Help me figure out what to do with and what can be done to this Big Box bike
#1
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Help me figure out what to do with and what can be done to this Big Box bike
Fresh thread.
Bike: Huffy Parkside Men's 27.5
Note: Personally I see no useful specifications here. I'd GUESS the rear freewheel is 14 to 28 tooth, but that's just a guess based off of other bikes. No idea what the front chainring is toothwise. No handlebar measurements. No listing for replacement parts that 'best fit' Nothing.
The included manual is a generalist affair that gives no real specific help past basic mantinancing. Leaves a newbie like me frustrated.
Where I ride:
farmland that used to be nursery space. Currently has overgrown grass and the fields are currently subdivided. They will be made into one large u shaped field totaling six or so acres.
Also plan on occasional greenway use, LIGHT dirt paths. Not actual mountain bike trails. I need to be able to see a path to follow it and not a chance in the pits of hell am I going to do whail tails, berms, etc.As fun as a lot of it looks on youtube? I just don't think I have the reactions to pull it off. So 'light trail use, fields, maybe within a cyclist group.'
Current Known Budget: At this point $150 + occasional assistance on detail adjustments and probable assistance in getting fresh tubes, chain oil and other (incidental expenses.)
Tools Owned: None. However I do have access to all manner of allen wrenches, sockets, open face wrenches, pliers, screwdrivers. Generalist or woodworking tools. Adjustable air compressor
Experience: Pretty much starting from nothing, but I was able to improve how the gearing feels by following tutorials. I know it's probably Not Right, but 'better than when it was at the store.'
Maintenance Questions:
I am assuming the guy that did assembly underlubed and poorly tuned. Best tutorial videos to look up? Best greases and lubes for each component? Should I go get someone with better eyesight? As in, tiny pea sized bearings, little fiddly O rings, and other small items that could get lost in a shop floor. Are those a thing?
What pieces of gear do I need for mantinancing? Bike stand? Do I need that or is that just a convenience item?
Component Questions:
What is the problem with that specific derailleur compared to even slightly 'better' offerings? In what way is that specific item defeciant? Mantinancing? Lack of features? Lifespan? All of the above?
Best options for replacing on a small budget?
In General:
Walk down with me on why each thing on my bike is garbage. I walked in here knowing 'OK I have been given a walmart bike. that is about as low end as it gets and this thing is not going on any trails and surviving.' However given the entire scouring of ******, facebook, other forums, and so forth seems to have an in gneral elitist 'lol bike shaped object' response to the point it feels less like commentary on poor coponents and more 'people spent a lot of money and are trying to reassure themselves they made the right call' along wit ha side of 'i am not seeing a lot of WHY, just that thing is bad.' So. tell me WHY This thing is bad. List quantifiable reasons to show me that you know what you are talking about so I will be better educated if I end up getting lucky enough to have money for a better bike. I need to know what to look for, or failing that know enough to educate people who want to help me upgrade.
In the meantime I am going to ask about specific components for THIS bike, because it is what I have to work with.
Freewheel.
I had my eye on getting a megarange so there is that one low LOW gear to deal with harder to muscle through parts of the ride. However I have no idea if that will work or if better options exist.
I realize converting to cassette would probably give better long term, but that is also more expensive, and if this is supposed to be a 'first bike to graduate from' probably better to hold off? I dunno
Crankset and front gear: Are there any apparent problems that would make someone go 'those need replacing Right Now'? Could getting a snail thirty tooth and action crankset make any improvements?
Pedals: Fooker? Rockbros? Ezra? Any preferences other than 'anything but what's there'?
Shifter: I have heard Revo is the least worst option for twist shifter, but what e a good budget option for a seven speed thumb shifter?ould b
Front Fork, Head tube, Handlebars.
What are my options considering this is a quill stem? I have heard sunfire makes decent entry level replacement forks but again, quill stem. I actually like the current handlebar height, but do not know how best to replicate or even if that is an optimal height. I put these three things together because 'quill stem sorta throws everything in the air on if i can do a front fork without replacing the quill headset which also means replacing theh andlebars' which puts that as a group replacement running easily into the $200+ range for budget options if it has to be done all at once.
Bike: Huffy Parkside Men's 27.5
Note: Personally I see no useful specifications here. I'd GUESS the rear freewheel is 14 to 28 tooth, but that's just a guess based off of other bikes. No idea what the front chainring is toothwise. No handlebar measurements. No listing for replacement parts that 'best fit' Nothing.
The included manual is a generalist affair that gives no real specific help past basic mantinancing. Leaves a newbie like me frustrated.
Where I ride:
farmland that used to be nursery space. Currently has overgrown grass and the fields are currently subdivided. They will be made into one large u shaped field totaling six or so acres.
