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May 7th 04 02:52 PM

landrider
 
Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons



John Everett May 7th 04 04:05 PM

landrider
 
On Fri, 7 May 2004 09:52:44 -0400, wrote:

Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


Any info you're likely to find here will be all con.


jeverett3ATearthlinkDOTnet http://home.earthlink.net/~jeverett3

Mark Tranchant May 7th 04 04:28 PM

landrider
 
John Everett wrote:

Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


Any info you're likely to find here will be all con.


I can't work out whether that's a condemnation of landrider, or a general
comment on the pessimism of this group...

--
m.

Rich Clark May 7th 04 04:41 PM

landrider
 

"Mark Tranchant" wrote in message
...
John Everett wrote:

Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


Any info you're likely to find here will be all con.


I can't work out whether that's a condemnation of landrider, or a general
comment on the pessimism of this group...


It's a condemnation of Landrider, which is an overpriced, low-quality,
ill-conceived solution to a problem that doesn't exist.

Any decent bike shop can sell you a better bike for less money.

RichC



BanditManDan May 7th 04 05:04 PM

landrider
 
clutccargo69 wrote:
Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons




If you go to thier
http://www.healthandbeautydirect.com...aq.htmlwebsite and read
the FAQ it will only take a few seconds to realize how stupid their
arguments are.

For example;
* They claim that shifting gears is confusing on regular bikes.

* They claim the Land Rider is faster than a 21 speed bike because you
arn't wasting time shifting.

* They claim to be safer since your not focused on shifting and can
focus better on the road.

Come on, those are way exagerated or all out false claims. Shifting
isn't really a big issue, and this is more of a gimick than anything
else. Stick with a regular bike, they are much more reliable and
better quality.

Dan.



--



Marlene Blanshay May 7th 04 05:47 PM

landrider
 

"Rich Clark" wrote in message
...

"Mark Tranchant" wrote in message
...
John Everett wrote:

Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


Any info you're likely to find here will be all con.


I can't work out whether that's a condemnation of landrider, or a

general
comment on the pessimism of this group...


It's a condemnation of Landrider, which is an overpriced, low-quality,
ill-conceived solution to a problem that doesn't exist.

Any decent bike shop can sell you a better bike for less money.

RichC


Absolutely. I can't believe how much they charge for those things, based on
the gimmick that it makes things 'easier.' Yeah, easier for the shmucks
getting rich on ripping off the gullible!

For that money,get a mountain bike! I can't remember if it was here,or
somewhere else, but someone posted about finding one IN THE TRASH! And was
barely able to scavenge any decent components. Maybe some nuts or bolts.



Claire Petersky May 8th 04 02:20 AM

landrider
 

"Mark Tranchant" wrote in message
...
John Everett wrote:

Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


Any info you're likely to find here will be all con.


I can't work out whether that's a condemnation of landrider,


Condemnation of the Landrider.

or a general
comment on the pessimism of this group...


We love cycling, and love to share our enthusiasm with others. That's why
we're down on this Piece O' S---.


--
Warm Regards,

Claire Petersky
Please replace earthlink for mouse-potato and .net for .com
Home of the meditative cyclist:
http://home.earthlink.net/~cpetersky/Welcome.htm
See the books I've set free at: http://bookcrossing.com/referral/Cpetersky



AustinMN May 8th 04 02:09 PM

landrider
 
BanditManDan

* They claim to be safer since your not focused on shifting and can
focus better on the road.


* keyboard *

The last time I spent more than ten seconds thinking about shifting, it was
my first ten-speed, oh, about 1974.

Austin


Peter Cole May 8th 04 11:21 PM

landrider
 
"Marlene Blanshay" wrote

For that money,get a mountain bike! I can't remember if it was here,or
somewhere else, but someone posted about finding one IN THE TRASH! And was
barely able to scavenge any decent components. Maybe some nuts or bolts.


I think that was me. I salvaged pretty much only the frame from a trash-day
example of its predecessor, the "AutoBike". Of course, it had hardly been
ridden, no wear on rim walls, tires or (clean) sprockets. Same idea, automatic
shifting. People get conned into buying these after watching an infomercial,
somehow being convinced that shifting was the thing that made bicycling so
difficult in the dim past. If someone can't deal with today's indexed shifting
then perhaps they should consider another pastime. These bikes are made to be
garage ornaments.

I replaced: the cranks, wheels, BB, pedals, tires, stem, bars, brakes, brake
levers, shifters, chain, cables, grips, saddle, seatpost. I added fenders,
rear rack, front bar-bag, and grocery pannier. It's now a pretty nice bike.
Damn frame/fork is awfully heavy, and the headset is junk, though. Perhaps
after I swap those out it'll be perfect.



[email protected] May 10th 04 03:44 PM

landrider
 
wrote:
Does anyone out there have any info on "landrider" bikes..pro or cons


I think that most people who say that a bicycle is too difficult or confusing
to shift either....

A. Have only ridden a bike from many years ago with friction shifting.
B. Ridden a bike with poorly adjusted indexed shifting.

Before I bought a good bicycle with indexed shifting, my only experiences were
with a Huffy w/friction shifting, a Murray with a double chainring only, an
old bike with a Sturmey Archer 3 speed, and finally single speeds with coaster
brakes.

An infomercial company could probably make money selling bikes with *indexed*
shifting as the main selling point since many people don't realize the
technology has changed over the years!



--
---
Eric Yagerlener



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