• AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    19 months ago

    Yeah, I have owned a few race bikes, a couple hardtails, and I currently own a recumbent and a Cannondale Habit 4. I’ve always felt that bicycle stuff is over-priced. The bike shops will quote economy of scale principles to you, but these bikes are built at a huge scale, so that’s kind of a silly argument to me. I get the R&D side of things too, but realistically I think there’s enormous markup on premium bicycle components. Which brings us back to the original comment. Nice rims are heckin expensive, so owning two sets sounds expensive. Haha. It’s a good solution though, and like you said, it’s still a lot more affordable than a car.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      29 months ago

      Oh that’s the other catch, I wouldn’t call my rims nice lol. They are just looped aluminum extrusion and the weld is almost a corner instead of being round. I’m actually shocked at how decent it is after dialing in the spokes. I just put the much nicer winter tires on the stock rims which while not marked for tubeless in any way, do work tubeless.

      If I had money to burn I’d also get a recumbent but they are freakishly expensive. If my welder didn’t get stolen I probably would have made my own by cannibalizing the kid bikes my parents never got rid of when we outgrew them.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        19 months ago

        Haha. Yeah that’s one way to do it. ‘Not nice’ bike components are pretty affordable.

        I found my recumbent at a yard sale. It was hand made by some local bike company in Seattle. The guy wanted $500 for it, but I had a Scattante race bike with a carbon fork and a Shimano 105 groupset that I didn’t want, so we traded. I bought the race bike at Value Village for $185 and commuted on it for a couple years before trading it, so I got an all-around great deal, and he got a sweet race bike that he wanted.