Also plan on occasional greenway use, LIGHT dirt paths. Not actual mountain bike trails. I need to be able to see a path to follow it and not a chance in the pits of hell am I going to do whail tails, berms, etc.As fun as a lot of it looks on youtube? I just don't think I have the reactions to pull it off. So 'light trail use, fields, maybe within a cyclist group.'
Current Known Budget: At this point $150 + occasional assistance on detail adjustments and probable assistance in getting fresh tubes, chain oil and other (incidental expenses.)
Tools Owned: None. However I do have access to all manner of allen wrenches, sockets, open face wrenches, pliers, screwdrivers. Generalist or woodworking tools. Adjustable air compressor
Experience: Pretty much starting from nothing, but I was able to improve how the gearing feels by following tutorials. I know it's probably Not Right, but 'better than when it was at the store.'
Maintenance Questions:
I am assuming the guy that did assembly underlubed and poorly tuned. Best tutorial videos to look up? Best greases and lubes for each component? Should I go get someone with better eyesight? As in, tiny pea sized bearings, little fiddly O rings, and other small items that could get lost in a shop floor. Are those a thing?
What pieces of gear do I need for mantinancing? Bike stand? Do I need that or is that just a convenience item?
Component Questions:
What is the problem with that specific derailleur compared to even slightly 'better' offerings? In what way is that specific item defeciant? Mantinancing? Lack of features? Lifespan? All of the above?
Best options for replacing on a small budget?
In General:
Walk down with me on why each thing on my bike is garbage. I walked in here knowing 'OK I have been given a walmart bike. that is about as low end as it gets and this thing is not going on any trails and surviving.' However given the entire scouring of ******, facebook, other forums, and so forth seems to have an in gneral elitist 'lol bike shaped object' response to the point it feels less like commentary on poor coponents and more 'people spent a lot of money and are trying to reassure themselves they made the right call' along wit ha side of 'i am not seeing a lot of WHY, just that thing is bad.' So. tell me WHY This thing is bad. List quantifiable reasons to show me that you know what you are talking about so I will be better educated if I end up getting lucky enough to have money for a better bike. I need to know what to look for, or failing that know enough to educate people who want to help me upgrade.
In the meantime I am going to ask about specific components for THIS bike, because it is what I have to work with.
Freewheel.
I had my eye on getting a megarange so there is that one low LOW gear to deal with harder to muscle through parts of the ride. However I have no idea if that will work or if better options exist.
I realize converting to cassette would probably give better long term, but that is also more expensive, and if this is supposed to be a 'first bike to graduate from' probably better to hold off? I dunno
Crankset and front gear: Are there any apparent problems that would make someone go 'those need replacing Right Now'? Could getting a snail thirty tooth and action crankset make any improvements?
Pedals: Fooker? Rockbros? Ezra? Any preferences other than 'anything but what's there'?
Shifter: I have heard Revo is the least worst option for twist shifter, but what e a good budget option for a seven speed thumb shifter?ould b
Front Fork, Head tube, Handlebars.
What are my options considering this is a quill stem? I have heard sunfire makes decent entry level replacement forks but again, quill stem. I actually like the current handlebar height, but do not know how best to replicate or even if that is an optimal height. I put these three things together because 'quill stem sorta throws everything in the air on if i can do a front fork without replacing the quill headset which also means replacing theh andlebars' which puts that as a group replacement running easily into the $200+ range for budget options if it has to be done all at once.
#2
Full Member
You have a POS bike, you've got a $150 budget to make it better, and you're considering upgrading to a cassette (that'll take the whole budget), pedals, rear derailleur and shifter?
Just ride the snot out of the bike and report back what you're having problems with.
Do DIY, look at lots of videos. Keep in mind that there are a lot of videos made by people who don't know what they're doing. Art's Cyclery is a great source. Sheldon Brown is also a great source. Workstands are nice, but you can get by with inserting the nose of the saddle into a loop that hangs from your garage ceiling. Bike doesn't shift good? Do your research. Poor shifting is usually attributed to simpler and cheaper things, such as new cables and housing.
You'll never make that a great bike. Just use the $150 to correct things as needed from riding what you have. Save the $ for a new-to-you bike, and maybe as time passes you'll have more $ and more knowledge of what you want and what to look for.
Just ride the snot out of the bike and report back what you're having problems with.
Do DIY, look at lots of videos. Keep in mind that there are a lot of videos made by people who don't know what they're doing. Art's Cyclery is a great source. Sheldon Brown is also a great source. Workstands are nice, but you can get by with inserting the nose of the saddle into a loop that hangs from your garage ceiling. Bike doesn't shift good? Do your research. Poor shifting is usually attributed to simpler and cheaper things, such as new cables and housing.
