You're all wrong.
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: St Peters, Missouri
Posts: 30,225
Bikes: Catrike 559 I own some others but they don't get ridden very much.
Mentioned: 16 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1572 Post(s)
Liked 643 Times
in
364 Posts
You're all wrong.
The thread has been closed and I don't have any data but I think that everybody missed the reason the majority of bikes are stolen: The thief simply wants a quick ride to wherever he happens to be going. That's why the cheesiest lock that you can put on your bike is still about 90% effective.
__________________
My greatest fear is all of my kids standing around my coffin and talking about "how sensible" dad was.
My greatest fear is all of my kids standing around my coffin and talking about "how sensible" dad was.
Likes For Retro Grouch:
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 763
Bikes: S-Works Stumpjumper HT Disc, Fuji Absolute, Kona Jake the Snake, '85 Cannondale SR900
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 219 Post(s)
Liked 217 Times
in
142 Posts
The thread has been closed and I don't have any data but I think that everybody missed the reason the majority of bikes are stolen: The thief simply wants a quick ride to wherever he happens to be going. That's why the cheesiest lock that you can put on your bike is still about 90% effective.
Likes For Charliekeet:
#3
Zip tie Karen
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Fair Oaks Ranch, TX
Posts: 7,004
Bikes: '13 Motobecane Fantom29 HT, '16 Motobecane Turino Pro Disc, '18 Velobuild VB-R-022, '21 Tsunami SNM-100
Mentioned: 26 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1465 Post(s)
Liked 1,542 Times
in
806 Posts
So's your mom...
#4
Senior Member
Sure all those reasons. How bout The one when you're a teenager visiting your girlfriend on the other side of town and have to walk home before curfew. After a while you realize you're not gonna make it in time. You see a bike in a front yard and you ride it almost home then just dump the bike in someone else's yard.
#5
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Lincoln Ne
Posts: 9,924
Bikes: RANS Stratus TerraTrike Tour II
Mentioned: 46 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3352 Post(s)
Liked 1,056 Times
in
635 Posts
The thread has been closed and I don't have any data but I think that everybody missed the reason the majority of bikes are stolen: The thief simply wants a quick ride to wherever he happens to be going. That's why the cheesiest lock that you can put on your bike is still about 90% effective.
#6
Senior Member
Sure all those reasons. How bout The one when you're a teenager visiting your girlfriend on the other side of town and have to walk home before curfew. After a while you realize you're not gonna make it in time. You see a bike in a front yard and you ride it almost home then just dump the bike in someone else's yard.
#7
Sunshine
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Des Moines, IA
Posts: 16,613
Bikes: '18 class built steel roadbike, '19 Fairlight Secan, '88 Schwinn Premis , Black Mountain Cycles Monstercross V4, '89 Novara Trionfo
Mentioned: 123 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 10960 Post(s)
Liked 7,488 Times
in
4,189 Posts
Since we are effectively opening that thread back up thru this one...
This summer I sold a high quality Diamondback hardtail MTB to a guy who was very much not a cyclist. He took out his phone, videoed the bike, then sent the video and we waited a few minutes. Then he got a call and spoke Spanish for a few minutes. He asked me a couple questions, then hung up and shelled over a lot of $20 bills.
I was super curious and we spent the next 10min talking about how he buys bikes and brings them down to a friend in Mexico for him to ride and eventually sell. He makes the trip a couple times a year and brings 5-15 bikes at a time. His friend came up here for college and worked here for a handful of years before moving home and they used to work together. The guy brings his kids on the trip sometimes and they visit where the dad grew up while down in MX. Its cheaper to buy the bikes up here and pay for the border fees than it is to buy them down in MX, especially since many arent available there.
It was odd, but really cool to hear. <---so a typical CL transaction.
This summer I sold a high quality Diamondback hardtail MTB to a guy who was very much not a cyclist. He took out his phone, videoed the bike, then sent the video and we waited a few minutes. Then he got a call and spoke Spanish for a few minutes. He asked me a couple questions, then hung up and shelled over a lot of $20 bills.
I was super curious and we spent the next 10min talking about how he buys bikes and brings them down to a friend in Mexico for him to ride and eventually sell. He makes the trip a couple times a year and brings 5-15 bikes at a time. His friend came up here for college and worked here for a handful of years before moving home and they used to work together. The guy brings his kids on the trip sometimes and they visit where the dad grew up while down in MX. Its cheaper to buy the bikes up here and pay for the border fees than it is to buy them down in MX, especially since many arent available there.
It was odd, but really cool to hear. <---so a typical CL transaction.
Likes For mstateglfr:
#8
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2020
Posts: 478
Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 166 Post(s)
Liked 252 Times
in
147 Posts
Since we are effectively opening that thread back up thru this one...
This summer I sold a high quality Diamondback hardtail MTB to a guy who was very much not a cyclist. He took out his phone, videoed the bike, then sent the video and we waited a few minutes. Then he got a call and spoke Spanish for a few minutes. He asked me a couple questions, then hung up and shelled over a lot of $20 bills.
I was super curious and we spent the next 10min talking about how he buys bikes and brings them down to a friend in Mexico for him to ride and eventually sell. He makes the trip a couple times a year and brings 5-15 bikes at a time. His friend came up here for college and worked here for a handful of years before moving home and they used to work together. The guy brings his kids on the trip sometimes and they visit where the dad grew up while down in MX. Its cheaper to buy the bikes up here and pay for the border fees than it is to buy them down in MX, especially since many arent available there.
It was odd, but really cool to hear. <---so a typical CL transaction.
This summer I sold a high quality Diamondback hardtail MTB to a guy who was very much not a cyclist. He took out his phone, videoed the bike, then sent the video and we waited a few minutes. Then he got a call and spoke Spanish for a few minutes. He asked me a couple questions, then hung up and shelled over a lot of $20 bills.
I was super curious and we spent the next 10min talking about how he buys bikes and brings them down to a friend in Mexico for him to ride and eventually sell. He makes the trip a couple times a year and brings 5-15 bikes at a time. His friend came up here for college and worked here for a handful of years before moving home and they used to work together. The guy brings his kids on the trip sometimes and they visit where the dad grew up while down in MX. Its cheaper to buy the bikes up here and pay for the border fees than it is to buy them down in MX, especially since many arent available there.
It was odd, but really cool to hear. <---so a typical CL transaction.
#9
Randomhead
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
Posts: 24,396
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4 Post(s)
Liked 3,696 Times
in
2,517 Posts
We closed the last one because someone couldn't avoid stereotyping Mexicans and here we are talking about Mexicans again. That is not going to end well. Which is why we don't appreciate people reopening closed threads, however good the intentions might be.