Children's bike sizes are determined by wheel diameter, not seat height and frame size as is the case with adult bicycles. The chart below should help you narrow your search, but it is not a substitute for an expert helping you find a bike that is most suitable. A critical factor is the brakes.
Saturday, December 25, 2010
2011 Schwinn Madison Fixie
Schwinn offers two different models of the 2011 Madison fixed. One which we refer to as your basic model, and the other a retro theme.
Going retro can be a hit or miss, but the 2011 Schwinn Madison seems to pull it off with its white, purple and yellow colorways, a vintage styled Schwinn logo with a strike through, and bullhorn handlebar.
Labels:
alloy,
fixed,
fixie bike,
road bike,
schwinn
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Cervelo RS Road Bike
Bike Setup:
Full Dura Ace 7800 apart from an Ultegra cluster, DA or Kysrium wheels, Deda carbon post, Selle Italia Turbo 4 saddle (the best ever, now regrettably no longer made).
Full Dura Ace 7800 apart from an Ultegra cluster, DA or Kysrium wheels, Deda carbon post, Selle Italia Turbo 4 saddle (the best ever, now regrettably no longer made).
Favorite Ride:
Local Hills
Local Hills
Summary:
I bought this as a training frameset in 2009 (frame is 2008 and cost is for that alone in US dollars). What appealed was the reasonable cost, the stable geometry and promise of comfort for longer rides.
I bought this as a training frameset in 2009 (frame is 2008 and cost is for that alone in US dollars). What appealed was the reasonable cost, the stable geometry and promise of comfort for longer rides.
The RS has met all my expectations. It is laterally very stiff, particularly the chainstays and bottom bracket, yet horizontally compliant and so very comfortable.
Labels:
cervelo,
road bike,
roubiaux,
specialized
Rose Mr Ride (custom build)
Rose's Mr Ride 29er has it all in terms of component value and low weight, and the basic geometry is sound if you get the right size for your sort of riding. The brutal bluntness of the oversized frame tubes makes it a boneshaker on longer rides and less than buff trails, though.
Ride & handling: Stable, safe, burly
Labels:
cross country,
custome bike,
equipment,
frame,
xc
Friday, December 17, 2010
Cannondale Road Bike 2011 Release
Cannondale debuted their UK road range this week down on the, er, sunny South Coast. Over the years Cannondale have built up a reputation for engineering innovation and the canny ability to trickle high end winners down the price ranges as fast as possible, top end kit at not such top end prices… should be a winning formula for hard times. Among the 2011 highlights on display were a budget-friendly version of the award winning Super Six (well, relatively) and an all-new CAAD 10 performance aluminium frame pitched squarely against the budget end of the carbon bike market.
Labels:
caad,
cannondale,
road bike,
super six
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Bicycle Size Guide
range of motion or personal riding style. To determine correct inseam measurement
stand with your back to a wall, your bare feet approx 150mm apart.
Labels:
bicycle guide,
bike tips,
frame size
NEW ARRIVAL: XDS A8 (foldable bike)
New arrival off folding bike from XDS, more powerfull, more stylist, and easy to move with this bike.
Specifications:
Labels:
folding bike,
spesificatio,
xds
How to Use Bicycle Gears?
Most bikes these days come with 18spd (front 3 x rear gear 6spd) or 21spd (front 3 x rear gear 7spd). However, this doesn’t mean you have an unusable gears. Most USJ Cycles’ customers get confused by all of the gear combinations available.
Labels:
bike tips,
gear,
maintenance,
repair,
shimano
Scratch Air Downhill Bike
Trek’s Scratch bikes have been refocused for 2011, which means their hefty coil-sprung model has given up any pretence of being a trail bike, shifting to a single ring and fixed 180mm-travel (7.1in) fork. The Air, meanwhile, is pitched as a ‘light’ freeride bike that’ll climb without much grumbling.