You'll never make that a great bike. Just use the $150 to correct things as needed from riding what you have. Save the $ for a new-to-you bike, and maybe as time passes you'll have more $ and more knowledge of what you want and what to look for.
#3
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Are you able to count? If so, things are very simple as far as your freewheel and chainring go. Count the teeth
Your bike is not worth upgrading. Use it as it is
There is nothing wrong with a quill type stem. Professional cyclists used them in the most demanding races for over 70 years. I have a very nice bike that I want to convert back to the original fork that uses a threaded headset and a quill stem
Had you spent your current upgrade budget plus the amount you paid for your bike you would have a better bike than what you will end up with. You will be paying retail price for parts that you already bought. The parts you already paid for will cost far more aftermarket.
Your bike is not worth upgrading. Use it as it is
There is nothing wrong with a quill type stem. Professional cyclists used them in the most demanding races for over 70 years. I have a very nice bike that I want to convert back to the original fork that uses a threaded headset and a quill stem
Had you spent your current upgrade budget plus the amount you paid for your bike you would have a better bike than what you will end up with. You will be paying retail price for parts that you already bought. The parts you already paid for will cost far more aftermarket.
Last edited by alcjphil; 12-17-20 at 11:40 PM.
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fresh thread.
OK, you just want answers, no opinions? Well, I'll try...
Bike: Huffy parkside men's 27.5
note: Personally i see no useful specifications here. I'd guess the rear freewheel is 14 to 28 tooth, but that's just a guess based off of other bikes. No idea what the front chainring is toothwise. No handlebar measurements. No listing for replacement parts that 'best fit' nothing.
The included manual is a generalist affair that gives no real specific help past basic mantinancing. Leaves a newbie like me frustrated.
OK, you just want answers, no opinions? Well, I'll try...
Bike: Huffy parkside men's 27.5
note: Personally i see no useful specifications here. I'd guess the rear freewheel is 14 to 28 tooth, but that's just a guess based off of other bikes. No idea what the front chainring is toothwise. No handlebar measurements. No listing for replacement parts that 'best fit' nothing.
The included manual is a generalist affair that gives no real specific help past basic mantinancing. Leaves a newbie like me frustrated.
...
current known budget: At this point $150 + occasional assistance on detail adjustments and probable assistance in getting fresh tubes, chain oil and other (incidental expenses.)
tools owned: None. However i do have access to all manner of allen wrenches, sockets, open face wrenches, pliers, screwdrivers. Generalist or woodworking tools. Adjustable air compressor
experience: Pretty much starting from nothing, but i was able to improve how the gearing feels by following tutorials. I know it's probably not right, but 'better than when it was at the store.'
tools owned: None. However i do have access to all manner of allen wrenches, sockets, open face wrenches, pliers, screwdrivers. Generalist or woodworking tools. Adjustable air compressor
experience: Pretty much starting from nothing, but i was able to improve how the gearing feels by following tutorials. I know it's probably not right, but 'better than when it was at the store.'
maintenance questions:
I am assuming the guy that did assembly underlubed and poorly tuned. Best tutorial videos to look up? Best greases and lubes for each component? Should i go get someone with better eyesight? As in, tiny pea sized bearings, little fiddly o rings, and other small items that could get lost in a shop floor. Are those a thing?
What pieces of gear do i need for mantinancing? Bike stand? Do i need that or is that just a convenience item?
I am assuming the guy that did assembly underlubed and poorly tuned. Best tutorial videos to look up? Best greases and lubes for each component? Should i go get someone with better eyesight? As in, tiny pea sized bearings, little fiddly o rings, and other small items that could get lost in a shop floor. Are those a thing?
What pieces of gear do i need for mantinancing? Bike stand? Do i need that or is that just a convenience item?
component questions:
What is the problem with that specific derailleur compared to even slightly 'better' offerings? In what way is that specific item defeciant? Mantinancing? Lack of features? Lifespan? All of the above?
Best options for replacing on a small budget?
What is the problem with that specific derailleur compared to even slightly 'better' offerings? In what way is that specific item defeciant? Mantinancing? Lack of features? Lifespan? All of the above?
Best options for replacing on a small budget?
in general:
Walk down with me on why each thing on my bike is garbage. I walked in here knowing 'ok i have been given a walmart bike. That is about as low end as it gets and this thing is not going on any trails and surviving.' however given the entire scouring of ******, facebook, other forums, and so forth seems to have an in gneral elitist 'lol bike shaped object' response to the point it feels less like commentary on poor coponents and more 'people spent a lot of money and are trying to reassure themselves they made the right call' along wit ha side of 'i am not seeing a lot of why, just that thing is bad.' so. Tell me why this thing is bad. List quantifiable reasons to show me that you know what you are talking about so i will be better educated if i end up getting lucky enough to have money for a better bike. I need to know what to look for, or failing that know enough to educate people who want to help me upgrade.
