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[Closed] Who would spend upward of £600 on a kids bike?

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 ianv
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Is there a market for light decent full suspension bikes with 20-24 inch wheels?


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:06 am
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Depends on what the kid uses it for, I guess?

There's a young boy who rides a tiny Orange 5 (with 24s?) for DH racing, and he rips around on it. Right tool for the right job?

And that was far more than £600!


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:17 am
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£600? - no

That's way above any birthday or Christmas present limit


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:19 am
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yeah, people spend a lot more than that on teenagers' bikes!

I would too if my child was into it


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:20 am
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I thought the beauty of a kids bike is that its purposefully shit so it doesnt cost much when it breaks (frequently)

You could buy them an lightweight, expensive xc mincing machine and get them into doing that early on. Or you could just give them a shit bmx or rigid mtb and let them learn to ride bikes properly.

When there a teenager they'll either be into cycling, or they wont be. Then buy them a good bike.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:24 am
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Suppose it depends where they ride and what they do on them I suppose.

My 12 year old has a 15" Trek 6500, XT groupset etc which was around £700, but he does do proper trails and stuff and at Xmas I got him a full susser built up as the LBS had a small Fat Possum 150mm frame spare that's built up into a very light DH bike for him. Its got 150mm air revs, Juicy 7'S, XT/SLX groupset so a fair bit more than £600...just means I have less to spend on mine 😯


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:28 am
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My kids each have 14" On-One 456s which each cost considerably more than that. 26" wheels though.

My sone also has a Norco DH/FR 24" wheel bike (he's 10) which would have cost [i]waaay[/i] more than that new. Weighs around 32lbs, so not light, but equally not appalling.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:29 am
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As a kid, I raced Moto-X

I had a good bike and all the gear

It was only later that I actually realised that it was my dad's bike, I just turned up and rode it.
The whole racing thing was for his benefit too more than mine, I think he liked the fights 🙂

I did enjoy it but I now know it wasn't really for my benefit


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:30 am
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Absolutely not. As above kids wreck things and dont understand dont throw your bike down because the tubes are that leight weight they will dent.

Kids care more about what a bike looks like than whether its got the lightest current year marketing shite on it.

Having said that some idiots would be prepared to spend £1k + for their precious one to be spoilt.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:30 am
 GW
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You couldn't build a decent lightweight full sus with 20 or 24" wheels for £600.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:31 am
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Thanks Funky. Mines been taught that they are expensive..
I only 'spoil' him cos he rides better than me....[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:33 am
 LoCo
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Yes I probably will end up paying that much for mini LoCo's bikes and the rest, not for a few year though 😀


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:34 am
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If you can afford it why the hell not. Looking forward to building up a ultralight 26 for the lad next year.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:35 am
 LoCo
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Well that's if she want's to race, and I'll end up going without to fund it.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:37 am
 GW
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As above kids wreck things and dont understand dont throw your bike down because the tubes are that leight weight they will dent.

Kids care more about what a bike looks like than whether its got the lightest current year marketing shite on it.

Having said that some idiots would be prepared to spend £1k + for their precious one to be spoilt


You're the idiot! What a load of shite!
not all kids have no respect for their possessions!
I'm an adult and throw my bike about, that's what it's for and that's why I ride a bike that's not so bloody light it can't take a knock or two.
a friends nephew rides the same model DH bike as me (although slightly better spec'd), it's far better looked after/maintained than mine (by the kid), driven to be ridden further and more often than mine and after a couple of years and who knows how many £1000s spent by the parents he's now podiuming at national races in his age category.
You'd probably call him spoilt, I'd call him lucky to have such supportive parents (he's a good kid)


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:41 am
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Snakebite - I thought the OP was talking your avg kid. Obviously if my son was showing talent for riding a bike and had aspirations to take it to a high level, then yes I would hope you could get good kit and would pay for it.

My folks supported me ski racing from about the age of 12.

This is an important note for the OP... Junior race skis are probably about 1/4 the price of the adult equivalent and produced by all the big brands, it would appear in many ways as a lost leader.

