T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1673.1 | d) One bike for all of the above | WAV13::DELORIEA | Jerseys @#%@!& Jerseys | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:07 | 12 |
| This is the time of the year when the sales are going on. Bicycle Alley in
Worcester is having a Super Sale this week end. Aug 3,4&5th. One bike they'll
have on sale for under $300 is the Bianchi Advantage which is a light weight
road bike frame with MT-bike components. That translates to an 18 speed with
upright handle bars and the tires are a cross between fat MT-bike and skinny
road bike.
Tom
If you want to check this out I'd recomend going before this week end and
seeing if you can get the sale price. This week end will be a mad house and
they won't be able to give you the service you would normally get.
|
1673.2 | Welcome to Western Mass! | WFOV11::SISE | | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:18 | 27 |
| Wendy,
I live in that area, and there are LOTS of bikes in this area.
One thing to keep in mind is that bikes tend to "walk" away, so
you may want to buy accordingly.
There are some very nice bike shops in this area. Just an idea,
If you are going to be having work done on your bike here, or be
buying other bike related goodies here, you may wont to buy your
bike in the area you will be living in.
This will result in the 10% discount on future purchases, as well
as being a prefered customer in the shop. I believe one should
support there local bike shop by buying ones bike there.
Hamp is fairly flat, but Amherst has more hills in the outskirts,
I would still tend to favor a Mt. Bike over a road bike in both
locations as the weather will pound your bike in the winter.
I have purchased bikes in the two shops in town, and if you want
feedback send me mail.
There are some wonderful bike roads in the area to train on!
When/if you come out drop me a line
John
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1673.3 | Bianchi Boardwalk input, @ $400 | MSHRMS::BURHANS | | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:32 | 17 |
|
Hi Wendy,
I just bought a Bianchi Boardwalk because I had similar
requirements. It's one model up in price, $400, over the
one suggested earlier, the Bianchi Advantage. The main
upgrades are 21 speed vs 18, some better components and
a little lighter weight.
My impression so far is that it will be good for what I
bought it for, crummy weather. It seems to be about
10-15% slower/harder (more effort) to ride on my commute
(15 miles) than my road bike (roughly eqiv. price).
For what it's worth,
Roger
|
1673.4 | addendum | MSHRMS::BURHANS | | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:58 | 6 |
|
Oops! Forgot to mention that my Boardwalk, and probably the
Advantage, can be fitted with road wheels to "REAL"
mountain bike width tires.
Roger
|
1673.5 | a sturdy bike... | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Mon Jul 30 1990 20:26 | 10 |
|
All the foregoing advice is good. I would indeed watch my
bike if I were you. A mountain or watchamacallit (oh, yes: hybrid)
bike is a pretty good idea. Just think: when spring finally
breaks (or before winter sets in), you can fearlessly cross
the Holyoke Range (MA 116 to South Hadley) or hit Quabbin,
and you'll have the gearing for it!
Good luck...
-john
|
1673.6 | Check out the area..... | ESKIMO::BOURGAULT | | Tue Jul 31 1990 05:40 | 12 |
| May I suggest you visit the area first, then decide what
you will be using the bike for? Last I knew, the Amherst/
Northampton area had EXCELLENT bus service. You may find
(like I did a few years ago) that you don't use the bike
for short distances... you walk or take the bus.
I found my 10-speed got very little around-campus type
use, but considerable weekend "tour of the countryside"
exercise during warmer weather. (It stayed in its
"parking space" inside during the snowy weather!)
- Ed -
|
1673.7 | PROTECTING YOUR INVESTMENT | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Tue Jul 31 1990 07:05 | 5 |
| I know this will sound like nagging, but since you are investing
in the academic aspect of your life, you should seriously consider
protecting the "information container". Please buy a helmet...
Chip
|
1673.8 | Eva Curious | FEMMES::WBECK | Income tax forms and trilobites. | Tue Jul 31 1990 10:26 | 17 |
| Wow! Thanks for all the quick responses and mail messages,
I'm getting excited and planning shopping trips for this
weekend already. I've got a couple more questions.
* How important is it to buy and get your bike serviced at the
same shop?
* Do these bikes need service often? Are they expensive to
maintain?
* What's the difference between a road bike and a mountain bike?
What's a hybrid?
I really appreciate your help!
Wendy
FEMMES::WBECK
|
1673.9 | bike taxonomy explained | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:24 | 40 |
|
> * How important is it to buy and get your bike serviced at the
> same shop?
It's a very soft requirement. Sort of a goodwill gesture.
For years I did business with shops that didn't sell me the
bikes I road (because I'd bought them far, far away). They
were still happy to help me.
> * Do these bikes need service often? Are they expensive to
> maintain?
In general, not expensive. If you ride a lot in the rain or
in salty weather (New England winters and springs), you can
save yourself a lot of bike-shop maintenance if you do some
preventive maintenance yourself.
> * What's the difference between a road bike and a mountain bike?
> What's a hybrid?
I guess other notes in this conference will give a better idea,
but, briefly, an ATB or Mountain Bike is built to be sturdy
and very maneuverable over trail obstacles, with lots of traction.
Hence wide, knobby tires, wide range of gearing (for steep trails),
motor-bike style handlebars (for control, not comfort, over logs
and rocks and ruts). "Road bikes" refer to bikes built for good
road surfaces (or some not so good, but not trails) - they are
built for lightness, ease of handling, efficiency, and speed.