In the meantime i am going to ask about specific components for this bike, because it is what i have to work with.
Walk down with me on why each thing on my bike is garbage. I walked in here knowing 'ok i have been given a walmart bike. That is about as low end as it gets and this thing is not going on any trails and surviving.' however given the entire scouring of ******, facebook, other forums, and so forth seems to have an in gneral elitist 'lol bike shaped object' response to the point it feels less like commentary on poor coponents and more 'people spent a lot of money and are trying to reassure themselves they made the right call' along wit ha side of 'i am not seeing a lot of why, just that thing is bad.' so. Tell me why this thing is bad. List quantifiable reasons to show me that you know what you are talking about so i will be better educated if i end up getting lucky enough to have money for a better bike. I need to know what to look for, or failing that know enough to educate people who want to help me upgrade.
In the meantime i am going to ask about specific components for this bike, because it is what i have to work with.
What are my options considering this is a quill stem? I have heard sunfire makes decent entry level replacement forks but again, quill stem. I actually like the current handlebar height, but do not know how best to replicate or even if that is an optimal height. I put these three things together because 'quill stem sorta throws everything in the air on if i can do a front fork without replacing the quill headset which also means replacing theh andlebars' which puts that as a group replacement running easily into the $200+ range for budget options if it has to be done all at once.
Re: fork, you mean SunTour, or SR SunTour. I would not buy a suspension fork - unless a pricey one on an actual mountain bike designed to have one, they add weight and complexity and cost. You have nice 27.5 x 1.75 width tires on this - if you want more trailworthiness, look at some WTB or Maxxis, or Kenda tires with a fatter diameter and maybe some chunkier tread - not so knobby that it'll slow you down a lot on smoother parts, but wider with a bit more bite in loose surfaces. That's a difference worth spending $ on.
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You'll almost certainly benefit from upgrading all of it, but it'd be cheaper putting the money aside to get a better bike when you need it (because you'll spend as much in parts). Lots of people have tried the "buy a cheap bike and turn it into an expensive bike" thing and almost all of them have concluded that you get a much better bike, cheaper, by buying the good one in the first place. Albeit if it's a project to work on then it's well worth trying to upgrade/build it for the learning experience.
Just ride it and replace what brakes or annoys you; you might find that it's fine. Cheap bikes are usually alright (the big box stores wouldn't sell them if they cost more in returns than they sold), they may be a bit heavy and unrefined but you're not doing anything demanding and likely won't notice. I had a $150 big box bike as a teenager, abused it something horrible and sold it 15 years later for $50 to a friend who wanted something to leave outside bars. As I understand it all he's changed is the tires.
I'd leave the gearing completely alone as that's a lot of fiddly work and I'm sure you'll be fine even with a 14-28 cog on the back unless you're dealing with really steep climbs.
The easy and good bang for buck upgrades (which you can potentially take onto a newer bike) are pedals and saddle, I'm not sure I'd bother with anything else.
If I wanted to improve the riding experience and had $150 to spend, I'd probably spend it on decent clothing (shoes, padded shorts and jacket) or accessories (like a track pump).
Edit: I've actually looked at the bike - this one? https://www.huffybikes.com/parkside-...-5-inch-56728/
It's a city bike, and it sounds like you're mostly going to be using it offroad? If so I'd get a pair of mountain bike or hybrid tires for it (the size will be written on them somewhere, 27.5x something). The gearing looks like it'll be OK too. The pedals look super cheap (and may not be great off-road) and the saddle is more for comfort and pretty heavy. So as I said above: leave the gears alone and look at possibly a new set of mountain bike pedals and a seat.
Just ride it and replace what brakes or annoys you; you might find that it's fine. Cheap bikes are usually alright (the big box stores wouldn't sell them if they cost more in returns than they sold), they may be a bit heavy and unrefined but you're not doing anything demanding and likely won't notice. I had a $150 big box bike as a teenager, abused it something horrible and sold it 15 years later for $50 to a friend who wanted something to leave outside bars. As I understand it all he's changed is the tires.
I'd leave the gearing completely alone as that's a lot of fiddly work and I'm sure you'll be fine even with a 14-28 cog on the back unless you're dealing with really steep climbs.
The easy and good bang for buck upgrades (which you can potentially take onto a newer bike) are pedals and saddle, I'm not sure I'd bother with anything else.
