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Been looking at them and trying to work out is it chicken or egg..?
All Fixie riders seem to wear the same gear, as in the retro peaked hat, jeans, same type of tops etc. Ok the same could be said of mtbers, but what we wear tends to be for function rather than fashion as, let's be honest, it ain't fashionable..
So do people who ride fixies ride them for fashion, to complete an image, or vice versa. I only ever see them in the city centre, I don't think I've ever seen one out in the 'burbs. And there is definitely no bicycle courier industry in Liverpool so it definitely isn't that.
but what we wear tends to be for function rather than fashion
Methinks the lady doth protest too much.
At what point are baggy shorts anything but fashion?
They flap about.
They flap about when wet.
They flap about when it's sunny.
They offer no protection from the cold.
They are an Americanised affectation, along with peaks on helmets and the whole 'I'm a mountain biker don't you know' statement dressing.
...and don't get me started on bloody Camelbaks and the interminable amount of crap that people think they have to transport all around the countryside...
but what we wear tends to be designed to disguise our massive unwieldy bulk rather than fashion
Whenever I've ridden my fixie I've worn baggie shorts and the STW favourite MP66's, I look teh awesomez.
It's just people having fun on bikes man. You get a few people who are actually couriers, a few people who are massive try-hards and everyone in the middle who just likes riding bikes with one gear and no freewheel. Some people ride with brakes, some without. Some wear lycra, some wear tight jeans and vests.
If you look at LFGSS, a lot of people who got into fixed gear in 2007 cos it was cool are now involved with road racing, CX, track racing, mtb and TT'ing. I started riding fixed gear cos it was 'cool', now I'm a member of a cycle club and race TTs and hillclimbs fixed. More people on bikes = good thing.
Regarding how people dress, it's just group behaviour innit? People mimic the behaviour of others in their perceived group, which is why you wear baggies to MTB in rather than the far more practical lycra.
At what point are baggy shorts anything but fashion?
A layer of fabric thicker than lycra between my arse and the ground when it goes wrong - I'll show you the lycra wearing scars if you want but it's NSFW. I also have some permanent skin damage resulting in no skin feeling on both my outer quads. I'll stick with baggies. That and they have pockets can be waterproof & windproof and are more comfortable and don't tell everyone your religion.
...and don't get me started on bloody Camelbaks and the interminable amount of crap that people think they have to transport all around the countryside...
Yep maybe we should all shove out spare tubes up our arse 🙂 If i'm going out I like to carry a tube or 2 (I don't enjoy walking my bike home) a pump, probably some food and a tool. Throw in some food and maybe a jacket (weather can make you miserable) then thats a decent amount to carry. Why not throw it into a bag? I like to stay hydrated and drink a bit more water couple that with my bike doesn't have bottle cages - and why should it? My dropper post is not compatible with a saddle bag.
whats next?
anyway don't get me started with intolerant gits who feel the need to judge everyone else, if there is one thing I can't stand it's intolerance.....
Prob cos it's mainly younger peeps riding them innit. Relatively new bike craze - all good no? When was the last time bikes were cool, MTB 1990?
Yeah you get the 'all the gear', someone who's just bought a fixie off the shelf but so what? The MTB scene is FAR worse. I saw some guy on a MTB recently who looked like something out of a Mad Max film: All black, full face mask/goggles or whatever, camelback etc. Looked like he had just rode through a nuclear holocaust. Ridiculous.
Hi,
Used to ride my fixie every day for the whole year. Also all my longest road rides - including Cov to London and back - around 280miles in 23.5h non-stop - was done on fixie.
Don't give a monkey about fashion, for me is just another bike.
Ride it hard 🙂
Cheers!
I.
All black, full face mask/goggles or whatever, camelback etc. Looked like he had just rode through a nuclear holocaust. Ridiculous.
His looks or that you decided that from seeing him that you didn't like the way he dressed?
Full Face, fairly valid in plenty of places
Goggles, great idea for keeping stuff out of your eyes and fit better with a FF rather than glasses.
Au contraire. I actually thought he looked pretty cool. In a 'future steampunk' stylee. I just thought it a bit much for a suburban street. But then I guess he may have been on his way back from HELL.
fixies are a good way of removing hipsters from the gene pool.
I commute on mine and I don't wear trendy clothes and I don't have a beard.
I got fed up with mashing derraliurs and cassettes with everyday, all year commuting.
My fixed wheel is as about 6-7 years old and it still has the same chain and sprocket/chain ring. I have only changed tyres and brake pads and oiled the chain in many thousand miles of all weather commuting.
"My fixed wheel"
Thankyou.
Fixies are ridden by trednies with strange beards and skinny jeans etc.
