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If you could buy up to four bikes (money no object), what four would you have?
To cover all the riding I do, or would like to do, mine would have to be
and for getting about in the city:
A horse
In my stable I'd put a horse.
My bikes would be in a bike shed or the house if the wife is away.
a horse
edit: a quicker one.
My current bike for general riding. A DH bike and a road bike with discs and decent tyre clearance for commuting.
No clue on the latter, but i'd take a session, a demo or a glory. I'm not that fussy.
a horse and certainly not a fat bike for which the craze like single speed will soon be over
Well, now that we got the horse jokes out of the way, anyone want to post some nice bike pics?
Only a horse.
Horses live in stables.
Bikes are not steeds. Horses are steeds.
Horses live in stables.
Anyone who mentions the word quiver is coming off the xmas card list!
A pivot LES 27.5 hardtail, though with 1 by drivertrain flat bar etc:
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A scott spark 27.5:
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A ridley x-night, in fact I'd have two of them so I have a spare bike for muddy races. Then I'd jsut have to work on my ability so i didnt lok like a ****t!
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[s]A horse.[/s]
Hmm bikes, I'd struggle with 4, some compromises would have to be made. Can we have 7?
[quote=SaxonRider ]Well, now that we got the horse jokes out of the way, anyone want to post some nice bike pics?
On a thread with this title, no. Try using less ****y terminology.
You do realise that the replys aren't just people trying to be funny?
xc/endurance racing and general go fast/go far rides:
[img] http://s7d5.scene7.com/is/image/Specialized/146651?$Hero$ [/img]
this will serve all my road riding just fine:
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singlespeed awesomeness:
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and some steel goodness and general purpose do-it-all workhorse bike:
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Obvs- all money no object. Reality is somewhat different and I'm sure in the depths of a muddy winter slog, I'd be happier and worry less on my inbred than all of the above.
A microbrewery.
In the shed I'd have a fatbike.
for which the craze like single speed will soon be over
Well it's lasted over a hundred and fifty years so far, so I'm guessing on a geological timescale that's still 'soon'.
Road racing..
XC... (though a custom project one version)
Cross...
TT...
Training...
And I know that's five. And other than the Shand I know it's all a bit boring big brand, but they're tools for a job.
I'd also like to squeeze in a 650B trail bike and a cargo bike. I'm going to need a bigger stable.
Money no object and you go for a Deore equipped hardtail and 105 equipped road bike OP? Dare to dream...!
I really can't see the appeal of buying anything 'factory made' for a road bike for that type of money.
Just cannot understand why anyone would want a pinarello or BMC over something like a Pegoretti or a Bertolelli-Legend (or even a classic English frame maker)? Proper timeless craftsman made work of art rather than churned out of a far east production line.
for which the craze like single speed will soon be over
Is it? Why wasn't I told?
My 1x1 and Karate Monkey would probably be joined by a fatbike (ICT, Caribou or Mukluk) and some flavour steel framed gravel / tourer (Vaya or similar)
But realistically I seem to be in n-1 mode at the moment - I barely have time to ride the 2 bikes I already have, my current bikes cover all I need and if I'm honest the Karate Monkey would probably be fine as my only bike.
A microbrewery
yeah, that would be great too. I'd have a creamery as well. Mmmmm, beer and cheese......
njee20 - Member
Money no object and you go for a Deore equipped hardtail and 105 equipped road bike OP? Dare to dream...!
I guess when I said money no object, I still meant 'realistic'.
I am a middle-aged man with a family. I can't really imagine spending more than £2500 to £3000 on a bike, even if I was a millionaire. Unless it was for someone else.
As much as I love bicycles, something so refined would not really suit my lifestyle.
If, however, you want to spend more, go ahead. I just like oogling bikes.
[quote=ninfan ]I really can't see the appeal of buying anything 'factory made' for a road bike for that type of money.
Just cannot understand why anyone would want a pinarello or BMC over something like a Pegoretti or a Bertolelli-Legend (or even a classic English frame maker)? Proper timeless craftsman made work of art rather than churned out of a far east production line.
Depends if it's for riding or looking at. A cheap digital watch is perfect for telling the time. Anything else is just for show (or, as my wife would call it, jewellery).
@scotroutes: my thoughts exactly.
I really can't see the appeal of buying anything 'factory made' for a road bike for that type of money.
Depends what you want it for. For me, best tools for the job. Besides, the OP said money is no object, so price is not relevant 🙂
I reckon if you race, then you want the best tool for the job you can afford, regardless of whether it is 'craft' or factory. Obviously the 'best tool' can be endlessly debated. All other bikes else can be chosen for other reasons, like craftsmanship, brand history, aesthetics, your mate built it, etc.
I guess when I said money no object, I still meant 'realistic'.I am a middle-aged man with a family. I can't really imagine spending more than £2500 to £3000 on a bike, even if I was a millionaire. Unless it was for someone else.
Never be embarrassed by this. 🙂
Obviously four won't be enough, but like Mrblobby;
Road : Propel SL0 dura ace di2
Cross : TCX SL0 or the SS version
MTB : Carbon Giant Anthem
SS MTB : Niner carbon
Training : Defy Advanced SL0
TT : BMC Time machine does it for me!
Track : Cervelo T4 and Mavic five spoke and disk
Nice bike : Pegoretti Responsorium DA9000
The idea of "training" on my DA Giant Defy is a little profligate, but you said money is no object.
On a parts per pound basis, the track bike is by far the most expensive on that list.
"Up to four bikes"?
If I only had four, I woudn't need a stable to keep them in. The garage and conservatory together have about 8 when I last counted (and could hold more if I wanted).