If I wanted to improve the riding experience and had $150 to spend, I'd probably spend it on decent clothing (shoes, padded shorts and jacket) or accessories (like a track pump).
Edit: I've actually looked at the bike - this one? https://www.huffybikes.com/parkside-...-5-inch-56728/
It's a city bike, and it sounds like you're mostly going to be using it offroad? If so I'd get a pair of mountain bike or hybrid tires for it (the size will be written on them somewhere, 27.5x something). The gearing looks like it'll be OK too. The pedals look super cheap (and may not be great off-road) and the saddle is more for comfort and pretty heavy. So as I said above: leave the gears alone and look at possibly a new set of mountain bike pedals and a seat.
Last edited by Herzlos; 12-18-20 at 04:37 AM.
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#6
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There is nothing wrong with the bicycle that you have. Keep the tires aired up. Lubricate the chain and wipe it occasionally. It looks to me like this bike will be fine for the riding that you've described. Simply ride it and enjoy the out of doors.
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no one is telling you things you don't want to hear because we are snobs or for some personal reason. it's because many of us have "been there" and know first-hand just how futile it is to "upgrade" a bike like that. if you spend enough time on this forum or in a bike shop or co-op, we've all seen at least a dozen of these stories play out: rider spends weeks trying to justify their choice, arguing with people who know better and care enough about them to tell them it's not a good idea, does it anyways and one of two outcomes occurs: the rider admits it was a waste of time and saves up for a suitable bike, or the rider can't relinquish their pride, gives up, and disappears. I don't want to see the latter happen, so for your own sanity, don't fret too much over this bike. ride it as-is. perhaps some better grips would be a good idea. buy some tools and learn how to perform basic maintenance on it. then find a more suitable starting point of a bike for what you are doing.
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no one is telling you things you don't want to hear because we are snobs or for some personal reason. It's because many of us have "been there" and know first-hand just how futile it is to "upgrade" a bike like that. If you spend enough time on this forum or in a bike shop or co-op, we've all seen at least a dozen of these stories play out: Rider spends weeks trying to justify their choice, arguing with people who know better and care enough about them to tell them it's not a good idea, does it anyways and one of two outcomes occurs: The rider admits it was a waste of time and saves up for a suitable bike, or the rider can't relinquish their pride, gives up, and disappears. I don't want to see the latter happen, so for your own sanity, don't fret too much over this bike. Ride it as-is. Perhaps some better grips would be a good idea. Buy some tools and learn how to perform basic maintenance on it. Then find a more suitable starting point of a bike for what you are doing.
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There is not a problem in life that spending money on can't make worse.
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#10
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Just ride the bike and see what happens. You might be able to ride it for years with no problems. If parts break or wear out, then you'll know exactly which ones you need to fix.
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Just ride your bicycle as is. Once you have a few 1000 miles on it you will have a better understanding of what you like and what shortcomings of your bike are holding you back.
Many of us, me included, have come back to bicycling after many years away from the activity. In my case I was off my bicycle for 25 years, when I decided to get back on it I was 60 years old. When I started back I had available to me 2 bicycles, one a mountain bike the other a road bike. The road bike I bought new in 1986, slightly above entry level. I have put on this bicycle in the last two years over 5000 miles in spite of the fact it has a quill stem and a 6 speed freewheel. I have performed a few upgrades but have no plans to replace the stem or go to a cassette because the cost isn't worth what I will have once completed. I say this as an individual that has the tools and knowledge to do all of the work myself, including building new wheels from scratch.
Today my primary road bike is a 15 year old Cannondale that I bought off CL for $300 I got it before the virus demic so deals like that are harder to come by now but my point is I have the cash stream to buy a new CF bike but what I have works fine for me as I've currently not reached the limit of what my bicycle can offer me. As far as my mountain bike is concerned it has v-brakes not disk, 26" wheels not 29". When I was first getting back to riding, before I fully comprehended the fact that I was actually out of shape, I thought in my mind that my problem was my bikes, not my fitness level. Now that my fitness level has improved I have no desire to upgrade my existing bikes. If however a major component were to fail I would probably replace that and it might be an upgrade but I'm not going to upgrade simply for the sake of upgrading as it's not a wise use of money.
So again ride your bike. As things either break or fall out of adjustment address them but don't throw money into it until you get your fitness level up and figure out exactly what you want out of this hobby.
Many of us, me included, have come back to bicycling after many years away from the activity. In my case I was off my bicycle for 25 years, when I decided to get back on it I was 60 years old. When I started back I had available to me 2 bicycles, one a mountain bike the other a road bike. The road bike I bought new in 1986, slightly above entry level. I have put on this bicycle in the last two years over 5000 miles in spite of the fact it has a quill stem and a 6 speed freewheel. I have performed a few upgrades but have no plans to replace the stem or go to a cassette because the cost isn't worth what I will have once completed. I say this as an individual that has the tools and knowledge to do all of the work myself, including building new wheels from scratch.
