How long do you kee...
 

[Closed] How long do you keep your bikes for?

52 Posts
50 Users
0 Reactions
324 Views
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I feel like I come across a lot of posters on here who refer to a bike they had only a few years ago as if it was a long time ago, or how they are now on their umpteenth bike in ten years (or whatever).

The thing is, while I can understand having multiple bikes (different rides for different purposes and all that!), I have a hard time getting my head around the idea of changing my bike constantly (or even very frequently).

So my question is:

How many of you buy a bike, just love it, and keep it (and keep riding it) for a good number of years?

For what it's worth, I still think of my own 2009 Fisher Big Sur as being brand new.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:01 pm
Posts: 8
Free Member
 

I keep mine about 5 years


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:02 pm
Posts: 19
Free Member
 

Usually 1 or 2 each year, depends on the latest fads 😆

However this year I have 3 in mind, saying that I'm in the trade so it really doesn't cost that much as alot of the cost is recovered each year from resale.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:06 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

But don't you feel any affection for a particular bike and just [i]want[/i] to keep it?!?


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:07 pm
Posts: 13356
Free Member
 

In 22 years of riding I've had 6 bikes. Still got my 2nd bike (of which the frame was built in 1990) but It's Triggers brush. Had a Norange 5 for 2.5 years & don't intend to change it.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:08 pm
Posts: 1832
Full Member
 

Depends on the bike. I've a gt sts I've owned since 97, an original Inbred from the early noughties and a 2003 Stiffee 69er. I've also had a number bikes I've kept only a few years then moved on. Sometimes a bike has a certain charisma that makes it a keeper, sometimes it's just a bike.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:10 pm
Posts: 9440
Full Member
 

I'm doing well. I've kept the same three bikes throughout the whole of this thread..


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

For evvveeeeeeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr or until it breaks.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

or get nicked 🙁


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:16 pm
Posts: 119
Free Member
 

Much as above some bikes I will only keep a year at most but some stay a lot longer , you just never know still you start to use them.
I still ride my very old Saracen killi flyer and a 1950 Raleigh road bike that prob does more miles than anything I own

I guess most years I will build 2-3 new bikes


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:18 pm
Posts: 20741
 

'til I get bored of it. Current lot are 2, 10 and 22 months old. Only the 2 month old one was bought new.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:19 pm
Posts: 349
Free Member
 

Depends how you're defining bike really. I haven't outright bought a full bike for quite a while now but I've upgraded components as they wear out or my preferences for setups change and I've swapped frames maybe 3 times in last 4 years or so.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:19 pm
Posts: 65968
Full Member
 

I'm not doing too well lately! Hemlock is now I think 3 years old and going nowhere. But I only had my Camber for about 2 months before sacking it, and the C456 it replaced only a year. There was a BFe in there at the same time somewhere which lasted 6 months. The Mmmbop before that, ooh I dunno. Not that long. None of them was ever quite right, some lovely bikes in there but I was looking for something else. Hopefully found it now.

All in all, it's just as well I have the 21 year old Carrera to even it up.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:22 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

mongoose tyax 2 years
Boardman ht 1.5 years
Trancex 4 years
Evil sov 1 year


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Pipedream Modro SS about 6 years so far
C456 about 6 months currently
Scandal about 18 months.
Cube Road bike about 2 months.

All work well for me and may be a long while before the move on. Used to have a Kona King Kahunna Ti for 10 years, but fancied a change. Pipedream Sirius was the change and that was kept for 5years, so not as frequent as some on here.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]

The lifespan shrinks as I get more [s]nerdy[/s] picky about my bikes. I'm more into changing frames than whole bikes as I like the parts I own. I've ping-ponged between FS and HT for the past 2-3 years, I'm back in a HT phase.

I've dropped to a 6 month rotation 😳 but my riding has come along leaps and bounds (literally) in that time so the bike I ride needs to do different things to 3 years ago. Similar, but different. 3 years ago is roughly when bike tinkering took hold chronically, prior to that a stock setup was perfectly fine. How things change!

