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Conference noted::bicycle

Title: Bicycling
Notice:Bicycling for Fun
Moderator:JAMIN::WASSER
Created:Mon Apr 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:3214
Total number of notes:31946

2252.0. "Expensive Hobby" by NEMAIL::EAGAN () Fri Apr 24 1992 16:59

    
    
    	Last year I decided to take up the sport of cycling.. I have been
    absolutly amazed at the expense.. Last season I rode my mountain bike 
    all year.. I decided I needed to invest in a rode bike... My original
    thought was if I bought a good bike I would not have too invest much
    more!! My original investment if $500.00 is now surpassed $800.00
    Being new at this I am really suprised at how much you can invest!!
    I know now that there will be more to spend to get the bike the way I
    want it.. I know there are a lot more expensive bikes, but the
    accessories seem to be the killer!!!!
    
    Ron
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2252.1Ti-athletes unite!SHALOT::ELLISJohn Lee Ellis - assembly requiredFri Apr 24 1992 17:125
    
    Interesting to read your note bracketted by new entries on the
    Titanium front... :-)
    
    -john
2252.2JUNCO::HUIFri Apr 24 1992 17:555
That is why I got a part time job at a bike shop. The only problem is that now
I got the bikes, I don't have any time to ride.

Dave

2252.3Lossing it!!NEMAIL::EAGANFri Apr 24 1992 18:155
    
    I relized I was lossing it when I paid more for pedals then some people
    pay for a bike!!!!
    
    Ron
2252.4bikes are cheap compared to boats & ski gearCUPTAY::BAILEYA pirate looks at 40.Fri Apr 24 1992 19:255
    Biking is the *least* expensive of my three major hobbies ... the other
    two are skiing and yacht racing !!!
    
    ... Bob
    
2252.5what's money for anyway...WILBRY::HORNSteve Horn, Database SystemsFri Apr 24 1992 19:3915
    
    
    Well, I HAD to buy a computer for my new bike....good deal on an Avocet
    40...$38.95.
    
    Hmmmm.  That brings the total cost to:  $1,709.94 !!!!!!
    
    Oh my, hope my wife doesn't get into this notes file!  
    
    But figure for less than a Hyundai you can get pretty much the ultimate
    top-of-the-line in technology in cycling...certainly can't do that in a
    lot hobbies!!  Not to mention it does help keep those love handles from
    becoming shelving units!
    
    8^)
2252.6Where???NEMAIL::EAGANFri Apr 24 1992 20:106
    
    
    Where did you buy the computer??? something I still need.. 
    
    Ron..
    
2252.7:-)NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurFri Apr 24 1992 21:077
    Steve,
    
    Wait till ya want to buy a computer to use for keeping
    your training log up to date.  Then it's, hmmm,
    286? 386? 486? VAX? Alpha? ...
    
    ed
2252.8No more than most other sportsMACNAS::FEENEYMon Apr 27 1992 11:3313
    
    It really is no more expensive than most other sports. It all depends
    on how much you want to get out of it. For starters, a good bike,
    shorts & helmet will get you started. The shoes etc.etc can be bought
    over time, although shoes are a great asset if you plan doing any sort
    of decent rides.
    
    The cost of joining a Golf Club, fees and golf equipment can often
    times work out to be much more than biking.
    
    Rgds,
    
    --John  ( who has still not progressed to the Campa. price bracket )
2252.9take your timeKAOFS::W_VIERHOUTCentral Canada SupportMon Apr 27 1992 13:5437
    
    
    
       I started cycling because I though it was gonna be a cheap sport. Ya
    right! I spend more on race entry fees in a year than some people spend
    on bikes. I tend to agree that it is an expensive sport when compared
    to running, most racket sports, basketball. baseball etc. On the other
    side however; we have waterskiing ($10K for a nice boat), skydiving ($100s
    for one jump), hanggliding ($1000s for a glider) etc.
      Like 2252.8 implies you dont have to have all the stuff right away.
    Get a good entry level bike, some decent shorts, gloves, shoes, helmut
    and off you go. Use all the other things you can buy as rewards.
    