Ride & handling: A ‘light’ freeride bike with secret climbing powers
The Scratch Air’s regular Fox RP23 shock doesn’t have the two-stage magic of the DRCV model found on Trek’s popular Remedy but since it has 20mm (0.8in) more travel, we didn’t particularly miss the feature. Set the back end up with a decent amount of sag and the Scratch Air settles back on its haunches, ready to take on pretty much anything.
It’s poised on steep, technical stuff but light enough to be chucked around. The surprise comes when you have to pedal back up. A bike in the 13.6kg (30lb) range is never going to keep pace with a 11.6kg (26lb) trail bike, but the Scratch Air puts in a decent showing.
That’s mainly thanks to the steep seat angle – in the saddle, your weight’s pushed forward, helping to keep the front end in line, and there’s always the TALAS fork’s 120mm (4.7in) travel setting if you need it. Yes, you’re hindered by the short cockpit, but it’s not meant to be fast uphill – just to get there, which it does well.
We rode a coil-sprung Scratch back-to-back with the Air, and while the heavier, slacker bike is an excellent park weapon, the Air isn’t far off it and is considerably more versatile. For lift-free areas, the Scratch Air 9 makes a lot of sense.
Frame & equipment: Versatile chassis plus decent finishing kit
Trek use the same Alpha Red aluminium frame on the Scratch Air and burlier coil-sprung Scratch – both have 170mm (6.7in) of rear travel, but the Air ends up with slightly steeper angles thanks to its shorter fork. Trek’s adjustable Mino Link lets you alter the head angle by 0.5 degrees and the bottom bracket height by 7mm, though.
Up front, you’ll find a tapered E2 head tube and under the down tube is a polymer guard to reduce the potential for rock strike damage. Out back, you’ll find the same Active Braking Pivot rear end as Trek’s other full-suspension bikes. The Scratch takes a 142x12mm rear wheel, but you can convert it to use a 135x12 if you prefer.
With the introduction of 10-speed cassettes, 2x10 drivetrains have come into their own. Shimano XT transmission is dominant throughout here and the 11-36T cassette is teamed with a Race Face Atlas 24/36 chainset to deliver a useful range.
The wheel package consists of DT Swiss E2000 wheels shod with 2.35in Bontrager XR4 tyres. Finishing kit is mostly Bontrager too, with an adjustable CrankBrothers Joplin seatpost adding to the bike’s ready-for-anything feel.
(BR)
Labels:
bike review,
downhill,
mtb,
scratch
Monday, December 13, 2010
1941 Schwinn | Liberty Autocycle
This 1941 Schwinn Super Deluxe Autocycle belongs to Drew Rollins. He found it at a local farm auction and restored it to the glory you see now.
Labels:
classic bike,
schwinn,
vintage,
vintage bike
Let's Try Google Bikes
Google extend their designs to customers needing something as unique as they are. Case in point, they outfitted Google with a fleet of bikes that Googlers use to cruise from building to building at the Googleplex in Mountain View, California. |
Labels:
costume bike,
road bike,
unique bike
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Calfee Tandem Bicycles
When only the best will do, then Calfee is your choice. Think of these bikes as the Ferraris of the tandem world: gorgeous speed demons that might just earn you a speeding ticket if you're not careful!
Fixie Bike Spesification
This fixie bikes are built around steel track frame core. Great geometry, drop out frame, straight blade forks and flip-flop hub, and just 23lbs are just some of highlights. Designed for recreational riding our bikes make for great work or school commuters, townie or bar hopper. Sleek looks with solid dependable components make this bike a stand out from the others. On top of that our customization options and exceptional price make our bikes a no brainier when it comes to value. Take a look at what we have to offer.
Labels:
brake,
crank,
fixed gear,
frame,
rims,
spesification
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Cycling Shoes
If you want to ride comfortably and efficiently you need to own a pair of cycling specific shoes, you probably already know this if you have been doing a lot of cycling. The big problem is to work out which cycling shoes are correct for you and the form of cycling that you choose to take part in.
Which Shoes Should I Buy?