Fixed wheels are ridden by cyclists who know how to ride through the winter and worship at the alter of Beryl Burton
I doubt if you'd even notice that I ride a fixed wheel unless you try to keep up with me down an easy descent. I don't wear special "fixie" clothing.
Same clothing on my fixies as I wear on every other bikes.
Baggies, yep.
Don't have a beard, no.
Do have brakes, yes.
Do ride offroad, yes.
It's just another bike, yes.
Commute on fixie, yes.
It's just part of the culture. Much the same as the culture around mountain biking and if you're naive enough to think that mountain biking is just riding bikes with function over form -
I don't ride a fixie but I still enjoy the culture that goes with it. It's fun, it's bikes, it's harmless. Soak it up and stop being a judgemental and miserable sod.
Relatively new bike craze - all good no? When was the last time bikes were cool, MTB 1990?
Yup, that's why I think they're great. Bikes became cool to use in urban areas again. umop3pisdn sums it up really.
How times on here do you read people ripping into others for being unprepared? What kind of idiot goes for a ride without a tube/multitool/chain breaker/warm layer, etc?!...and don't get me started on bloody Camelbaks and the interminable amount of crap that people think they have to transport all around the countryside...
me me me! I ride a fixed wheel.
I ride it because it's fun, it slows you down a bit (zen baby), because it hurts up hills and because they require little maintenance.
I do think some 'fixie' riders are pretty cool though.
'Fixies' may be a "relatively new bike craze" but people have been riding fixed gear bikes for decades and way before the MTB was created, or it was socially acceptable to wear your sisters jeans.
I prefer teens riding bmx's without brakes than hipsters on fixies without them. They seem to be able to stop when needed, unlike the others. IME one of these groups is more likely to jump a red light and weave through pedestrians whilst riding too fast, ****s.
I ride a fixie... I do it because no manufacturer on earth can make components that can deal with the incredible torque my surprisingly skinny legs mash out.....
DrP
Confession time. I think I might fit all the criteria.
Live in London
Very skinny jeans
Silly haircut
Big lustrous beard
t-shirt with skulls on
Black hoodie with white drawstrings
But, what I don’t do is ride a ‘fixie’, it’s a track bike that gets ridden on the road and the track.
Fakenger FAIL, Huws 😉
I wear the same clothes when I ride my fixed as I do when riding any of my other bikes.
If I'm riding to/from work, I wear the clothes I'll be wearing at work.
If I'm on a 'proper' ride, I wear bike clothes.
Fixed wheels are ridden by cyclists who know how to ride through the winter and worship at the alter of Beryl Burton
The old boy at the end of my street has the fixed wheel bike he raced and rode all over Yorkshire in the 50s/60s hanging up in his garage.
My commuting bike is a fixed gear. Bought a Genesis flyer second hand and absolutely love it. Bought it partly because I wanted to be different (Lowestoft is a bit behind the fashions) but mainly because I ride single speed bikes whenever I'm at the in laws in Serbia. It's nice just to pedal and relax
At what point are baggy shorts anything but fashion?
They flap about.
They flap about when wet.
They flap about when it's sunny.
They offer no protection from the cold.
They are an Americanised affectation, along with peaks on helmets and the whole 'I'm a mountain biker don't you know' statement dressing.
I disagree, I always wear baggy shorts over my lycra. It's not a fashion statement, I just don't like people seeing the outline of my penis.
I commute fixed, then mtb at the weekend. Fixed gear bike is light and less to go wrong, and I do ride with a brake. Just like riding bikes really.
Awe not this again.. 🙄
It's a bike, it's use is getting from A-B and the rider needs to feel comfortable.
😉
All [s]Fixie riders[/s][b]Hipsters[/b] seem to wear the same gear,
Its just fashionable in their circles to ride a fixed gear bike.
Cyclists who ride fixed gear bike IMHO just wear cycling gear.
Fixed commuter here. I just wear normal roadie type lycra though. I'm too old to be cool now...
Hipsters and fakengers are scum, but the bikes are just part of the outfit. It's not about the bikes its about pretending its about the bikes.
there are a fair few bicycle couriers/companies in liverpool btw - though they will mostly be wearing something more comfortable than jeans.
Hipsters and fakengers are scum
That seems a little harsh, did one steal your girlfriend?
I just don't like people seeing the outline of my penis.
Afraid that you don't quite measure up?
they have a reinforced crotch to cope with the extreme gnar and resulting arousal
Doesnt bother me what people wear on their fixies. As long as you haven't got a set of those narrow flat bars on it.
Damn I new I was going wrong riding my fixie in lycra and road shoes 🙁
there are a fair few bicycle couriers/companies in liverpool btw - though they will mostly be wearing something more comfortable than jeans.
No there isn't. There is absolutely no requirement for them. Traffic ok, not a huge business sector with a small commercial district. There might be some freelance individuals, but certainly nothing to support an industry.
