is $325-500 depending on when you buy it. At least it's sold well enough that some sizes are often out of stock.
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Date: 02 Oct 2007 01:31:03
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 09:24:25 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: >The lights are an issue as the cheaper dyno lights aren't all that >great, and even the expensive ones aren't bright enough for a lot of >commute situations. You prove how dim you are every time you denigrate the lighting systems that have been in constant use since before you were born. Grow up. -- zk
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Date: 02 Oct 2007 04:53:59
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Zoot Katz wrote: > On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 09:24:25 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> > wrote: > >> The lights are an issue as the cheaper dyno lights aren't all that >> great, and even the expensive ones aren't bright enough for a lot of >> commute situations. > > You prove how dim you are every time you denigrate the lighting > systems that have been in constant use since before you were born. > > Grow up. Very creative snipping to change the context. When you have something useful to say, without taking things completely out of context, get back to us. The complete statement was: "The lights are an issue as the cheaper dyno lights aren't all that great, and even the expensive ones aren't bright enough for a lot of commute situations. But you can always supplement the included dynohub lights with more powerful lights if the situation demands it." I don't know _anyone_ that would disagree with that statement, at least not in the U.S..
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Gooserider wrote: > Cheaper is better for a dedicated commuter, I think. Of course, that depends > on the type of commute. But for something that may be locked to a rack all > day, or will be used for stops at the grocery store on the way home from > work---yes. They're making a big deal about the dynohub lights, but I don't > know how bright these lights will be. I know that there are good generator > lights(Lumotec, etc), but are these cheap ones good? "Good" is such a relative term. Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. Of course the integrated dynamo lights are the only dynamos you're going to see around for commuters in most parts of the U.S., for technical and demographic reasons. I wouldn't say they're good. They're adequate "being seen lights" though the lack a standlight. They're probably good enough for riding slowly on familiar streets. However nothing prevents the owner from buying some better headlamps to use with the hub dynamo. If some large company would make the effort to build a Cree based dynamo light in large quantities then the cost of the components of that light would come way down.
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 14:16:51
From: Don Wiss
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: >Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these >commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. Not true here in NYC. Most here commute with no front light at all. I use a dynamo light. We don't need more. All streets have street lights. Don <www.donwiss.com/joyrides > (e-mail link at page bottom).
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 14:55:57
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Don Wiss wrote: > On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: > >> Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these >> commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. > > Not true here in NYC. Most here commute with no front light at all. I use a > dynamo light. We don't need more. All streets have street lights. > > Don <www.donwiss.com/joyrides> (e-mail link at page bottom). That's true, on well lit streets like in NYC you can get by with whatever keeps you legal. Around here there are quite a few Breezer's around but the commutes are such that everyone puts better lights on them.
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 19:22:18
From: Don Wiss
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 14:55:57 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: >Don Wiss wrote: >> On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: >> >>> Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these >>> commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. >> >> Not true here in NYC. Most here commute with no front light at all. I use a >> dynamo light. We don't need more. All streets have street lights. >That's true, on well lit streets like in NYC you can get by with >whatever keeps you legal. Around here there are quite a few Breezer's >around but the commutes are such that everyone puts better lights on them. Well, to be legal here one needs lights, but it is never enforced. So headlights are rare. Blinkie tail lights are more common, but it is far from universal. To change the subject. In Europe (at least in The Netherlands) tail lights can't blink. Is this technically also true in the US? Don <www.donwiss.com > (e-mail link at home page bottom).
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 02:35:41
From: SMS
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Don Wiss wrote: > To change the subject. In Europe (at least in The Netherlands) tail lights > can't blink. Is this technically also true in the US? Each state makes their own rules, but most adhere to the uniform vehicle code for stuff like this. It's not perfectly clear whether flashing red lights are permitted on bicycles, or if bicycles are treated like motor vehicles. Some states have explicitly permitted bicycles to have a flashing red light in the rear (i.e. Ohio), see "http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4511.56". The original flashing lights, the Belt Beacon and Ed Kearny's "barricade light" were yellow because yellow flashers are in a gray area of "slow moving vehicle." Of course none of this is enforced. If you put a flashing blue light on your bicycle then I think you might have a chance of getting stopped by the police.
