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Fixed Gear Manual

chriscarleton

Monkey
Aug 4, 2007
366
0
Portland Maine
I hate these jack as ses

this is the best thing I've read in a while.

fvcking hipsters.

New Fixed-Gear Bicycle Owner's Manual

Contratulations on the purchase of your Bianchi Pista/Specialized Langster/Cannondale Capo/Jamis Sputnik or similar. Your new bicycle should give you many days of enjoyment until you tire of it for aesthetic reasons and list it on Craigslist for the full retail price in order to help fund the purchase of an NJS-certified keirin bike, a vintage Fender Telecaster, or your move to another, trendier city.

Until that moment arrives, here are some things you need to know in order to get the most enjoyment out of your new toy:

A Note on the Fixed Gear Drivetrain

Your bicycle is equipped with a fixed gear drivetrain. For this reason you may want to alter your riding style accordingly. Firstly, ride slowly. Very slowly. This is the best way to avoid obstacles. When riding with friends on city streets, in bike lanes, or in parks, it is acceptable to disregard the flow of car or bicycle traffic and ride in whichever direction you choose. Slowly. If you find yourself traveling in the same direction as traffic and encounter an intersection with a red light or turning vehicle and are unable to stop, simply turn right. Riding around the block will eventually put you back on course and save you embarrassment and injury. In fact, did you know it's possible to get to any point on an urban street grid using only right turns? Well, it is. And it's safe and fun! Remember this acronym: AAL (Always Avoid Lefts).

Furthermore, your drivetrain enables you to enjoy your bicycle without having to actually ride it more than a few feet at a time. Fun things to try include: skidding, skip-stopping, trackstanding, and putting stickers and colorful parts on it.

Upgrading

It is important to begin the process of upgrading your bicycle’s appearance immediately. This can occasionally have the side-effect of improving your bicycle’s performance as well. Fortunately there are increasing numbers of track bicycle boutique shops. These shops dispense with the selection, service, and expertise of old-fashioned bike shops and instead focus on catering to your every candy-colored whim. They can also offer you sound and practical advice. Best of all, they carry lots of cool t-shirts.

Proper Usage

Though the model name or advertising copy for your bicycle may include words like “pista,” “track,” or “entry-level racing,” in no circumstances should you attempt to use your bicycle on or for any of the above. Doing so shall void your warranty.

“Proper Usage” includes: riding slowly to the bike boutique to purchase accessories and clothing; photographing your bike for submission to on-line galleries; participation in ad-hoc skidding contests; and doing track stands for hours outside of the residence of a person you would like to impress.

Handlebars

Your handlebars are wrapped in tape made of synthetic cork. Please note that the purpose of this tape is to protect your bars during shipping. This tape should be removed immediately.

You should be aware that once the tape is removed the bars may be slippery and difficult to grip. If this is the case, remove bars from stem, invert, and re-install. Then, using a hacksaw, cut in the middle of the curved portion until the excess length is removed. Your hands will now be slightly less likely to slip from the bars due to the limited hand position. This is called “flop n’ chop,” and your bicycle is now a gelding.

Brakes

Depending on make and model, your bicycle may have been shipped with a brake or a pair of brakes pre-installed. These brakes should only be used in emergencies. Once you are comfortable bringing the bicycle to a safe and complete stop without using the brakes, they should be removed and discarded.

The term “safe and complete stop” means bringing the bicycle from 5mph to 0mph in a distance of no more than 50 feet.

Safety

Whenever operating your bicycle, safety should be your primary concern. Be sure to have a qualified mechanic install a top-tube pad immediately.
Thanks very much for your purchase, and welcome to the exciting world of track cycling!
 

kinghami3

Future Turbo Monkey
Jun 1, 2004
2,239
0
Ballard 4 life.
God damn hippies. I want to run over them all. Sometimes I really hate San Francisco.
I rode through SF on a touring bike this summer. Oh, the mean looks I got... I thought I might like to move there someday until I ran into the bike culture there. Beautiful city though.
 

black noise

Turbo Monkey
Dec 31, 2004
1,032
0
Santa Cruz
Fixies are badass. It's too bad their image has been trashed by dudes in slip-ons, girl jeans, and trucker hats who can't ride them.
 