Personally, I hate the term "fixie". I ride my fixed wheel road bike in full lycra club kit, commute on it all winter with guards and a rack, and ride winter club rides. It has drop bars, carbon forks, a proper set of brakes which of course I use, and hand made Open Pro wheels on low flange hubs. You would not notice it was fixed.
And then it gets stripped down for the IG Nocturn track bike race and again when we go to Herne Hill. We also have a vintage track bike and a Langster (only £100) for school duties. No rack or guards, but a blazer and tie 8)
Genuine Question:
For those saying lack of maintenance is a factor in riding a fixed wheel, what exactly does this relate to? I've never, in years of commuting five days a week year round, had a free hub fail and this is all I can think that the statement relates to?
There's 2 types of fixie riders.
The 'hang out in London Fields on the weekend and pull wheelies at the weekend types' and the proper 'elegant as f*** technique' types. It's easy to tell which is which.
Saying this I saw a '3rd type' which I'll call NinjaFix. He was a very long levered black guy on a stealth black track bike with a full skinsuit and a carbon full face helmet. But I think he is an anomaly.
I've had both a free hub, and a freewheel fail.
But then, I do resemble Jesus.
You mean relative to commuting on a singlespeed with a freewheel? [Obv it's night and day relative to maintaining a geared commuter]. Rel to a normal ss there's not a great deal in it - I would get about 18 months out of those cheap shimano freewheels, so I guess you're saving the occasional £20.buck53 - MemberGenuine Question:
For those saying lack of maintenance is a factor in riding a fixed wheel, what exactly does this relate to? I've never, in years of commuting five days a week year round, had a free hub fail and this is all I can think that the statement relates to?
Ride is quite different though - I switched earlier this year after a freewheel went on my pompino, and wouldn't go back. Like the way it rides fixed.
Big [b]lustrous[/b] beard
Lustrous.
There's a word.
- Shellsuits?there are a fair few bicycle couriers/companies in liverpool btw - though they will mostly be wearing something more comfortable than jeans.
jameso - Member
there are a fair few bicycle couriers/companies in liverpool btw - though they will mostly be wearing something more comfortable than jeans.
- Shellsuits?
don't forget the curly wig 😉
PS,
I ride one of my fixed gear bikes near enough everyday,shops,running my dog,etc.
some days it's jeans and a hoodie,some days Ron hills,waterproof jacket,some days,baggies and an MTB jersey,some days I wear a piss pot lid,some days an MTB helmet,some days a cap,and some days,I turn full anarchist and wear no headgear whatsoever....
I ride it 'cus I like it,on or off road,but prefer off road,TBH.
takes all kinds,I guess 😉
I ride it 'cus I like it,on or off road,but prefer off road,TBH
There's some rooty, stream-side singletrack near me which is great fun on my nichecore fixie**** fixed monstercross.
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I like that Crikey tried to come up with 5 arguments against baggies, he ended up using the same argument 3 times. That's quite informative I think.
I like that Crikey tried to come up with 5 arguments against baggies, he ended up using the same argument 3 times. That's quite informative I think.
I wear 'baggies' over my lycra shorts, though they're not that baggy really and they're not bike-specific or anything.
I used to not, until I rode past a bunch of girls one day who said "there's that teacher from college". You get very self-aware when a group of 17-year-old girls who you may have to teach one day see you in lycra.
Fixie riders get more clunge.... Fact*
*jimmy in the pub said
especially if you have a stiffy.
especially if you have a stiffy
I always ride rigid.
Cheers Garry. I figured there must be more to it considering how often simplicity and lack of maintenance are cited as driving factors of riding fixed. I'm surprised it's not more than that, I don't think I've spent a disproportionate amount maintaining my geared bike in that case.
Ride is quite different though - I switched earlier this year after a freewheel went on my pompino, and wouldn't go back. Like the way it rides fixed.
What's this about? In what way is the ride different? I've ridden a track bike at the velodrome, but I can't say I thought that I'd like that on the road. Again, genuine question.
Thinking back to the original question, do the riders wear the clothes that people who ride fixies choose, or is there a fashion statement that includes the need for a fixie.
Watching some of the local students, I think option B is most likely. The bike is an accessory to the image, rather then the image being guided by the choice of bike.
I'll go back under my rock now (I wear baggies btw. Not because they are practical, but I think lycra looks stupid).
I wear the same clothes when riding fixed as I do when riding anything else.
Shorts - whatever is at the top of the drawer. Normally baggies with a liner because that is what was on special at Halfords a couple of Christmasses ago when I asked for cycleing shorts for Christmas.
Top - whatever is at the top of the drawer. Normally a knackered red one from when I first met FredDibnah/Elfinsafety up in London or a knackered yellow one from the very first BBB*
Sock/pants - yes
Shoes - Either of my pairs of 5-10 bike shoes as I can only ride flats and like the grip they provide.