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 19:34:42
From: Dorfus Dippintush
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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SMS wrote: > Don Wiss wrote: > >> To change the subject. In Europe (at least in The Netherlands) tail >> lights >> can't blink. Is this technically also true in the US? > > Each state makes their own rules, but most adhere to the uniform vehicle > code for stuff like this. It's not perfectly clear whether flashing red > lights are permitted on bicycles, or if bicycles are treated like motor > vehicles. Some states have explicitly permitted bicycles to have a > flashing red light in the rear (i.e. Ohio), see > "http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4511.56". > > The original flashing lights, the Belt Beacon and Ed Kearny's "barricade > light" were yellow because yellow flashers are in a gray area of "slow > moving vehicle." > > Of course none of this is enforced. If you put a flashing blue light on > your bicycle then I think you might have a chance of getting stopped by > the police. > I've had police go past me while I've had a flashing blue light and they've never stopped. Traffic was always slower and gave me a lot more space with the blue light. I recommend it. Dorfus
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 23:04:30
From:
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 19:22:18 -0400, Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com > wrote: >On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 14:55:57 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: > >>Don Wiss wrote: >>> On Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these >>>> commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. >>> >>> Not true here in NYC. Most here commute with no front light at all. I use a >>> dynamo light. We don't need more. All streets have street lights. > >>That's true, on well lit streets like in NYC you can get by with >>whatever keeps you legal. Around here there are quite a few Breezer's >>around but the commutes are such that everyone puts better lights on them. > >Well, to be legal here one needs lights, but it is never enforced. So >headlights are rare. Blinkie tail lights are more common, but it is far >from universal. > >To change the subject. In Europe (at least in The Netherlands) tail lights >can't blink. Is this technically also true in the US? Technically true in Ontario Canada, but not enforced. Even the bike-mounted cops use blinkies. > >Don <www.donwiss.com> (e-mail link at home page bottom). -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
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Date: 30 Sep 2007 02:15:30
From: Steve Gravrock
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On 2007-09-29, Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com > wrote: > To change the subject. In Europe (at least in The Netherlands) tail lights > can't blink. Is this technically also true in the US? It varies from state to state. In my neck of the woods a blinking tail light is illegal, but I've never heard of it being enforced.
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Date: 29 Sep 2007 18:54:07
From: Andreas Oehler
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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Fri, 28 Sep 2007 04:05:00 -0700, SMS: >Gooserider wrote: > >> Cheaper is better for a dedicated commuter, I think. Of course, that depends >> on the type of commute. But for something that may be locked to a rack all >> day, or will be used for stops at the grocery store on the way home from >> work---yes. They're making a big deal about the dynohub lights, but I don't >> know how bright these lights will be. I know that there are good generator >> lights(Lumotec, etc), but are these cheap ones good? They are good enough to do the job - ride around the city or on smaller streets in the suburbs. Brighter than much of the slamp-on headlights with integrated battery-compartment. >Let's just say it's extremely rare (like never), to see one of these >commute bikes out at night using only the dynamo lights. Ridiculous. have you been to central europe: Netherlands, germany, switzerland? Towns are full of bikes at night - most with dynamo lights! >I wouldn't say they're good. They're adequate "being seen lights" though >the lack a standlight. You don't know what you are talking about. The most standard Lumotec found on european commuter bikes today is the "Lumotec Oval Senso Plus" - of course with LED-standlight powered by a capacitor. On the back nearly all commuter bikes (at least in germany) today are equipped with dynamo-powered LED-lights with similar capacitor-standlight. >If some large company would make the effort to build a Cree based dynamo >light in large quantities then the cost of the components of that light >would come way down. They will be available in 2-3 weeks: Busch&Müller Lumotec Fly IQ. Much brighter and more efficient shaped beam like the Solidlights 1203D you always praise (much dimmer than a standard Lumotec halogen light - but a little wider). Or the Inoled 20+ Model 2008. Or the Supernova E3 Model 2008... Andreas
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 23:29:27
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 21:49:07 -0700, SMS <scharf.steven@geemail.com > wrote: >Mike Jacoubowsky wrote: > >> It's almost impossible to get customers to buy practical bikes. We've >> stocked fully-decked-out commuter bikes, and they sit & rot on the floor. >> We've dressed up stock standard bikes, showing people what's available for >> them, and they just collect dust and sales of fenders & lighting systems >> only go to those who already understand their value, not new converts to the >> cause. > >I think it's a matter of pricing. The reason the Schwinn World Avenue >has done relatively well is because they priced it well. On sale, with >the Team Performance discount, it goes for around $320, sometimes less. >They can't keep it in stock. It's going to be very different for a >$700-1000 commuter bike, even if it includes some dynamo lights. I think when people start noticing how sexy we are they'll pay anything to get on the bandwagon. Fixed gear bikes have become popular largely because of the messengers iconic image. If city bikes help cyclists to dress better more people will be encouraged to ride. By coming stock with fenders having coat/skirt protectors, chain guards and geometry that permits a more dignified riding position people can wear their "normal" clothes. http://copenhagengirlsonbikes.blogspot.com/ Keep it lightweight, give 'em a place for their stuff and lights like a real vehicle. At $1000 though, I'm afraid many of the new converts will be expecting a motor. -- zk