In this time I've moved from SRAM to Shimano, reduced to double n bash, stuck with Hope hubs, widened my bars, returned to flat pedals and come to appreciate slack steel. Oh and Maxles, I do like a pair of Maxles.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:36 pm
Posts: 1859
Full Member
 

I have one bike at a time* and my last two I had for over six years each. Just changed a couple of weeks ago to a Kaffenback frame and forks. I am no longer a mountain biker.

*I have a 1989 MS Racing mtb at my parents. It is set up as a singlespeed and gets used occassionally to pootle around if I visit Keswick and find myself with a bit of spare time.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:39 pm
Posts: 479
Full Member
 

never sell anything


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:41 pm
 sbob
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I wanted a good all round bike that would last.
Bought a GT Zaskar X 12 years ago.
It's a great bike, and I've never seen another, which is nice.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:43 pm
Posts: 39497
Free Member
 

Till it breaks usually .


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:46 pm
Posts: 1866
Free Member
 

Never sold a bike, of bought a new one when i have a perfectly good functioning bike.
They always snap way before i get bored, or fancy a change.

That was until my current bike which i've had for 7 years. That is 6 years longer than anything else prior to it.
So, i might actually have to throw this one away at some-point if it doesn't break.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 9:59 pm
Posts: 2388
Full Member
 

Usually until they break in which case I have no choice but to get a new one. At the last count, I've broken two Santa Cruz, two Oranges,, two Turners, a Raleigh and a Ritchey though the latter was no thanks to a **** in a car who deliberately ran into the back of me. Actually, better add a borrowed Scott to that list too. Strike that thought, I forgot about the Cove Hummer that I broke. I blame my Raleigh Chipper - it was my first ever bike and the first one that I
broke. Nothing changes! 😀


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:01 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I cant see myself buying a simiular priced bike to my 2006 Felt q650.They are all worse specced nowadays 7 or 8 speed for the same price.Plus they all look clumsy in and have cable routing that doesnt appeal to me either also the wider handle bars are clumsy looking.I dont like the new felt q bikes either with the manipulated top tubes.I think aluminium hardtails looked best arround the time I got mine when you already got ingrated headtube but still had cyclocross still cable routing and more roundish ovalised tubing and v-brake option.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I tend to keep bikes (thankfully have the space, well it's just a pain putting the car in the garage)

[b]Sold two bikes:[/b]
Salsa Bandito - built it up but didn't get on with it - 8 months
One One ss - killed my knees - 4 years (mostly sat in garage)

[b]1 stolen[/b]
Nigel Dean MTB, with Campag Group set - 2 years

[b]2 broken[/b]
Kona Cinder Cone - 4 years
Police auction road bike - 3 years

[b]rest kept.[/b]
airborne Lancaster - 5 years
spesh eduro - 9 years
Cannodale M800 (beast of the east) - 16 years (now on commute duty)
Copi San Remo - 8 years - now on turbo duty, cause it's shit on the road
MB Dronfield Road Bike - 20 years (recently resprayed and up dated)

Only one currently owned bikes was bought new

n + 1 and all 🙂


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:21 pm
Posts: 7333
Free Member
 

I've had a few transients, some I really regret selling, others I was glad to see the back of. Currently riding a Coyote Dual that I've had for 7 years, only the frame and the fork remain from the original. Also got an old Kona Hahanna that I built about 18 months ago as a fully rigid SS. Both completely different bikes, probably keep them till they break.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:22 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

My oldest bike was built in Mar 2008. A couple of others have come and gone since then though, mostly through me re-defining what I want each bike for.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:35 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

my Rocky Mountain Vertex 1992 triple butted tange prestige will now live with me forever. I have done too much stuff on that frame with too many interesting people to let it go. Too many good and bad times. I just wonder what colour to paint it next! Bikes can be emotional


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:41 pm
 sbob
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I wanted a good all round bike that would last.
Bought a GT Zaskar X 12 years ago.
It's a great bike, and I've never seen another, which is nice.

Come to think of it, I've still got my old '95 Tequesta and a late 80s Peugeot road bike.
Not that I'm a hoarder but bikes are, you know, special. 😳


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 10:52 pm
Posts: 2870
Full Member
 

I have an Orange O2 of the first geneation Circa 1996. Currently undergoing a very slow rebuild into a SS.