IMO thats how it should be with bikes, and to be honest I am suprised the big co's dont build junior race replicas already.

It would be very niche though.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:43 am
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All the kids i see are into dirt jump bikes and BMXs round here. If you go to GlenT how many kids do you see on the trails - not many they are all in the dirt jump park.

Freeride is cool - xc trails arent.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:47 am
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custom brooklyn, does help if your dad owns the company.

[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:49 am
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Stepson 1 has inherited his mother's old bike, which is a Merlin Malt 1 sporting Pikes wound down to 100mm travel (I know! They're the only spare forks I've got) and Avid Juicys. It's a lovely machine, but he's a little miffed because it doesn't say "Specialized" or "Orange" on the frame.

He's also on occasion used his mum's Rock Spings and my Enduro.

Stepson 2 has a Spesh Hardrock with Dart 3s and Avid Juicys.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 10:53 am
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That mini-mini-link Brooklyn is brilliant 😯


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 11:31 am
 ianv
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I am not really talking about an average kid. I was really trying to get an idea about the size of the potential market for good bikes for kids in the 6-10 age group.

As I see it ALL 20 inch mountain bikes are crap and a good kid will be held back (Isla bikes being the exception but these are not really suited to anything too hardcore) and all 24 inc Downhill bikes are heavy and have crap suspension. There must a a niche there somewhere, I would definately have bought a 20inch full sus if it was available, as my son would have been more comfortable on that than a 24 that it is still a bit big for him.

Take the point about price though, £600 might be too low a price point.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 11:56 am
 GW
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I would definately have bought a 20inch full sus if it was available, as my son would have been more comfortable on that than a 24 that it is still a bit big for him.

how hardcore is your kid that EVERY 20" kids bike is crap? and if he's so hardcore why would he need a full-sus? 😉
I nearly always ride 20" (BMX) when I take younger kids riding as I'll appreciate how bumpy and how much more difficult obsticles are for their smaller wheels I teach them to choose the smoother lines and remind them to stand up when it's rough (as we all should)

Why didn't you just buy a Scott Spark 20? you could have modded the fork to work properly, tuned the rear shock (or another suitable one) and then upgraded every part on it and ended up with what you're after..

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 12:15 pm
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My lad used to race schoolboy MX. Bikes cost a lot more than £600.

If he'd raced mountainbikes instead £600 would have sounded like a bargain. £3000 would have been a bargain...

Trouble is I don't think youth mtb racing really exists on anything like the scale (with dad-based-enthusiasm to win at all costs as MX).

So no. There isn't much of a market I'd guess.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 12:30 pm
 ianv
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"how hardcore is your kid that EVERY 20" kids bike is crap? and if he's so hardcore why would he need a full-sus?"

He was riding reds in the mountains last year (so pretty good for 6/7)and I dont really see why he should get battered on a hotrock when the grown ups are on DH bikes with 8 inche of travel!

"Why didn't you just buy a Scott Spark 20? you could have modded the fork to work properly, tuned the rear shock (or another suitable one) and then upgraded every part on it and ended up with what you're after.."

My original question was would people be prepared to buy something like this off the shelf, maybe better.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 12:39 pm
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It's worth it if you have the money and your kid is properly into it. If you are just giving him/her a flash new must-have item for posing with then it's definitely NOT worth it.

Just ordered one of these at great expense for Lil Grips.. I'm a fool...

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 1:34 pm
 GW
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I would have thought the answer to your original question is probably No! not very many.
I reckon anyone hankering after something way better than say an Islabike or a Kona full sus for their kids would have very specific reasons as to why and in that case they'd be far more likely to go down the custom or upgrade route to achieve what they "thought" their kids need.

He was riding reds in the mountains last year (so pretty good for 6/7)and I dont really see why he should get battered on a hotrock when the grown ups are on DH bikes with 8 inche of travel!
hotrocks are perfectly good bikes IMO and more than up to riding natural trails in the Mountains under a confident kid with good skills, never mind "reds" (whatever that means).

