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What would your "only bike" be?

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View Poll Results: What would your "only bike" be?
Road race bike
9.88%
Cyclocross/drop bar tourer
53.09%
Road hybrid
6.17%
City hybrid
13.58%
Hardtail MTB
11.11%
FS/downhill MTB
1.23%
BMX
0
0%
Folding bike
2.47%
Recumbent
2.47%
Voters: 81. You may not vote on this poll

What would your "only bike" be?

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Old 03-16-12, 12:02 PM
  #1  
BarracksSi
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What would your "only bike" be?

Inspired by this thread:
https://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...-of-your-bikes...

I was noticing that a lot of the bikes pictured there have drop bars, a rack, and also often have fenders. Looking around the streets here, you'd think that hybrid variants would have had a stronger showing. So, this got me wondering what, statistically, would be the most popular commuter bike here on BF.

Pick one, and pick what you'd like to have, not necessarily what you actually use now or have on hand.

Road race bike
Cyclocross/drop bar tourer
Road hybrid (lightweight, skinny tires, fully rigid)
City hybrid (heavier, higher bars, fatter tires, front shock optional)
Hardtail MTB
Full suspension/downhill MTB
BMX
Folder (with either flat bars or drops)
Recumbent
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Old 03-16-12, 12:22 PM
  #2  
unterhausen
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randonneuse, but I like to have a road bike and a cheap bike to commute on, so I'm not sure why I would limit myself to one
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Old 03-16-12, 12:26 PM
  #3  
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I voted hardtail MTB only because I've been thinking that a 26" wheeled bike would be most versatile. I'm 5'6" and though I love my Tricross, finding putting fenders on anything 700c is PITA. Clearances, toe overlap, you name it. If I could get a nice custom 26" (or 650c) Rivendell then maybe I could get down to ONE bike.
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Old 03-16-12, 12:28 PM
  #4  
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Road racing bike. They're generally the most fun, with the possible exception of riding a mountain bike in the mountains.

There's a video of a BF member who rode a carbon Roubaix (?) from Seattle to San Francisco, covering 1,100 miles in 10 days of riding. It's especially inspiring to somebody, like yours truly, who lives on one end of that journey and has lived on the other. So, a road racing bike can be a touring bike ... as long as you have a chase vehicle.
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Old 03-16-12, 12:38 PM
  #5  
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I'd pick something like a Cross-Check/DoubleCross/Cassaroll. You could slap racks and fenders on for the commute or overnighter, mount skinny tires for hammer rides, even go SSFG if you like.

on edit: Does Bianchi still make the Volpe?

Last edited by caloso; 03-16-12 at 12:44 PM.
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Old 03-16-12, 12:41 PM
  #6  
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I don't technically own one, but you can definitely do the most with a cyclocross/touring bike.
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Old 03-16-12, 12:54 PM
  #7  
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I don't understand class road Racing bike, but I selected it meaning Road Bike.

for me road bike is drop bars and efficient. Lots of variation of course, but even though my bike was marketed as for triatholons (not a tri bike) when I bought it in 89 it could be an entry race. but to me it is a road bike.

why a road bike.... most flexible....even if you have a full on race you can so some sort of carrying (underseat bag, seat post rack, messenger bag) and anything less than full on race gives you even more flexiblity.

here is my only bike if I had to choose one. '89 miyata 1400 upgraded to ultegra 9 triple. right now it is set up for riding hard on weekends, but I have had it set up with fenders and a rack ...bit of tight fit and requires creativity with no eyelets

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Old 03-16-12, 12:57 PM
  #8  
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I'd get a cross bike, but only if it has rack mounts. Otherwise, just give me a traditional road with rack mounts.

The Fuji Cross 3.0 would do nicely, but not sure though...I'd get a Giant Defy 2 or Jamis Xenith Enduro.
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Old 03-16-12, 01:02 PM
  #9  
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if i could only have 1 bike for commuting, i'd have a cross bike. they're the utmost in combing decent speed with maximum versatility.

as it is i don't have a cross bike. i have a race bike for fair weather commuting, and an IGH/disc brake hybrid that can take wider tires/studs as my foul weather/winter commuter.
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Old 03-16-12, 01:03 PM
  #10  
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i use my home brew beach cruiser that has 700c wheels and hybrid tires. maybe you needed a choice for other on the poll
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Old 03-16-12, 01:06 PM
  #11  
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I took "road race bike" to mean tight clearances, short wheel bases, and lack of mounting bosses for fenders and racks. Like this:



Biggest tire I can fit is a 25mm, and even that's tight. Break a spoke and you're walking.
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Old 03-16-12, 01:08 PM
  #12  
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Only one bike?



with a second set of SS/FG wheels and a racing SS crank/BB combo.
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Old 03-16-12, 01:20 PM
  #13  
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Originally Posted by caloso
I took "road race bike" to mean tight clearances, short wheel bases, and lack of mounting bosses for fenders and racks. Like this:

Your Soloist is so much prettier than mine. Nice wheels, too!
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Old 03-16-12, 01:41 PM
  #14  
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a cyclocross bike..with mustache bars ... and I would probably have to build it from the frame up to be what I want it to be
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Old 03-16-12, 01:51 PM
  #15  
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There's no fixie on the list. The simpler, the better.

