Commutting on a fixie

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

dave2041

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't mind trying a fixie but i have around 600ft of climbing on my commute... are fixies viable for this? I could just leave my bike in one gear and try it i suppose (a 34x17 looks about right). any thoughts?
 

Teuchter

Über Member
I wouldn't mind trying a fixie but i have around 600ft of climbing on my commute... are fixies viable for this? I could just leave my bike in one gear and try it i suppose (a 34x17 looks about right). any thoughts?
I tend to use a different bike if I'm expecting a lot of hills - the descents are as much (if not more) of an issue than the climbs. Single speed may be a better option for you - you wouldn't be having to brake on descents just to keep your legs from spinning out. 34x17 sounds pretty low to me (my fixie is 46x17 I seem to recall).

Have a look at Sheldon's gear calculator:
http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/
 

4F

Active member of Helmets Are Sh*t Lobby
Location
Suffolk.
Right, next person who says "fixie" is going on the "ignore user" list :tongue:

34 x 17 ????? Whilst riding "Fixed" this may help going uphill however you knees are likely to explode going down :hyper::B)
 
Still wrong. 'Fixed gear' is an Americanism. In the UK it's 'fixed wheel', or just 'fixed'.

Whence this desire proscriptively or prescriptively to require other people to name a variety of bicycle (or not to name it) in a particular way?

Fixies were being ridden long before the hipsters, long before the cycle couriers. They will be ridden long after the craze has died.

People will be selling fixed bikes on eBay and Gumball (or similar) as "Fixed gear, ideal for conversion to geared freewheel".

One day I woke up and my racer (which was never meant for racing) had become a road bike.

Non-cyclists still call it a racer (which it never was), unaware that it is now a fixie.

I have a 'mad keen' mountainbiking friend (parent of a child's friend) who laughed when I said that my early '90s Kona Kilauea is a mountainbike... She thinks it's a hybrid. Which it most definitely is (or was) not.

They're all just bicycles and caring what other people call them may demonstrate membership of the very club whose credibility we question when they use what we think the wrong terminology.

I do hope this has been helpful. My fear is that the possibility exists that it has not been.
 

dave2041

Well-Known Member
I tend to use a different bike if I'm expecting a lot of hills - the descents are as much (if not more) of an issue than the climbs. Single speed may be a better option for you - you wouldn't be having to brake on descents just to keep your legs from spinning out. 34x17 sounds pretty low to me (my fixie is 46x17 I seem to recall).

Have a look at Sheldon's gear calculator:
http://sheldonbrown.com/gears/
Yeah i use this calculator: http://www.machars.net/bikecalc.htm

I currently ride a 50/34 11-25 cassette road bike. maybe i'm confused... looks like it is 50x19 or 34x13 for the same gear inches~ as a (fixie) friends gearing 46x16 i think.

Either way when i think about it i'd have to cross chain so guess i wont try it xD
 

Teuchter

Über Member
Yeah i use this calculator: http://www.machars.net/bikecalc.htm

I currently ride a 50/34 11-25 cassette road bike. maybe i'm confused... looks like it is 50x19 or 34x13 for the same gear inches~ as a (fixie) friends gearing 46x16 i think.

Either way when i think about it i'd have to cross chain so guess i wont try it xD
Aiming for between 65 and 70 is probably a good starting point.
 

GrumpyGregry

Here for rides.
Pull front brake, lift back and flip round with clipped in foot. Soon becomes second nature, even with a heavy pannier on the back
Apply front brake and leave back unlifted. Push down on bars, pout all your weight on your unclipped foot. flip around pedal with clipped in foot in a forward pedalling motion, back end will magically rise all on it's own.
 
Top Bottom