      Set some goals for yourself and as you reach them buy yourself some
    of the other things that would be nice to have but you dont really
    need like some cool cycling glasses or whatever.
     
                                  OR 
    
      A technique that some cyclists use to jump start there interest after
    a long layoff or when they are down and out about cycling;
    is to buy themselves a little something thats nice to have but they
    dont really need - a perk to keep them going.
    
    
    I recommend spending lots a time making sure what are thinking about 
    buying is the right stuff for your needs; that way when you buy you
    wont feel as guilty, or as foolish, or as broke, or as ... Also shop
    around for the best price, cycling equipment is marked up a huge amount
    (in Canada anyways) leaving room for substantial price differences from
    one place to another.
    
    
                                                    /regards
                                                    Wayne V
    
    
2252.10MOVIES::WIDDOWSONIts (IO$_ACCESS|IO$M_ACCESS) VMSMon Apr 27 1992 15:3223
2252.11entry costSHALOT::ELLISJohn Lee Ellis - assembly requiredMon Apr 27 1992 17:0528
2252.12SUBURB::PULLANRin the rain ???Mon Apr 27 1992 21:3615
    The running costs are pretty high too. I rode 87 miles yesterday and I
    spent money on the following:
    
    2 x Pint Old Fart's XXX bitter	3.20
    1 x beefburger			1.40
    1 x toasted ham and cheese s'wich	1.50
    2 x Mars bar			0.48
    					----
    					6.38
    
    which works out at 13.6 pence/mile! 
    That's 1.7 times the Digital (UK) mileage rate.
    
    Richard.
    
2252.13A few $$$$COMET::VOITLMon Apr 27 1992 21:5611
    Hey Everybody, 
    I have do disagree with inexpensive (but who am I).
    I started riding 3 years ago.  My brother loaned me his old Myata(sp),
    which I rode for 1 year and I fell in love bicycling.  I now own a
    Trek 2100 (which broke and Trek sent me a 1992 2300), and an Alpinestar
    MTB.  Over the past 2 years I have invested around (heck I can not
    count that high) ~$4000 into the sport.  Excluding  race fees,
    USCF, license, and NORBA license.  That includes the bikes.  I guess an
    addiction is an addiction.  
                              Keep Pedallin'
                                   Bob_who_needs_some_more_money
2252.14delayed response...WILBRY::HORNSteve Horn, Database SystemsTue Apr 28 1992 02:1116
    
    
    RE: .6
    
    Gee Haggetts in Manchester had all the Avocets on sale over the
    weekend...sorry I didn't get in to reply before the sale was over...my
    wife decided to have our second child friday night THREE MONTHS TOO
    SOON!!  This was not a good weekend.
    
    RE: .7
    
    Funny you should say that Ed...before my weekend disaster I WAS looking
    at thos laptops that employee purchase had on sale!  Then I'd only need
    the fancy heart monitor...and...and...
    
    -Steve who's shuttling between two hospitals 90 miles apart...
2252.15WELL...WMOIS::GIROUARD_CTue Apr 28 1992 11:0916
     Expensive - Inexpensive... It's very relative. The point about
    what it is you're after out of the sport is really the key (as
    someone mentioned).
    
     If you have the the very best (and every piece of exotic technology
    that comes out every year) then it's really more of an addiction than
    a hobby. BTW, I don't know anyone like this personally.
    
     If you view and treat it as a physical fitness, recreational, and
    entertainment, then ($'s to hours) it's extremely inexpensive (as
    someone else has pointed out).
    
     It's impossible to just generalize on this one...
    