Luis
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Old 03-16-12, 02:03 PM
  #16  
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Been using my Bike Friday Pocket Llama, to the exclusion of the others, all winter.
But 1 icy interval..
Disc brakes, F dyno-hub, and R IG hub .. It's like a Step thru frame ..
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Old 03-16-12, 02:18 PM
  #17  
BarracksSi
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Originally Posted by caloso
on edit: Does Bianchi still make the Volpe?
Yup: https://www.bianchiusa.com/bikes/road/steel/volpe/
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Old 03-16-12, 02:18 PM
  #18  
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Originally Posted by lhbernhardt
There's no fixie on the list. The simpler, the better.

Luis
Bah! I knew I forgot something...
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Old 03-16-12, 02:24 PM
  #19  
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A chromoly steel road or performance hybrid would be my choice. Something like a Jamis Coda Elite would be nice!
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Old 03-16-12, 02:41 PM
  #20  
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Like I said in the other thread: not possible. I can't imagine a bike that would serve all my purposes. I'd need at least a roadworthy, rigid and tough commuter; a nicer bike for weekend rides and touring; and a full suspension mountain bike.

Last edited by AdamDZ; 03-16-12 at 04:02 PM. Reason: Fixed a typo: can't
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Old 03-16-12, 02:46 PM
  #21  
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Originally Posted by AdamDZ
Like I said in the other thread: not possible. I can imagine a bike that would serve all my purposes. I'd need at least a roadworthy, rigid and tough commuter; a nicer bike for weekend rides and touring; and a full suspension mountain bike.
Those are the three bikes I have, too, but imagine which purposes -- or activities -- you'd be willing to forego if you were stuck with just one bike. Would you take that commuter for weekend rides and touring, or would you use the FS MTB for touring and commuting as well, or would you give up playing in the dirt now and then, etc?
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Old 03-16-12, 03:08 PM
  #22  
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If I had to do this (and wasn't on an especially tight budget) I'd build up a Ritchey Breakaway Cross (in Ti if the budget were really extravagent) frame with drop bars, STI, and a triple crank and mountain rear derailleur. I could fly on it, road ride on it with road wheels, ride singletrack and cross race on it with cross tires, and it'd be decent as a tourer and commuter. Or just a cheaper cross bike with a triple would do everything but fly easily and be a lot cheaper, or a cross bike with a double for everything but fly and tour (well).

I already do the bulk of my riding with a cross bike anyways, and pretty much only ride the touring bike with large loads or when it's raining (no fenders presently mounted on the cross bike, but I could).
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Old 03-16-12, 03:13 PM
  #23  
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LOL, I only have one bike at the moment, so poll was easy.
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Old 03-16-12, 03:56 PM
  #24  
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Originally Posted by BarracksSi
you'd think that hybrid variants would have had a stronger showing.
If that's the result you seek, just ask in the Hybrids forum instead of here. You'll hear all about the evils of drop bar bikes.

Here in commuting--well despite the diversity represented here--in general we see to be more along the lines of bike nuts than the type of riders who are attracted to hybrids. Bike nuts these days seem pretty much attracted to road or mountain bikes, not the middle ground represented by hybrids.

In survey terms, there's a built-in selection bias.
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Old 03-16-12, 04:03 PM
  #25  
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Originally Posted by BarracksSi
Those are the three bikes I have, too, but imagine which purposes -- or activities -- you'd be willing to forego if you were stuck with just one bike. Would you take that commuter for weekend rides and touring, or would you use the FS MTB for touring and commuting as well, or would you give up playing in the dirt now and then, etc?
I could give up the MTB, maybe, just because it's the least used one, but I'd miss it.

Originally Posted by tsl
If that's the result you seek, just ask in the Hybrids forum instead of here. You'll hear all about the evils of drop bar bikes.

Here in commuting--well despite the diversity represented here--in general we see to be more along the lines of bike nuts than the type of riders who are attracted to hybrids. Bike nuts these days seem pretty much attracted to road or mountain bikes, not the middle ground represented by hybrids.

In survey terms, there's a built-in selection bias.
Totally, hybrids were never my thing. I wouldn't consider one even for one second. They just don't serve any useful purpose as far I'm concerned. They don't work well as road bikes and they don't work well as mountain bikes. The position is way too upright to be practical. Besides, I'd rather ride a rigid MTB with slicks than a hybrid... oh, wait, I am actually riding one

I'd rather ride a 'bent than a hybrid

Last edited by AdamDZ; 03-16-12 at 04:08 PM.
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