D
Deleted member 1258
Guest
Don't worry I'm easily amused
It still seems to be indicating that there was a certain amount of internet shops about though![]()
Fixed that for you

Don't worry I'm easily amused
It still seems to be indicating that there was a certain amount of internet shops about though![]()
Not true! The French actually have a word for it - Souplesse - and they give special prizes for it in some big races.As for pedalling technique, it's only we Brits worry about that.
But they don't claim it lets you ride faster.Not true! The French actually have a word for it - Souplesse - and they give special prizes for it in some big races.
I would like a really well designed fixie just to hang on my living room wall.
Steve
Not if you have as much money as me. I also have a motorbike in my living room.
Some of the fixies I have seen have been like works of art. They are nice to look at.
Steve
It doesn't matter how nice the bike is, or how much money you've got, a bikes for riding, if you want an ornament go buy an ornament.
For a number of years I used a 44mm socket as a paperweight in my study. It was lovely to look at.
I believe it was bought to change the rear wheel bearings on a 2CV, but its real value was as a paperweight.
I would happily have a 125cc GP bike from the 90s as an ornament, or an AJS 7R or similar.
I think I know where SteveinDenmark is coming from, although I fear the wall-mounted fixie would be ridden more than looked at.
I've seen pictures of clay (GS) and wooden (Nuova 500) models used by the Citroen and FIAT designers. Either of those would get its own shrine and posh lighting.
I understand where SteveinDenmark is coming from as well, but it is still a waste of good machinery to use it as an ornament, the socket was valuable to you as a paperweight but its real value is as a tool doing the job it was intended to do. I have worked in an engineering firm where they made the models for the car industry, and other places, the amount of work that went into them was amazing. A lot of them would end up scrapped once the project was finished, most were shipped out to the company that they were built for, I always thought it was a shame to scrap them after the hours of work that went into them.
some days I ride fixed, some days I ride 8 speed brompton, some days I ride 27 gear mtb, some days I ride singlespeed mtb, some days I ride Strida, some days I ride 30 speed audax bike, some days I ride two speed hub gear with coaster brake, some days I ride 27 speed tourer, et cetera, et cetera.
It ain't what you ride that matters, it's that you ride that counts.
The old pro's didn't train on fixed because they'd learnt to ride fixed, on the track, when they were growing up. Some of them were very very good at it. Hardly any road pro's these days ride on the track. Shame.
![]()
I had this problem 20 years ago too, but the indexing technology has come on a bit since then. The incessant hissy-rattly noise from my fixie chain every time I stand up to put some powor down (1/8" chain on 3/32" sprocket probably isn't helping) makes it actually louder than my geared bike, although I have so far resisted letting it drive me any further mad than I already am
The key advantage of fixed gear, I think, is that you can slow down while riding no-handed in traffic without having to grab the handlebars