I only bought a new bike last year as the lack of disc mounts on the O2 stopped me upgrading to better stoppage methods.


 
Posted : 15/10/2012 11:18 pm
 P20
Posts: 4177
Full Member
 

Ritchey P20, 13yrs. Doubt I'll ever sell it.
Colnago C40, 10yrs, far better than I'll ever need, but I'd be mad to sell it for a different road bike.
On one 456C, 2yrs
Yeti ASR5C, 2 months. The frame replaced a 5yr old 575. The rear hub and top headset cup are now 12yrs old from various previous builds


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 12:37 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tend to change frames every 9-10 months as I get bored, usually take components across but then these usually get swapped out every 10-12 months.
Middle aged, no kids and only space for one bikes means I tend to, and can afford to, change things depending on what I am riding a lot of at the time (i.e. CX to AM etc).
Currently on a SC Blur TRc (5 months) which replaced a Yeti ASR-5 (9 months) and looking for something with more suspension in the new year, maybe a carbon Covert or Scott 700, lets see what happens in Jan/Feb.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 12:50 am
Posts: 15970
Free Member
 

My road bike is from about 1996, my hardtail which I still race on occasionally from 2001, and my full susser is about 4 months old.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 5:03 am
 mrmo
Posts: 10706
Free Member
 

bontrager race, frame rusted through, 16years old
bontrager privateer, in bits, 17years old
Lemond Croix de Fer, warranty replacement for a frame i snapped, 5years old i think.
Trek Top Fuel only 2.5 years old.

Bikes don't matter it is what you do with them that does, fitness matters more than the bike.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 5:49 am
Posts: 299
Free Member
 

I start each year saying I won't make a change, this year I might just do it 😉

Also this year was the first year I took the same bike to the alps. The bike I have now is the best of those I've owned its longevity with us reflects that.

I have no set time to keep bikes and no current plans to make any changes unless forced too.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 6:33 am
Posts: 2
Full Member
 

They're all part of the family.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:29 am
 Gunz
Posts: 2249
Free Member
 

Kona Hei Hei - 15 years
Kona Kilauea - 19 years
Surly Crosscheck - 5 years

If my cycling isn't up to my expectations I usually blame myself, not the bike.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:30 am
Posts: 1752
Full Member
 

I'm glad its not just me who is constantly tinkering...

1994 Raleigh Dyna Tech Ogre - rarely used

2012 C456, built 2 months ago with spare bits from old Soul. I'll probably get bored of it before next summer

2012 Liteville 301, built up in May from parts from 2011 Zesty. A really complete bike, and for present, see no reason to replace for some time 😀


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:32 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Like some others on here once I get attached to a bike Itend to keep it. I'm currently riding a Cannondale M900 from 1996, and am now into a round of admiring/quizzical 'wow look at that retro bike' looks, which is fun. Have ridden that bike in at least five different countries:-)


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:33 am
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

2006 and still going strong.
Why would I change it?

[IMG] [/IMG]
(not that I use it enough lately to justify a new bike 🙁 )

My Handjob is 2007. No need for that to be replaced either.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:39 am
Posts: 28712
Full Member
 

Usually <1 year. However due to having an expensive year of buying a new car and 3 new motorbikes i've had to keep the Giant XTC29 for more than a year now and it will have to stay for a while yet. I'd like to throw a load of money at a super light xc 29er, but TBH i struggle buying a bike that's lower specc'd than mine for £3000 more !!!!

I've also tried several machines now and not liked them as much as the Giant, so can't see me swapping for a while yet.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:39 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Generally until the frame brakes - then I just change the frame..... so very much Triggers broom.

Bikes have morphed over time in our house....


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:46 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

still riding a 2005 Ellsworth Truth, still my favourite full suspension bike.
Did buy a carbon Ellsworth enlightenment HT at the start of the year.
Should keep me going for a while 🙂


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:46 am
 Euro
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Until they break. Even when they do, i generally keep them for a few years and only bin them when I need to free up space. Proud to say i've never sold a bike - they either go out on permanent loan, are fashioned into something useless/pointless or to the skip.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 7:47 am
Posts: 10392
Full Member
 

GT Avalanche 2004, several makeovers but just split for parts for a new build.
Orange 5 2005, I actually bought the frame in 2009 and built up with new parts. No reason to change it yet.
On One Inbred 29er 2012, had frame since Friday just finished building it up. some new bits some bits off the GT. Won't be changing that for a while!
I reckon it'd have to be a shocker of a bike or the wrong size completely for me to notice much difference between different bikes. FS to FS or hardtail to hardtail. Not saying they're all the same just that i'm not that good!