We've had 2 hotrocks in the family over the years (a 20" & 24"), I did "upgrade" a few parts on each (just cause I could, it wasn't massively needed)) and modified the chain device and forks to actually work properly rather than just look the part but perform like a pogo stick suited to someone twice the childs weights.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 1:40 pm
 GW
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It's worth it if you have the money and your kid is properly into it. If you are just giving him/her a flash new must-have item for pos[b]t[/b]ing [b]pics here[/b][s]with[/s] then it's definitely [s]NOT[/s] worth it.

I'm a fool...

No you're a Muppet, remember? 🙄

😉


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 1:47 pm
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Oh yeah that's right.

Last time Lil Grips's birthday present came up on here someone said something like 'are you really capable of spending that much on a bike?'

It's awesome though, can't wait 🙂


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 2:00 pm
 ianv
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"they'd be far more likely to go down the custom or upgrade route to achieve what they "thought" their kids need"
So what is there to build up a custom bike for younger kids who need smaller wheels? I cannot think of anything. The big hit grom was the best of the small bikes and that is no longer available. There is nothing smaller than 24 inch as far as I know. The hotrock is a good frame with poor suspension.

""reds" (whatever that means)" "Reds" meant stuff like this:

as I am sure you are aware. Not really a trail ideally suited for an inch and a half of front suspension and v brakes. Which is what prompted the initial question.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 3:05 pm
 GW
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Eh? What are you talking about?
I posted a pic of a decent 20" wheel full sus above.

Red graded could mean anything to me but I haven't seen a red graded trail that couldn't be ridden down on a 20" wheel ladies shopper. sorry but I couldn't really be bothered watching a vid Pro DHers riding a very untechnical DH trail for more than the first minute but from what I saw I honestly didn't see anything that would warrant anymore than a hardtail with vs and a short travel fork to ride it at the pace an average 6yr old would.

you first asked about lightweight full sus bikes for kids and now you are saying the Bighit grom is the best.. erm.. WTF?

Personally I'd let him find his feet on a hardtail until he's fast/big enough to get the benefit from rear suspension.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 3:24 pm
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Snakebite is that stile cop?


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 3:33 pm
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I_Ache - Member
Snakebite is that stile cop?

Looks like it to me....


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 3:35 pm
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also not ideally suited to 20 inch wheels either. i've done a few runs with brooklyn jnr (so his dad can get some proper runs in) the kid has no fear, riding behind him through a little rock garden, he still gets thrown around a lot. when he disappeared at speed off the side of the track otb into a large bush, i feared the worst!
he got up pissed at himself for crashing 😀

the brooklyn is a custom frame, also has a custom fork crown that runs on top of the head tube. the fork will be the hardest thing to get right.imo!
i've also seen the fs frank the welder made for his kids, also very nice. it was for sale for $600 but had 24 inch wheels

decent tyres are also a problem.

there is nothing available off the shelf. your gonna have to get something made or wait till your kids a little bigger...


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 3:41 pm
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Obviously your children "aren't worth it"... to continue pastcaring's theme, Jeff Jones's son's (Korbin) bike..

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:04 pm
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You're the idiot! What a load of shite!
not all kids have no respect for their possessions!
I'm an adult and throw my bike about, that's what it's for and that's why I ride a bike that's not so bloody light it can't take a knock or two.
a friends nephew rides the same model DH bike as me (although slightly better spec'd), it's far better looked after/maintained than mine (by the kid), driven to be ridden further and more often than mine and after a couple of years and who knows how many £1000s spent by the parents he's now podiuming at national races in his age category.
You'd probably call him spoilt, I'd call him lucky to have such supportive parents (he's a good kid)

GW you have really got on my tits here, I have you on my hit list as someone to shoot down at every opportunity and I find myself agreeing with everything you've said. This has been happening with me and TJ recently too. Damn this forum is going to the dogs.