Ian Collins

Turbo Monkey
Oct 4, 2001
1,428
0
Pacific Beach, San Diego, CA
Fixies are badass. It's too bad their image has been trashed by dudes in slip-ons, girl jeans, and trucker hats who can't ride them.
you forgot they have huge plugs, they never shave or shower, they smell, they are vegans, they roll their own cigarettes and hang out at velodromes drinking cheap wine and bitching about how lame technology is.....

oh yeah.....they like huge girls too....why is it that vegans dudes look like heroin addicts, but their female counterparts are always tubbers
 

AtTheGates

Monkey
Mar 5, 2003
259
0
Fixies are badass. It's too bad their image has been trashed by dudes in slip-ons, girl jeans, and trucker hats who can't ride them.
I had one for about five years, commuted on it every day, loved the simplicity of it. The town I live in has abot 80,000 year round residents and 20,000 students. Until last year it was rare to see another Fixie riding down the street. Now there are 20 or so locked in front of the same coffee shop/vegan eatery at any given tiem. It was over for me when I was waiting for a stoplight and some guy pulled up next to me in his car wreaking of BO and patchulli and sporting a dread mullet. He says, "nice fixed gear dude!" I went home and tore my bike down.
 

?????

Turbo Monkey
Jun 20, 2005
1,678
2
San Francisco
I just don't understand why they put those damn toe-clips on them.

There is a choice in pedals, flats and clipless. toe-clips take the most inconvenient parts of the worst flat and clipless pedals and combine them into 2 ultra ****ty clunky contraptions that your feet are supposed to go on.

There's a girl studying architecture with me that has a fixie. It's a nice looking bike and she's done a lot of work to it to make it look nice, but the parts and frame are just your average run of the mill 70's vintage parts and she's got those damn toe-clips on it.

But anyways, I think fixies are cool and it sure would be alot wiser than riding my socom to class. I plan on getting my dad's old DeRosa and converting it into a fixie the next time I go back home.
 

Smelly

Turbo Monkey
Jun 17, 2004
1,254
1
out yonder, round bout a hootinany
It was over for me when I was waiting for a stoplight and some guy pulled up next to me in his car wreaking of BO and patchulli and sporting a dread mullet. He says, "nice fixed gear dude!" I went home and tore my bike down.
Congratulations on letting other people decide how you live your life.
Fixies f'in rock, and riding one has undoubtedly improved my mountain biking. It's gotten me in the habit of always moving my pedals and improved my timing so to not slam my pedals on rocks reguarly.
I haven't touched my road bike since building a fixed gear. 18-20 gears, coasting, and two brakes make it too easy to slack off while road riding... Fixies add an extra dimension or two that make road riding similar to riding a mountain bike, and that's where the enjoyment is for me.
 

Ian Collins

Turbo Monkey
Oct 4, 2001
1,428
0
Pacific Beach, San Diego, CA
Congratulations on letting other people decide how you live your life.
Fixies f'in rock, and riding one has undoubtedly improved my mountain biking. It's gotten me in the habit of always moving my pedals and improved my timing so to not slam my pedals on rocks reguarly.
I haven't touched my road bike since building a fixed gear. 18-20 gears, coasting, and two brakes make it too easy to slack off while road riding... Fixies add an extra dimension or two that make road riding similar to riding a mountain bike, and that's where the enjoyment is for me.

i respect what you say about it improving your riding but at the same time, there is something that is really annoying about being pigeon holed.....i could understand how someone could maybe be into house music but not want to hear people asking him if he does ecstasy, goes to raves in gay clothes and sucks on pacifiers every time they pull up to a traffic light listening to that type of music......

that kind of crap turns you off to something quick.....
 

norcalbiker

Chimp
Jul 15, 2007
61
0
when i saw the title of this post, i wondered how could someone manual on a fixed gear. Am i the only one that thaught this?
 

