Categories: General

Ultimate Bike Love: Customize Your Ride

The Monument to the Tour de France in the Pyrenees

Despite their obvious utility, I’m not a big fan of Fixies.  I understand they have minimal maintenance – which make them great for commuting – and the fixed gear forces excellent pedaling technique.  But the wide-spread adoption of these bikes has less to do with those two considerations than they do with fad.  But fads aren’t all bad, and I really do appreciate how they’ve made cycling more popular in metro areas and it’s been keeping people out of their cars more.  To visit a Farmer’s market in Seattle is a testament to the wide-spread use of the bicycle as transportation, due in no smart part to the popularization of the Fixie.

For me, one of the most enjoyable aspects of  bike ownership is the process of tweaking and customizing it to make it your own, personal bike of which there is no other in the world exactly like it.  The sad fact is that most people don’t even recognize that a bike is a collection of separate parts.  Back in 2002, I was going through the process of buying components for the new Bianchi XL EV2 frame I had recently acquired.  In passing, I told my boss about the project and I remember he was shocked that bikes are available à la carte and aren’t only sold as complete packages.  The truth of the matter is that you have to have a certain level of interest in bikes before you even realize there are parts on your bike, let alone that you can make choices that will make your bike more to your liking.  And that is one thing I love about the Fixie community: most of these are some seriously customized rides.  One of the most memorable examples I have seen was a guy in Ballard who was scooting around on a mid-80’s Kilo bike, complete with 26-inch front wheel.

At the risk of looking like I’m imitating the Bike Snob, I’ve been snapping some shots around town as I spot a bike that I feel exemplifies the love and care that goes into customizing your bike. Check back and watch for updates; I’ll keep posting more shots here as I come across more.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

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  • I've always been up in the air on the fixed frenzy. Yeah, more people are riding bikes. Good. But, people are also dumping thousands of dollars into a bike and they can't change a tube and they ride is three miles a day. I've met too many people like this, not just a stereotype. I'm also all for customizing your bike, but only if it makes it more/equally functional. Many fixed folks do completely stupid things to their perfectly good stock bike to make it "personal" or to gain some street cred (hey, I'm not on a stock bike!). See riding with negative rise stems, riding with 8" wide bars, riding a TT bike with a small front wheel, mounting a brake on the seat tube, etc. Leave it to them.

    I'm glad more people in U.S. cities are riding bikes. I wish more people on their "customized" fixed gears were cycling enthusiasts, not just trend enthusiasts. Oh, and more often not if someone is riding at dusk/night without lights and dangerously, it ain't a roadie in kit, it's someone on a fixed gear without a brake, in denim, and without toe clips.

    All of us toe the line of form v. function in some cases, but for a lot of of fixed faders, it is all about form.

  • Oh, and I have nothing wrong with anyone owning a bike or riding a bike of any kind. But, I find a lot of the fixed crowd to be like some of the $10,000 Dogma/Extreme Power/Etc. crowd - both ride bikes that are quite expensive (relatively), both do little or no mechanical work, both talk bikes more than they ride bikes, and both are more about how they look than how much they love cycling.

    That is what it really boils down to for me. Ride whatever the hell you want, what you like, and what you can afford. But if you spent more time sourcing all your NJS part for your 3Rensho and you can't ride worth a damn, you make me sad. If someone is using a bike more as a commodity to look a certain way in some big city than as a tool to haul ass on and put tons of miles on, that makes me sad to. And pisses me off to a degree, since I find conspicuous consumption upsetting.

  • @frank
    Frank,
    Much of what you say in this post makes sense, but I just want to check you're not becoming unsound.
    I flicked through the BikeSnob's "product" a few weeks ago. Two things. One, if you start producing content like his on a regular basis I shall have to come over there, hunt you down and either kill you or have you surgically bolted for life to this bike - only with squeaky cranks, underinflated tyres and stabilisers:
    Two, I also like the way fixies have led more people to customize their bikes - but it's just unfortunate that often the results are so ....so... douchey! This does allow the real works of art to stand out, but it depresses me when people make things worse. Your first photo of the chromed Bianchi - when that first came out I really wanted one. Every time I saw one I was offering about 90%. This bike is desecrated with that foam and cloth thing. I like the bars. The wheels are horrible. I feel a bike like that calls for seriously low profile wheels.
    Photo no. 4: Get those grips off the bars. WITNOGB did the owner think she was doing?
    Photo no. 5 is excellent and I congratulate its owner on an exceptional job.

    Does anyone else think that the front forks are too ugly on many fixies? See photo 3? Seems to me there's room for an aesthete to enter the market with some sweetly crafted forks.

  • @George
    George, the threat of being lashed to this bike will cost me valuable hours of sleep. Point taken. I do have another article in the hopper regarding a Fixie, but I believe it is well clear of the subject matter that warrants your wrath and this threat.

    As for the Chrome Bianchi...man on man, I'd love to get one. I just can't get on the Fixie wagon for all their hipster fuck knuckle associations, but if I bought one, it would be that chrome one. They are not that expensive...one day, if one comes by for the right price...

  • the 3rd bike pictured is a volume bikes frame. They are a bmx company, who does 2 "freestyle" fixed gear frames

  • I was passed on my ride today by a guy on one of those new motorized bikes. You know the old DUI bike with a motor kit put on it, been seeing a lot of those here lately. Anyway, the guy sort of buzzed me and laughed. I laughed at him when I ran into him 2 lights later where the county sheriff stopped him for having an unregistered motor vehicle.

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