Hip Priest
Veteran
Excellent summary, Cubist. If it ain't fit for purpose, it's a BSO. If it's cheap but does the job, it's a cheap bike.
If these bikes were the deathtraps some insist they are, where are all these dead cyclists?
I would hazard a guess that the huge majority of cycling fatalities are the result of being knocked down by a car/van/bus/lorry and it matters little whether you are riding a state of the art carbon, fancy custom built steel or a Tesco double bouncer.
Perhaps it's because they are not ridden far enough to reach that point. Maybe the owners know people such as me or Cubist (my neighbour has a BSO I am forever tweaking it). Unless you live in the Fens or Holland I would have thought brake failure would be a major/fatal issue.If these bikes were the deathtraps some insist they are, where are all these dead cyclists?
I would hazard a guess that the huge majority of cycling fatalities are the result of being knocked down by a car/van/bus/lorry and it matters little whether you are riding a state of the art carbon, fancy custom built steel or a Tesco double bouncer.
Even Tescos fit brakes to their bikes. They will be capable of stopping the thing if maintained properly, just like any other brake. It is not the fault of the bike if people can't be bothered to maintain them.
If you bought a new car and the brakes didn't work would you argue the same point?Yes but that is an assembly issue and not an intrinsic bike quality issue.
That is not a fault of the bike. If I have something that doesn't work, I fix it, or get someone else to fix it for me if I can't fix it myself. If someone continues to ride a bike with no brakes, that is the fault of the owner, not the bike.The issue arises when the brakes fail to work from day one. Anyone who buys a bike from such a place is highly unlikely to have even heard of an M-Check and will assume (quite logically) that the brakes et al will work. If they (and other components such as gear) do not then the bike is not fir for purpose and is a BSM.
So you would buy a new bike that did not work properly, pay for it to beThat is not a fault of the bike. If I have something that doesn't work, I fix it, or get someone else to fix it for me if I can't fix it myself. If someone continues to ride a bike with no brakes, that is the fault of the owner, not the bike.
Even Tescos fit brakes to their bikes. They will be capable of stopping the thing if maintained properly, just like any other brake. It is not the fault of the bike if people can't be bothered to maintain them.
I would argue its bad but i dont see the arguement for bso.If you bought a new car and the brakes didn't work would you argue the same point?
I would argue its bad but i dont see the arguement for bso.
If assembly issues are evidence of bso status then if you disconnects the brake cable from your super bike then it also becomes a bso (albeit temporary) . It just dosnt work that way , does it ?