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 22:56:19
From: datakoll
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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I'm betting on burlap, knobbies and 3 speeds.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 20:31:21
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com > wrote in message news:1190933779.262686.18940@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com... > > > I'm betting on burlap, knobbies and 3 speeds. I wish someone would compete with Carradice and bring out traditionally styled cotton duck panniers with modern mounting hardware. :-)
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 11:37:49
From: Dane Buson
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > "datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com> wrote in message > news:1190933779.262686.18940@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com... >> >> >> I'm betting on burlap, knobbies and 3 speeds. > > I wish someone would compete with Carradice and bring out traditionally > styled cotton duck panniers with modern mounting hardware. :-) Err, you mean like the SQR type saddlebag I've been using for the past three years? http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/bags/sqr-products.htm -- Dane Buson - sigdane@unixbigots.org The difference between science and the fuzzy subjects is that science requires reasoning while those other subjects merely require scholarship. -- Robert Heinlein
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:29:31
From: Gooserider
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"Dane Buson" <dane@unseen.edu > wrote in message news:t8uvs4-19p.ln1@curare.zuvembi.homelinux.org... > In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >> "datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com> wrote in message >> news:1190933779.262686.18940@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com... >>> >>> >>> I'm betting on burlap, knobbies and 3 speeds. >> >> I wish someone would compete with Carradice and bring out traditionally >> styled cotton duck panniers with modern mounting hardware. :-) > > Err, you mean like the SQR type saddlebag I've been using for the past > three years? > > http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/bags/sqr-products.htm Not saddlebag----panniers. Big, huge difference. Err....
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Date: 28 Sep 2007 16:00:41
From: Dane Buson
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com > wrote: > "Dane Buson" <dane@unseen.edu> wrote in message >> In rec.bicycles.misc Gooserider <Gooserider@mouse-potato.com> wrote: >>> >>> I wish someone would compete with Carradice and bring out traditionally >>> styled cotton duck panniers with modern mounting hardware. :-) >> >> Err, you mean like the SQR type saddlebag I've been using for the past >> three years? >> >> http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/bags/sqr-products.htm > > Not saddlebag----panniers. Big, huge difference. Err.... Doh! Mea Culpa! That's what I get for posting when I'm at about 20% mental capacity. [1] I think when I get home from work, I should just go lie on the couch and go "wibble" for a while (without the pencils up nose and the underpants on my head though). [1] Out 'Too Darn Late' riding and hanging about with disreputable types. It was a mighty wet night. A sign of the coming monsoon season most likely. -- Dane Buson - sigdane@unixbigots.org "There's no set architecture in Linux. All roads lead to madness" -Microsoft
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 19:43:24
From: Bellsouth Ijit 2.0 - Global Warming Edition ®
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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"datakoll" <datakoll@yahoo.com > wrote in message news:1190933779.262686.18940@22g2000hsm.googlegroups.com... > > > I'm betting on burlap, knobbies and 3 speeds. > Trikes.
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 12:54:37
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 15:08:39 -0400, Matt O'Toole <mattotoole@letterboxes.org > quoted, in part: > >If anyone gave birth to the urban biker movement, it's probably Sky >Yaeger, Swobo's managing director. Bulldadda. Urban cycling has been with us for over 130 years We can look forward to scooping some nice equipment at garage sales after these trend following fixey clones get their knee replacement surgeries. If anyone is responsible for cyclists regaining their senses it was you, me and freds the world over who never knew transportation/utility/commuting cycling was ever out of "fashion". Our "beaters" are the real progenitors of this new bicycle breed. Ms. Yeager just happened to pick up on the meme at a time when cities are becoming untenable for occupants of those stinking lesser vehicles that we've been brainwashed to accept as normal. -- zk
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Date: 27 Sep 2007 22:26:41
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: "City Bike" Hot New Category at Bicycle Industry Show
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In article <pr0of3hm2pt73knbu2hsiba7t90opv7mrl@4ax.com >, Zoot Katz <zootkatz@operamail.com > wrote: > On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 15:08:39 -0400, Matt O'Toole > <mattotoole@letterboxes.org> quoted, in part: > > > >If anyone gave birth to the urban biker movement, it's probably Sky > >Yaeger, Swobo's managing director. > > Bulldadda. Urban cycling has been with us for over 130 years > > We can look forward to scooping some nice equipment at garage sales > after these trend following fixey clones get their knee replacement > surgeries. > > If anyone is responsible for cyclists regaining their senses it was > you, me and freds the world over who never knew > transportation/utility/commuting cycling was ever out of "fashion". It _was_ out of fashion. Dag nabbed fashion is always trying to catch up with me. They'll never make it though. I've got more where that came from. > Our "beaters" are the real progenitors of this new bicycle breed. [...] -- Michael Press
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