I have every intention of pissing as much away on bikes for my kids as I do on my own, I want them to have as much opportunity to have fun and enjoy what MTB has to offer from as early an age as possible.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:25 pm
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If I had a son, and he wanted to come riding, and I could afford it. Yes. The end.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:30 pm
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A decent bike will still retain a resale value once your child has outgrown it, so the year-on-year cost might end up less than buying a complete shitter and binning it after a couple of years.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:38 pm
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druidh +1

[url= http://www.islabikes.co.uk/ ]Islabikes[/url] seem to have made a very good business using that 'plan', there bikes (seemingly) resell really well & look quality kit.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:40 pm
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I am ordering an Islabike for my 4yr old tomorrow and my 7 year old got a Specialized Hotrock 20 for his last birthday. I would easily spend £600+ on a decent bike for my kids if I thought it would make them better riders. Both my kids have Honda dirt bikes and they were just under £1k each. Some crazy dad's spend £4000+ on 50cc KTM's for their kids before the kids can walk! There is definitely a market as long as the bikes are quality and work for the kids.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 4:57 pm
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I did.

My son got a XS Turner XCE when he was 7. Fitted it with 60mm stem, 165mm cranks, reversed post to shorten the reach & 24" wheels - he was fine. Now he's 13 and has an inline post & 26" wheels, and there's plenty of room for further growth.

My daughter got a 14" Explosif when she was 7 - same idea as above, but with shorter (cheapo) 152mm cranks. Worked a treat. She's move up to 26" wheels too now.

Both bikes have been properly ridden (proper hills, Thetford, Dalby, Chicksands etc.) and are still fine - not trashed or abused in any way.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 5:10 pm
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OK, so it is not a MTB... but proof that some people spend crazy amounts on kids bikes.
This is full customs with Lightweight 650c wheels, Dura Ace Di2 and loads of other exotic kit. 5 figure price for sure.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 5:51 pm
 ianv
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The point I was making re lightweight full sus is that the Norcos and the Konas are HEAVY with unsuited coil suspension. Kids are light and therefore do not need something to be so overbuilt, which could translate into a much lighter but just as capable full suspension bike.

And if this was possible, is there much of a market? There are kids MX there are kids moto trials bikes so why not some decent mountain bikes?

The forks do seem to be a sticking point though. Tyres less so as Maxxis make some decent 20 and 24 inch ones.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 6:32 pm
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On a previous kids bikes thread on here someone posted the coolest picture of a 6 year old girl riding in the alps on a Specialized fulls susser with 20" wheels - not available in UK.

My kids have got Specialized, Rigeback and Giant bikes - the giant is pig heavy though and has persuaded me that perhaps an Islabike would be far better.


 
Posted : 31/03/2011 6:51 pm
 GW
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Toys

GW you have really got on my tits here

Always happy to oblige 😉
I have you on my hit list as someone to shoot down at every opportunity
You must be a pretty shit aim then, maybe you should go for an eye test? :/


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 9:45 am
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You must be a pretty shit aim then, maybe you should go for an eye test? :/

True, but I also haven't been hunting in your frequent pastures recently. After this thread I am slightly revising my hit list.


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 10:32 am
 GW
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weirdo


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 10:39 am
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Farticus - a Tuner at 7? I'm jealous!


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 11:15 am
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I wouldnt spend that amount until they were in their mid teens. That isn't because im a cheap bastard, nor is it beause i wouldnt want the best of them it is just a different philosophy to parenting.

Looking at my own childhood the most fun years i have ever had on bikes was spent riding a rigid appolo from halfords. No doubt it would be considered utter crap now but it is still my favourite bike ever and played its part of some great childhood adventures like jousting on bikes with bamboo canes as the lance, doing ghosties off the back, or cycling out to the countryside away from the city, or being the first to ride over to the other side of the river at the ford without falling in (a feat which i imagine the kids of today still talk about) or racing through the woods to set up a guerilla ambush against the invasion by the Russians or Germans. Would not have had anymore fun doing this than had i been riding some pimped out quality bike and i hope any kids i have can experience this uncomplicated fun too.


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 1:49 pm
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If I had 3 boys to pass the bike down to, then I'd probably consider it. (although not at the moment as I'm skint).
Personally I'd be looking for something like the Islabikes Beinn 24 in terms of quality and lightweight build, but with full sus.
As it is, the Beinn with fatter tyres is pretty good.


 
Posted : 01/04/2011 2:26 pm

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