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 8:25 am
Posts: 6206
Full Member
 

Mine are 23 yrs, 16 yrs, 5 yrs (doesn't seem than long, but the calendar doesn't lie), and 2 yrs old. Certainly no intention to replace the 2 newest.

The 2 older bikes would be handy to get rid of (to make space for something else). Did consider upgrading both of the 2 oldest bikes, but they'd end up being trigger's broom, so makes more sense to offload them and buy new.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 8:40 am
Posts: 41671
Free Member
 

Usualy I'll keep stuff untill it's worn out/broken, I probably average one new bike a year over the last 5 years, but often that's just been selling a frame and buying a similar replacement (DMR Switchback evolved into a O-O 456, which evolved into the Pitch).

It all depends on where I am and what I'm doing, I've done a lot of driving this year so the Pitch came in handy as I could stopoff in places where it could be used properly. Riding localy I rarely use anything other than the SS-Rigid Swift as it's all that's needed. Building up a hardtail for general messing about in the woods and that'll be bike number 3 in the shed (mountainbikes, theres the BMX's and road bikes on top of that!).

For all that, the Pitch is a siignificant proportion re-cycled bits, the Swift was 2nd hand and the hardtail was going to be built with old bits but the forks didn't fit so that was another £270, and all that was available was 15mm axle so that needed a new front wheel, so it may as well be a pair, and the 9s drivetrain eneded up on another bike, the only old bits are the saddle and pedals and they're on the list to go!


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 8:55 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

until it breaks


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 9:12 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Kept Reign for 5 years, did include wheel and brake upgrades which were then transferred to a new FS frame. Original Hardrock (7yrs) I still have as a loaner bike. Oddly it was my BFe which caused me to change the Reign, it just made it feel dead and dated, had I not got the Cotic I might still be riding the Reign.

I can see the attraction of trying out new components and frames, the frame is only 25% (often less) of the cost of the bike. If I were more mechanically minded I'd be likely to do that.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 9:13 am
Posts: 3403
Free Member
 

I basically buy them to keep them, and ride them until it starts to make less sense to keep putting money into them or they get nicked (although only 1 pinched so far). My 6 year old XTC needs so much doing to it at the moment that I'd consider replacing it with a Boardman or something.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 9:34 am
Posts: 149
Free Member
 

Bought lots. Kept a few and have sold fewer. Wide range, oldest is now 35 years old, told the frame will have lost its spring but seems ok. My Stumpy is 1986 still pretty good. Merlin 2001 but feel old fashioned. Couple of 3 year olds and two less than a year, just babies really, need to mature a little.


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 9:35 am
Posts: 4097
Free Member
 

Keep them until they break or are stolen. Current one (Mongoose) is five years old and going strong, previous was five years old and close to knackered when it was nicked.

I'm an N=1 kinda person though, so my one bike becomes a significant attachment, and I still miss every bike I've ever had (apart from the Hellfrauds steel "ATB" behemoth I had 25 years ago, that was horrible. Actually, scratch that, I'm remembering that one fondly thinking of the adventures we had together as I discovered mountain biking for the first time.)


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 10:27 am
Posts: 9203
Free Member
 

Until they break or I get bored of them/decide I want to try something different. I've had my old trailstar frame for a good few years now but fancied something with different geometry as it seems to fit my current riding style better. Bought my Bullit for a long holiday to Whistler and am considering selling it now as I don't really need a FS and if I get one again I'd like something with different geometry..


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 10:29 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Until it gets stolen, sadly.

(Although it gets upgrades every now and then - my Claud Butler Cape Wrath morphed into a Giant VT, part by part over a period of 10 years before getting nicked. Yearly photos would have made a nice story, come to think of it - must do that with the latest steed.)


 
Posted : 16/10/2012 10:41 am