    
         Chip_who_needs_his_job_here_to_support_his_addiction
2252.16More ImportentUKAOS::OVERMEYERTue Apr 28 1992 13:185

Steve,

  Hows the Wife and Son????
2252.17CTHQ3::LANGLOISEASYnetTue Apr 28 1992 15:5327
    Yes, it CAN get expensive if you let it. However, at the level which I
    think a lot of us race (ie. citizen) the most important item is the
    motor (ie. your quads). I bought a Fuji Royale, CroMo frame, Suntour
    components, new in 1981 for $300. It's still my only bike. Last year 
    I dragged myself partway into the 20th century by buying clipless pedals 
    (used one season, excellent shape (Mavics) for $40) and shoes, lace-type 
    for $50. That was the first upgrade of any type, excluding tires and
    seats, I'd ever done in 10 years. And this year I went all-out and had
    a Shimano 105 drivetrain put on. Cost me $200. It's still a great bike
    and with the clipless pedals and index shifting I'm pretty much up to
    date.
    I don't ride my bike as much as a lot of folks in here but I probably
    do 500 miles a season or so which has obviously added a lot to the
    bike's lifespan. And I do ok in my citizens races although Greg LeMond 
    probably doesn't lose any sleep over me.
    So, it all depends on what you want to do.
    But, like other replies have stated, it's a relatively cheap and
    excellent way of staying healthy. People spend a heck of a lot more
    sitting in a bar somewhere sucking on cigarettes and gulping down beer
    (mind you, I'm certainly not AGAINST gulping down beer! :^).
    
    RE: .15. 
    >>>   If you have the the very best (and every piece of exotic technology
    >>>   that comes out every year) then it's really more of an addiction
    >>>   than a hobby. BTW, I don't know anyone like this personally.
    
    	Gee Chip, I don't anyone like that either. AHEM!  :^)
2252.18:-)NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurTue Apr 28 1992 16:183
    I suppose I could save a lot of money if I rode less...
    
    Nah...
2252.19But the Oakley Blades can be used for bothBROKE::NALESue Nale MildrumTue Apr 28 1992 16:5323
    I like to compare the cost of my biking to my winter hobby: downhill
    skiing.  Every time Mark and I want to go downhill skiing, we have
    to spend a bundle:

	2 lift tickets:	~80
	bag lunch:	  8
	hand warmers:	  2
	gas to/from:	 10
	dinner:		 20
	apres ski:	 10 (what's a day of skiing w/out a coupla drinks?)
		      -------
		       $130


	And that's just for one day of skiing!  That doesn't count if you
	want to stay overnight and pay for a hotel room.   It also doesn't
	count the cost of equipment and clothes.  Granted, I spend a lot
	more on my bike equipment than my ski equipment, but that's because
	I'm more "into" biking, and not as into skiing.  On the other hand,
	a nice ski outfit can cost at least $300.  You can get a lot of
	nice biking clothes for that.

	Sue
2252.20it's all relative ...CUPTAY::BAILEYA pirate looks at 40.Tue Apr 28 1992 19:5511
    Yup ... it's all relative.  $4,000 is a lot of money to spend on a
    recreation over two years.  Last year I spent about that much for 
    boat payments as a part owner of a 36-foot sailboat ... not to
    mention $2,500 for my share of new sails, $500 in racing fees, and
    another $3,000 to fix the boat after I ran it onto a rock that was at
    about 4" less depth than the bottom of my keel.
    
    I could buy an awful lot of bicycles with that kinda money ...
    
    ... Bob
    
2252.21tell us more, :-)NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurTue Apr 28 1992 20:035
    .20 makes me look like a miser.
    
    :-)
    
    ed
2252.22on the other handSHALOT::ELLISJohn Lee Ellis - assembly requiredTue Apr 28 1992 20:195
    
    And at the other end of the spectrum are people using Shoe-Goo to 
    extend the life of treadbare bike tires... :-)
    
    -john
2252.23that's a new bike/6 yearsWILBRY::HORNSteve Horn, Database SystemsWed Apr 29 1992 02:5114
    
    
    Back again.  I figure three bikes over 20 years isn't bad.  
    