Today my primary road bike is a 15 year old Cannondale that I bought off CL for $300 I got it before the virus demic so deals like that are harder to come by now but my point is I have the cash stream to buy a new CF bike but what I have works fine for me as I've currently not reached the limit of what my bicycle can offer me. As far as my mountain bike is concerned it has v-brakes not disk, 26" wheels not 29". When I was first getting back to riding, before I fully comprehended the fact that I was actually out of shape, I thought in my mind that my problem was my bikes, not my fitness level. Now that my fitness level has improved I have no desire to upgrade my existing bikes. If however a major component were to fail I would probably replace that and it might be an upgrade but I'm not going to upgrade simply for the sake of upgrading as it's not a wise use of money.
So again ride your bike. As things either break or fall out of adjustment address them but don't throw money into it until you get your fitness level up and figure out exactly what you want out of this hobby.
Last edited by Thomas15; 12-18-20 at 09:34 AM.
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Talk of upgrading the OP's Huffy reminds me of a high-school classmate who put mag wheels and headers on his parents' brown '75 AMC Matador Sedan.
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The bike is what it is. While some would rush to condemn it, I will note that a big-box bike like this is worlds away superior to big-box bikes of 30 or 40 years ago, and with some basic maintenance should work just fine.
There really IS a point of diminishing returns. Maybe my story will illustrate it. When I was a kid in 1973, my father bought me my first 10-speed bike. Fortunately for me, the first bike, a basic welded American BMA/6 thing with Ashtabula cranks and Shimano Eagle derailleurs was actually missing some vital parts, so Dad returned it and came home with a West German-built "Brownie," probably built by Kalkhoff. It was one of the many bike sourced from makers world-wide to meet the demand of the Great Bike Boom of the early 70s. It had all the hallmarks of bottom rung European 10-speed - steel rims with 3-piece hub shells laced with galvanized spokes to steel rims, gas-pipe tubing that was at least lugged, but was squished flat at the dropouts and crudely attached to stamped ends, a steel cottered crank, plastic Simplex derailleurs, Altenberger Synchron sidepulls and a nasty hard a$$-hatchet plastic saddle. I actually did upgrade some things on it, and learned several lessons the hard way. 1. DIY repainting a bike rather than cleaning it and living with the stock paint job is a bad idea and looks like home-made hell. 2. Replacing broken Simplex derailleurs with budget SunTour alloy units makes sense and was cheap, easy and a genuine upgrade - replacing the Altenberger brakes with expensive Italian Universal mod. 61 sidepulls that cost almost as much as the bike sold for new was a bad idea. 3. The difference between the $50 big-box bike vs. the $150 bike shop bike that replaced it two years later was far more than the 3:1 cost ratio.
Were I in your shoes, I would ride the bike you have now and (apart from saddle and pedals!) would only REPLACE stuff if it breaks or wears out. I would NOT upgrade anything, unless it was an incidental upgrade to replace broken or worn-out stuff. I would also ride the snot out of the bike and make notes on what I wanted next. Finally, I would learn all I could about how to service and repair bikes.
I am NOT enamored of new bikes, and for the riding you're doing, I would tell you to figure out what size and dimensions of bike fit YOU, then start keeping an eye out for a high-quality older mountain bike at a bargain price. Ride what you have while you do so. Sooner or later a deal will come along. As I write this I have a 2007 or so Giant Yukon 24-speed with disc brakes and a front shock that I paid $20, then another $4 for a rear brake cable. Once I fixed the rear brake, I pumped up the tires, lubed the chain - and it runs beautifully. Pity it's too big for me! I just had a nice older used Cannondale offered to me for $25. If you can use tools and watch YouTube videos you will get a much better ride experience out of an older bike shop quality bike than you can get from a big box machine.