*the yellow t-shirt has finally been retired as the arm fell off. It has now been replaced by a knackered green 'Charlie the BikeMonger' t-shirt which was an unclaimed prize from the second year of the BBB
When I moved into my current place there was a really old racer in the shed. I want to use the frame and the contents of my parts box to build a fixed gear pub-bike.
Problem is, I'm in a quandary because I've got these lovely old drilled brake levers that I want to put on it. But then half the point of building a fixed gear is wanting to experience the no-brakes riding style.
So, due to this, it just sits there, mocking me. 🙁
Incidentally, I can't find any markings on the frame or forks at all. How would one go about identifying this frame? Only unusual feature is a lug on the side of the forks. Presumably for mounting a light.
Jambourgie,
brakeless is pretty silly, most fixed riders use at least a front brake.
I often ride without using the front brake,but have been very glad of it on at least two occasions ! better to have and not need etc...
If you strip the frame,you may find some no's etc ?
or,.... post a pic,you never know.
Re: the Chicken and Egg question - it's Egg - Birds are reptiles.
😉
I like the idea of a fixed wheel, but the short, steep hills hereabouts take the edge of the appeal a bit (based on my experiences riding them on my SS). I'm also a bit wary about the potential for pedal strike on rough surfaces / lumpy transitions (hmm, just use shorter cranks I 'spose). Definitely with proper 'bars tho' - I like being comfortable on a bike.
Thinking back to the original question, do the riders wear the clothes that people who ride fixies choose, or is there a fashion statement that includes the need for a fixie.
I've seen quite a few nice new bikes around recently that look like what's described as a "fixie" but very often they use a freewheel. I think people are attracted to those bikes because they're pretty and practical, and often very good value. Yes it's a fashion thing at the moment, but it's more about the style of the bike than the ability to coast (or not).
brakeless is pretty silly, most fixed riders use at least a front brake.
Never, ever seen a fixie with any brakes.
Never, ever seen a fixie with any brakes.
I'm sure you have, you just didn't notice it was a fixie.
Ahem!
It was not an argument against baggies.
It was intended to make the point that baggy wearers in general cannot claim any functional high ground when it comes to dressing for cycling.
I even have a couple of pairs myself, and have used them on most of my mountain bike rides. I use them to avoid knackering any of my lycra shorts, and have no problem in using lycra in the dry.
As for the 'Ooh Mr Darcy, I can make out the outline of your John Thomas' business; if you buy decent lycra shorts, the offending member is safely tucked away behind the drip tray on the chammy.
Never, ever seen a fixie with any brakes.
I have a disk on the front of mine.
Are we getting our fixed-gear's and our single-speed's mixed up? A SS has a brake(s), Fixed does not. Or am I wrong?
Are we getting our fixed-gear's and our single-speed's mixed up? A SS has a brake(s), Fixed does not. Or am I wrong?
A singlespeed can freewheel. A fixed wheel can not.
Brakes have nothing to do with it.
More people on bikes is good.
Doesn't matter why, or what they wear.
I can confirm there is one full time bike messenger in Liverpool. you can't miss him he's 8 foot tall and incredibly scouse. he is the only one.
After watching an ace documentary about New York bike couriers in the 80's/early 90's I was tempted to try this. But I think it was the nostalgia of that age and the NYC backdrop that tempted me. When I think about doing it in my own city (Sheffield) it doesn't seem that much fun. 🙂
plyphon - Member
brakeless is pretty silly, most fixed riders use at least a front brake.
Never, ever seen a fixie with any brakes.
not very observant then...
a front brake is a legal requirement in the UK,in fact,a 'functioning brake on each wheel' is a legal requirement,on a fixed wheel your legs count as a brake.
a 'fixie' is just that. i.e. a bike with a fixed,as in permanent drive,no freewheel.
the amount of brakes are irelevent,track bikes are 'Fixies' but so is any bike with one,or two wheel brakes,as long as it's er,fixed wheel....
and yes,of course there are always going to be cockjockeys who think riding brakeless on the road is cool.
but not as bad (quite) as the bmx'er with no brakes,lights,or even a fixed wheel,who shot out of the park onto a main road infront of my car tonight.
'Fixie' is just a slang word for a fixed wheel bike. A track bike is exactly what it says, a bike for riding on the track. To be a track bike it has to conform to the rules of the track it is ridden at. I.e. No brakes, a certain height for the BB depending on banking angle and in some instances even the tyres are specified (you are not allowed to use Michelin at Manchester) and drop bars for bunch racing (no pursuit bars). Some velodromes have a gear inch limit too.
It was the Hoxton/Clerkenwell fixie lot that made cycling cool in London. We have a lot to thank them for