AtTheGates

Monkey
Mar 5, 2003
259
0
Congratulations on letting other people decide how you live your life.
Fixies f'in rock, and riding one has undoubtedly improved my mountain biking. It's gotten me in the habit of always moving my pedals and improved my timing so to not slam my pedals on rocks reguarly.
I haven't touched my road bike since building a fixed gear. 18-20 gears, coasting, and two brakes make it too easy to slack off while road riding... Fixies add an extra dimension or two that make road riding similar to riding a mountain bike, and that's where the enjoyment is for me.
I still love fixed gears. I'd do 80+ mile rides on mine when I was racing road. I'm not doing that anymore. I have 3-4 other bikes I can ride to class that don't require me to deal with the annoyance of "posers". Ian Collins pretty much nailed it.The guy had a dread mullet, what was I supposed to do?
 

SteezyWeezy

Turbo Monkey
Apr 4, 2006
2,436
1
portland, oregon

Ian Collins

Turbo Monkey
Oct 4, 2001
1,428
0
Pacific Beach, San Diego, CA
i must have missed it when eating healthy food became something you get made fun of for:huh:



so we can get closer to the benefits of clipless without changing shoes




healthy food?.....f that, i don't have round teeth......gimme some meat....leave that lettuce crap for the rabbits.....it's not the health thing that bugs me, it's the advertising your obnoxious righteous and giving everyone else a guilt trip....no problem with vegetarians who keep it to themselves....touting how perfect you are, and how wrong everyone else is with gay dreadlocks, plugs and fag "meat is murder" bumperstickers is annoying......

people who eat meat don't go around accusing vegans of wrong doing's.....it's the typical blame everyone liberal b.s.

kinda like the rainbow stickers for gay people......i don't really care, you don't need to advertise your lifestyle.....i don't drive around with a bumper sticker on my truck that let's everyone know that i love
pu$$y...i love it in private(well, most of the time)..but they feel the need to advertise their preference for some reason......annoying
 

?????

Turbo Monkey
Jun 20, 2005
1,678
2
San Francisco
so we can get closer to the benefits of clipless without changing shoes
Eh, I've never liked them and they don't give any advantage over flats to me... but then again I haven't ridden a bike with toe-clips since I was 6 and clipless have always been easier to get in and out of.
 
Sep 1, 2007
320
0
16 powers st BKLN NY
"Though the model name or advertising copy for your bicycle may include words like “pista,” “track,” or “entry-level racing,” in no circumstances should you attempt to use your bicycle on or for any of the above. Doing so shall void your warranty."

haha, love it.
 

Huck Banzai

Turbo Monkey
May 8, 2005
2,523
23
Transitory
I like a Fix, - F - a 'track bike'

I rocked runs for 3 years on a coverted bianchi touring frame - riding an actul track fram with wheel overlap and tiny wheelbase is deadly crap.

I do want to clothesline 9 of 10 people in Pista, Langster and Sputnik - but mostly IRO.

I would love to rock a fix again, but it'll be a project bike, it WILL have bull horns (people that run drop bars on a fix are the poseurs) and a front brake (tuned to eject the rider if used as anything but an e-brake -- this was the source of many humorous pratfalls of those who decided they wanted to try my bike back in the day. IMO - Flats & SPD's should NEVER be used for a fix - ridiculous - cages with double straps are way to go.

I appreciate em, but they ARE fun to mock (esp Hipster fix riders) as are 29ers... Fixes are good - Hipsters on 'Track' bikes need to crash into something while Im watching.

Yes Im opinionated - hate me, love me, pass the popcorn...