BSOh
Über Member
- Location
- Ceredigion
This is a long thread, apologies, but I thought I'd share my BSO experience with you.
At the end of last summer I decided to buy a bike to get out and about. I enjoy walking, and thought cycling might be another way to get outdoors and enjoy the scenery. As I mainly walk fire-roads etc. I thought I should get myself a MTB. What I ended up with, thanks to a cheap internet outfit, was a BSO in the wrong colour (I'm a lady - it's important) and with different spec than I ordered. Of course they didn't respond to my complaints so I kept it as was in the end. It was half price from £260 to £130. It's listed weight was 15kg (I'm about 50kg soaking wet) and it was a nightmare to get on and off the rack on the car. It was horrible to ride with jumping gears, so it was ridden about three times and went to the back of the shed,
Just after Christmas, I thought again about cycling, So I dragged the bike back out of the shed and set to try to at least make it ride-able. I had zero cycling experience or mechanical nous, so I hit the forums. Thanks to my BSO (and the inter-web) I now know how to:
Break a chain, but even better fix one again! (too long anyway when fitted by said rubbish internet shop)
Adjust derailleurs (gears jumped from the day I bought)
Fit a new front derailleur (arrived from shop damaged, replacement basic tourney for £8)
Fit sus corrected exotic rigid fork (to replace heavy zoom sus fork, £40 fork ebay second hand, tools £40)
Fit a mechanical disc brake (to go on new fork £26)
Change tyres (Came with big cheap knobblies so LBS sold me some Bontrager semi's they had for £20 the pair)
So my £130 BSO has now cost me £260. It's still a very basic bike, basic Tourney components and still heavy, but its definitely better than the pile of rubbish that turned up in a box last year. And it'll be fine for a while to do what I want it to. Of course I now know I should have just bought a decent spec second hand hybrid (and read this forum sooner!!)
But I've had a wonderful time learning about bikes, how they work, how to maintain them, and even fix them when stuff breaks. I may even buy a wreck off ebay and sort it out for practice, I enjoyed it that much. It's given me confidence. And for that my BSO is priceless to me. Few more bits and bobs to sort on it and I'll be away on my first maiden voyage
At the end of last summer I decided to buy a bike to get out and about. I enjoy walking, and thought cycling might be another way to get outdoors and enjoy the scenery. As I mainly walk fire-roads etc. I thought I should get myself a MTB. What I ended up with, thanks to a cheap internet outfit, was a BSO in the wrong colour (I'm a lady - it's important) and with different spec than I ordered. Of course they didn't respond to my complaints so I kept it as was in the end. It was half price from £260 to £130. It's listed weight was 15kg (I'm about 50kg soaking wet) and it was a nightmare to get on and off the rack on the car. It was horrible to ride with jumping gears, so it was ridden about three times and went to the back of the shed,
Just after Christmas, I thought again about cycling, So I dragged the bike back out of the shed and set to try to at least make it ride-able. I had zero cycling experience or mechanical nous, so I hit the forums. Thanks to my BSO (and the inter-web) I now know how to:
Break a chain, but even better fix one again! (too long anyway when fitted by said rubbish internet shop)
Adjust derailleurs (gears jumped from the day I bought)
Fit a new front derailleur (arrived from shop damaged, replacement basic tourney for £8)
Fit sus corrected exotic rigid fork (to replace heavy zoom sus fork, £40 fork ebay second hand, tools £40)
Fit a mechanical disc brake (to go on new fork £26)
Change tyres (Came with big cheap knobblies so LBS sold me some Bontrager semi's they had for £20 the pair)
So my £130 BSO has now cost me £260. It's still a very basic bike, basic Tourney components and still heavy, but its definitely better than the pile of rubbish that turned up in a box last year. And it'll be fine for a while to do what I want it to. Of course I now know I should have just bought a decent spec second hand hybrid (and read this forum sooner!!)
But I've had a wonderful time learning about bikes, how they work, how to maintain them, and even fix them when stuff breaks. I may even buy a wreck off ebay and sort it out for practice, I enjoyed it that much. It's given me confidence. And for that my BSO is priceless to me. Few more bits and bobs to sort on it and I'll be away on my first maiden voyage