There really IS a point of diminishing returns. Maybe my story will illustrate it. When I was a kid in 1973, my father bought me my first 10-speed bike. Fortunately for me, the first bike, a basic welded American BMA/6 thing with Ashtabula cranks and Shimano Eagle derailleurs was actually missing some vital parts, so Dad returned it and came home with a West German-built "Brownie," probably built by Kalkhoff. It was one of the many bike sourced from makers world-wide to meet the demand of the Great Bike Boom of the early 70s. It had all the hallmarks of bottom rung European 10-speed - steel rims with 3-piece hub shells laced with galvanized spokes to steel rims, gas-pipe tubing that was at least lugged, but was squished flat at the dropouts and crudely attached to stamped ends, a steel cottered crank, plastic Simplex derailleurs, Altenberger Synchron sidepulls and a nasty hard a$$-hatchet plastic saddle. I actually did upgrade some things on it, and learned several lessons the hard way. 1. DIY repainting a bike rather than cleaning it and living with the stock paint job is a bad idea and looks like home-made hell. 2. Replacing broken Simplex derailleurs with budget SunTour alloy units makes sense and was cheap, easy and a genuine upgrade - replacing the Altenberger brakes with expensive Italian Universal mod. 61 sidepulls that cost almost as much as the bike sold for new was a bad idea. 3. The difference between the $50 big-box bike vs. the $150 bike shop bike that replaced it two years later was far more than the 3:1 cost ratio.
Were I in your shoes, I would ride the bike you have now and (apart from saddle and pedals!) would only REPLACE stuff if it breaks or wears out. I would NOT upgrade anything, unless it was an incidental upgrade to replace broken or worn-out stuff. I would also ride the snot out of the bike and make notes on what I wanted next. Finally, I would learn all I could about how to service and repair bikes.
I am NOT enamored of new bikes, and for the riding you're doing, I would tell you to figure out what size and dimensions of bike fit YOU, then start keeping an eye out for a high-quality older mountain bike at a bargain price. Ride what you have while you do so. Sooner or later a deal will come along. As I write this I have a 2007 or so Giant Yukon 24-speed with disc brakes and a front shock that I paid $20, then another $4 for a rear brake cable. Once I fixed the rear brake, I pumped up the tires, lubed the chain - and it runs beautifully. Pity it's too big for me! I just had a nice older used Cannondale offered to me for $25. If you can use tools and watch YouTube videos you will get a much better ride experience out of an older bike shop quality bike than you can get from a big box machine.
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#16
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Yes, it's a cheap bike, but it's a very simple one. That means there's not much to go wrong. You're not going to be asking much of it, performance wise, so it may suprise you with how well it holds up.
The weakest link is probably the derailleur, but again, it's a 1x7 path bike, so it won't see very demanding use, so, if it's working well enough now, i'd ride it until it breaks, then worry about an upgrade. (Frankly it's more likely to get damaged from a drop than worn out) 7-speed is also good to learn about tuning / adjusting as it's fairly tolerant of minor misadjustment , not as 'picky' as something like 10-speed.
Same goes for the tires, 27.5x1.75" is more than enough for a gravel track, and unless you're riding in a lot of mud, a more aggressive tread pattern really wouldn't bring much benefit.
Again, ride until they need to be replaced.
The only thing I'd go for replacing out-of-the box would be the pedals. I like plastic-body BMX pedals as a budget upgrade. Oddessy 'Twisted" and Animal "Hamilton" are perennial favorites. They're light-ish, good grip and durable. You can find them all day for $20.
The weakest link is probably the derailleur, but again, it's a 1x7 path bike, so it won't see very demanding use, so, if it's working well enough now, i'd ride it until it breaks, then worry about an upgrade. (Frankly it's more likely to get damaged from a drop than worn out) 7-speed is also good to learn about tuning / adjusting as it's fairly tolerant of minor misadjustment , not as 'picky' as something like 10-speed.
Same goes for the tires, 27.5x1.75" is more than enough for a gravel track, and unless you're riding in a lot of mud, a more aggressive tread pattern really wouldn't bring much benefit.
Again, ride until they need to be replaced.
The only thing I'd go for replacing out-of-the box would be the pedals. I like plastic-body BMX pedals as a budget upgrade. Oddessy 'Twisted" and Animal "Hamilton" are perennial favorites. They're light-ish, good grip and durable. You can find them all day for $20.
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#17
Senior Member
No complaints here. It's a bike pedal, not a rocket to Mars. Simple.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Last edited by Reflector Guy; 12-18-20 at 10:33 AM. Reason: Added a link
#18
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One thing that separates cheap bikes from the next step up, is just manufacturing quality.
I've met some people who work for a bike brand that's sold through big-box stores. They are passionate about bikes, but they're dealing with the reality of bringing an affordable bike to the masses within the modern retail environment. If they can't make a certain price point, the retailer simply drops them and buys bikes from someone else.
According to Deming, during the heyday of the Model T, cars were not even fully tested before being shipped from the factory. The dealer was expected to do the final preparation of the car, which involved fixing all of the production defects that could be found. Lower end bikes are the same way: In fact they are not even fully assembled at the factory: The frame and wheels are brought together for the first time at the retail store, or at your home if you buy one by mail. Bikes purchased from more respectable shops are tuned up by the dealer before being sold, and since those dealers value their time and reputation, they impose some discipline on the brands that they carry.