The tires are narrow (one inch), the rims lightweight, the
handlebars drop-style - for long-distance riding comfort.
Hybrids (offspring of the City Bike?) are more like Road Bikes
in their frame geometry, but tend to come with wider tires
(but not big knobbies) and T-bone ATB-style handlebars. They
are supposed to be bikes you can ride comfortably (if not at
Criterium speeds) on the road, but also hit trails with (though
not obstacle courses).
Hope this helps!
-john
|
1673.10 | maint opinions | BALMER::MUDGETT | He's reading notes again, Mom! | Tue Jul 31 1990 20:41 | 12 |
| Wendy,
I was amazed at how little servicing a good bike (my bike for instance
is a TREK 1100 cost $549.00)takes. It probably needed one trip to tighten
up all the gizmos and cables. What you ought to do if figure out how
to change both tires for because that's the most often occurring problems
you'll have. I always have 2 tubes with me. I have to chuckle because my
son is 12 and weighs like 8 pounds and never has a flat even though he
rides over glass and through potholes etc. I'm very very careful to
avoid all those things and get flats like crazy. There is no justice.
Fred Mudgett
|
1673.11 | a few suggestions | SPWACY::SAVAGED | | Wed Aug 01 1990 13:26 | 13 |
| Hi!
Just my opinion but there are two excellent bike shops in Northampton
they are: Northampton Bicycle
and Peloton's
If you decide to go for a used bike there is an employee here
named Joe Pitchko who owns Southampton Bicycle (not far from Northampton)
and I know he used to sell used bikes.
You should also be fit-kitted to determine the correct size frame.
|
1673.12 | re .11 my 2 cents | THEBEN::ERICKSON | | Thu Aug 02 1990 12:59 | 8 |
| Just a comment on .11. My experiences with the 2 shops mentioned were
always disappointing. Myself and a friend were both misguided at the
place in Noho. I would recommend Bicycle Alley or Valley Bicycles
both in Amherst.
My $0.02.
/Doreen
|
1673.13 | | WMOIS::N_FLYE | | Thu Aug 02 1990 20:46 | 32 |
| Just a comment on .12
Sorry no Bicycle Alley in Amherst. There is a Bicycle World and
Valley Bike. Bicycle Alley is in Worcester.
Just a comment on Peleton in Amherst and Northampton. I know we are
not supposed to be bashing businesses on the notes file and I
won't. I will simply give you a list of things I know about Peleton.
You can make up your own mind.
1. Peleton on numerous occasions have been caught selling bikes
illegally. They were selling new bikes they were not authorized
to sell.
2. Their SALE prices "usually" match the everyday prices of the other
area shops.
3. A few years ago I went into the Amherst shop to look at aluminum
frames. They didn't carry aluminum frames because "the frames are
slippery in the rain". I got this from the store manager.
4. The local bike club advises new members to avoid both of these
shops due to extremely poor service and technical knowledge of the
staff. Most of the staff are college students that have had little
or no experience with bicycle maintenance or sales.
You can make your own decision.
Norm
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1673.14 | re .13 thx for correction | THEBEN::ERICKSON | | Fri Aug 03 1990 08:55 | 3 |
| My mistake, I meant Bicycle World behind Bonducci's.
/DE
|
1673.15 | cheap Terrys in Lennox... | KOOZEE::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Mon Aug 06 1990 12:02 | 8 |
| During a trip last week, I met a lady who runs a bike shop in
Lennox, MA. She has some Terry Gambits (sp?) that she is trying to
sell and has cut the price a bunch. If you are serious about road
bikes, rather than fat tire bikes that would be more suitable for
winter/sandy roads/slush use, try a Terry.
[I understand that there are only two good bike shops in Lennox, so
her's shouldn't be too hard to find - sorry, I don't know its name.]
- Chris, survivor of Terry Tour '90
|
1673.16 | a 2nd on Terrys | SCAM::DIAL | | Mon Aug 06 1990 18:02 | 5 |
| My wife recently purchased a Terry Despatch, and couldn't be happier
with it. It is well crafted, and *very* light, it looks like a toy
next to my 25 inch Peugeot.
Barry
|
1673.17 | A couple of questions | MILKWY::CRITCHLOW | | Tue Aug 07 1990 09:15 | 16 |
| > During a trip last week, I met a lady who runs a bike shop in
> Lennox, MA. She has some Terry Gambits (sp?) that she is trying to
> sell and has cut the price a bunch. If you are serious about road
> bikes, rather than fat tire bikes that would be more suitable for
> winter/sandy roads/slush use, try a Terry.
> [I understand that there are only two good bike shops in Lennox, so
> her's shouldn't be too hard to find - sorry, I don't know its name.]
> - Chris, survivor of Terry Tour '90
Just Curious, but where is Lennox MA? And how much does a
Terry Gambit cost? From your description, it sounds like
this is a typical road bike with a small front Wheel?
JC
|
1673.18 | Lenox Ma. | SOFBA2::BELISLE | Mike Belisle MRO4-1/H20 297.3324 | Tue Aug 07 1990 09:44 | 14 |
| > Just Curious, but where is Lennox MA? And how much does a
> Terry Gambit cost? From your description, it sounds like
> this is a typical road bike with a small front Wheel?
>
> JC
JC
Lenox (not Lennox) MA. is located in Western Mass, about 10 miles
from NY. If you take the Mass Pike, its the LEE exit. It seems kinda
far.
Mike
|