    The wife is doing fine.  My daughter is holding her own...she's
    breathing on her own now...and constantly moving...she'll make a good
    cyclist some day!  We're not out of the woods yet...but every hour she
    hangs in there improves her chances!  Thanks for asking!  Hmmm, this
    sounds like it should be in the PARENTING notes file...but then I don't
    follow that one.  I'm planning on stationing the wife up there next
    week...less driving and more riding for Dad that way.  So Ed and Sue
    the "Green Machine" will be back!!!
    
    Steve
2252.24Just a HobbyHEFTY::NORTONMWed Apr 29 1992 13:2511
    	Expensive Hobby?  If you start racing you make some if not all the
    money you put into it. I broke even last year. That inculdes:
    
    	Entry fees
    	Travel to races and lodging
    	tires and tune up
    	new equipment
    About $3,000 dollars spent last year. I made $3,000 dollars last year
    racing. So a expensive hobby turns into a hobby of no cost.
    
    Mike
2252.25better than break even!SHALOT::ELLISJohn Lee Ellis - assembly requiredWed Apr 29 1992 13:497
    
    RE: .-1
    
    Break even on the cost vs. monetary return ... PLUS you got the
    trophies, jerseys, and adoring fans, right?
    
    -john
2252.26NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurWed Apr 29 1992 17:146
    Racing bikes is like racing horses, for every ONE who breaks even
    or comes out ahead, there are a million of us "pack fodder"
    
    Congrats Mike.
    
    ed
2252.27man ... I'm in the wrong sport !!!CUPTAY::BAILEYA pirate looks at 40.Wed Apr 29 1992 17:2710
    Wow ... you mean you guys actually get *money* for winning a race?  In
    yacht racing all you get is a stupid pewter cup or teak plaque or
    something equally useless.
    
    I mean, look at the America's Cup ... the cheapest of those boats
    cost $15 million !!!  And all the winner gets is a cup you can't even
    drink beer out of ... and he doesn't even get to keep it ... ;^)
    
    ... Bob
    
2252.28:-)NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurWed Apr 29 1992 17:544
    Yeah, next thing ya know they'll form a union and go on strike unless
    they get better pay, more benefits, summer vacations, ...
    
    ed
2252.29How much! For a brake block!PAKORA::GGOODMANBorn VictimThu Apr 30 1992 23:5126
  (Adopt stereotyped Scottish voice)

	Whit! Spend money on a bike! You must be joking!

	Those cane rims that my Great, Great Grandad Kilpatrick bought in 1870
  and have been passed from generation to generation have got miles left in
  them. Much better than those modern ones where you've got keep replacing the
  rubber every year. Do you know how much those things cost! Kids these days
  have no respect for money! But I'll tell you something, it'll take more than
  that to make me open my sporran.


	Seriously, this money bit is totally up to yourself. Work out what you
  need to enjoy cycling and then work out how much you've actually spent on the
  equipment that you've got. Guranateed there'll be a big difference.

	But if you want to spend a pile of money on Ti stuff (who mentioned
  names?), then do it. If you get pleasure from it, then what's the harm? It's
  when you spend thousands every year and keep complaining that cycling is too
  expensive that you've got a problem. And before I get hate mail from everyone,
  I'd like to say that I don't think anyone in this conference comes under that
  description. Maybe it's just the Scottishness coming out on my local riders...

  Graham.

2252.30NOVA::FISHERRdb/VMS DinosaurFri May 01 1992 10:498
    YEP, it's all YOUR recreation.  If you enjoy riding 21st century stuff
    then prepare to part with the greenbacks.  If you're happy on a Huffy
    -- all you wanted was exercise, right? -- then buy a Huffy.
    
    ed
    
    Btw, why does a new bike get dusty -- when you use it?  Damn, looks like
    it's been sitting in the basement.
2252.31de gustibus non disputandumSHALOT::ELLISJohn Lee Ellis - assembly requiredFri May 01 1992 12:078
    
    Mine does, too, Ed.  But *your* the one who opted for black,
    just for the sake of Dura Ace.  :-)
    
    My green De Rosa has been great for the green pollen around
    here lately. :-)
    
    -john