I've messed with a lot of what used to be called "department store" bikes. I think the main thing you can do is go from one subsystem to the next, and learn how to adjust and maintain it. The Park Tool website and videos are great. Things will be harder to adjust than on a higher end bike, because things like threading and mating surfaces don't slide as nicely, but you can learn a lot. Simply knowing that all of the bearings are actually lubricated is a step forward. Knowing that the spokes are at a decent tension will make the bike last longer. Being in charge of how the brakes work and how the shifter behaves, will improve your riding experience.
Gain confidence in these skills will give you the option, in the future, of buying another "cheap bike" by buying a used bike that you can evaluate and maintain yourself.
I've met some people who work for a bike brand that's sold through big-box stores. They are passionate about bikes, but they're dealing with the reality of bringing an affordable bike to the masses within the modern retail environment. If they can't make a certain price point, the retailer simply drops them and buys bikes from someone else.
According to Deming, during the heyday of the Model T, cars were not even fully tested before being shipped from the factory. The dealer was expected to do the final preparation of the car, which involved fixing all of the production defects that could be found. Lower end bikes are the same way: In fact they are not even fully assembled at the factory: The frame and wheels are brought together for the first time at the retail store, or at your home if you buy one by mail. Bikes purchased from more respectable shops are tuned up by the dealer before being sold, and since those dealers value their time and reputation, they impose some discipline on the brands that they carry.
I've messed with a lot of what used to be called "department store" bikes. I think the main thing you can do is go from one subsystem to the next, and learn how to adjust and maintain it. The Park Tool website and videos are great. Things will be harder to adjust than on a higher end bike, because things like threading and mating surfaces don't slide as nicely, but you can learn a lot. Simply knowing that all of the bearings are actually lubricated is a step forward. Knowing that the spokes are at a decent tension will make the bike last longer. Being in charge of how the brakes work and how the shifter behaves, will improve your riding experience.
Gain confidence in these skills will give you the option, in the future, of buying another "cheap bike" by buying a used bike that you can evaluate and maintain yourself.
#19
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I have Rockbros pedals on both bikes, the kind with the little grub screws for traction (I ride with regular sneakers, not clipless).
No complaints here. It's a bike pedal, not a rocket to Mars. Simple.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
No complaints here. It's a bike pedal, not a rocket to Mars. Simple.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
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#20
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I've read quite a few horror stories about the spindles on those breaking during a ride. some of these stories include graphic images of lacerated legs. they might be fine for OP, but there's a reason why cheap knockoffs are so cheap. Odyssey PCs come from a reputable brand and can be found cheaper than that.
#21
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Looks like a good choice for a box store bike. No suspension to rob power, only one derailer to worry about keeping working. I would check the tune, make sure it shifts through al the gears. Park tools website has videos that can help you. Center the brake pads, and make sure they don't rub. I would put slime inner tubes in the tires, pasture have lots of thorns and people have probably been loosing nails out there for 100 years. Check tire pressure before every ride so you don't pinch flat on rocks.
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Best upgrade for a bike like that is a clothes pin and playing card in the spokes.
Vrooom Vroom.
Can't believe the mods told him to start a second thread.
Vrooom Vroom.
Can't believe the mods told him to start a second thread.
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Sell it and buy an actual hybrid or rigid mtb. The geometry on those comfort bikes is awkward for trail riding. You'll want to be able to stand and peddle comfortably.
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I would simply ride the bike as is, and replace things as they need replacement. As for pedals, maybe try some BMX style platform pedals by Wellgo. I use pedals like that on my touring bike and they are comfortable. I have a pair of Wellgos in the garage, but swapped them out for some magnesium DMR V12 pedals, but the shape and design are the same as the Wellgos I have. They both work well. Wellgo has many different styles, mine have replaceable pins, but that isn't necessary. Here is a basic one that would work well. Also search Amazon for their pedals.
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Cheap bikes often suffer from poor standardization and low-quality bolts. Rather than using common off-the-shelf components, they use subcontractors who don't normally make bike parts. The end result is incompatibility with the rest of the industry. Stuff like odd seat post diameters can make upgrading anything difficult. The BIGGEST issue I think are the cheap bolts they use. Upgrading a bike involves lots of disassembly and reassembly. The cheap bolts they use will round off very quickly making any maintenance a nightmare.
As others have said, ride the bike as is until you save up enough to get a bike that is worth the effort to upgrade. $500 can get you a good used bike with industry-standard parts. You can then spend the rest of your life upgrading it.
As others have said, ride the bike as is until you save up enough to get a bike that is worth the effort to upgrade. $500 can get you a good used bike with industry-standard parts. You can then spend the rest of your life upgrading it.
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