The first answer is easy, there are specific biking shoes for each different discipline; from mountain biking to road shoes, track and spinning. There are even shoes that are specificly designed to keep your feet warm in the winter.
A word to women’s cycling shoes
Labels:
bike parts,
bike tips,
cycling shoes,
tips
Taking the 'Bond bike' for a spin in the snow
Britain's Environmental Transport Association (ETA) have taken advantage of the early winter snow to demonstrate their caterpillar track-driven snow bike.
Labels:
unique bike
Giant Reign
Giant’s Reign has been evolving for years now, generally getting both lighter and slacker with each passing season. The 2011 version is no exception. What’s more, it receives a tapered-steerer-compatible Overdrive head tube that’s raked out by 1.5° compared to the 2010 bike.
Ride & handling: Stiff and light but rear suspension never gave the performance we expected
Labels:
cross country,
giant,
xc
Cannondale SuperX SRAM Rival
While many cyclo-cross bikes are pure performance machines meant for an hour-long lung-searing event, Cannondale's SuperX is a proven winner that also offers a surprisingly smooth and comfortable ride. It's just a shame the price is so high.
Labels:
bike review,
caad,
cannondale
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Merida Ninety-Six Carbon Team-D
Merida’s Ninety-Six project was designed to put both their World Cup cross-country race team and their bike design skills at the top of the tree. While it’s no relaxed and easy option, it’s far more fun than you’d expect from such a light, race-honed ride.
Labels:
bike review,
cross country,
merida,
xc
Monday, July 19, 2010
Norco Faze 2
The Faze is Norco’s singletrack hellraiser, with a sleek design and solid build. With a slightly shorter stem to encourage a more neutral riding position, it could be a trail centre killer.
Labels:
bike review,
cross country,
norco,
xc
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Marin San Quentin
Named after the state penitentiary in Marin County, California, the new San Quentin is helping Marin escape their cross-country image. With plenty of design input from their pro dirt jump rider Andrew Taylor, this new bike has a healthy potential to be a superb weapon in the fight for fun.
While it's aimed at jump and street riders, we wanted to see how versatile it is – sure, it may perform well at the trails, but can you pedal it there too? After all, not all of us can afford more than one bike. As it happens, the superbly well thought out geometry and cockpit layout make the San Quentin a blast for trail centre riding.
Carefully shaped seatstays take the sting out for long-ride comfort, while the well controlled short-travel fork means it can shred the downhill runs too. Dirt jumps are handled with ease, and the fairly long frame definitely suits those still learning their air art.
It's a versatile chassis that coped with every bit of terrain we could throw at it. We're not fans of the lovingly decorated chunky monkey of a saddle, but the rest of the bike gets a big thumbs-up. It achieved exactly what we set out to find – cheap thrills.
Ride & handling: Great middle ground geometry for all-round fun
With an effective top tube length of 22.5in, the San Quentin has a reasonable length cockpit for pedalling. With the saddle at full extension we found we were still about 65mm (2.5in) short of the ideal pedalling height, but it was comfy enough for a blast down the singletrack. The short stem gives an uncomfortable position when climbing out of the saddle, but that’s alleviated slightly by the wider wrist stance the bars afford.
Hacking down the hill, we instantly felt the benefit of being able to back off the spring preload and tune our damping using the Suntour Duro DJ fork's external adjusters. The front end felt composed and, despite its minimal travel, we were encouraged to push much harder than we had expected. With the wide bar-and-stem combo, steering inputs are intuitive and are met with superb feedback. The brakes lack outright power and require a fair tug in a panic braking situation.
Shifting is reliable, if a little agricultural, as can be the way with SRAM. Battering through rougher terrain, the controlled front end was bolstered by an easygoing back end. The S-bend seatstays and longer chainstays were kind to our ankles and let us play with the trail at speed, rather than getting constantly pinged off line. The only negative factor was the sofa-esque saddle. With grippy corners it constantly grabbed at shorts and had to be run slammed to the top tube to stop it from being a hindrance.
Marin san quentin: marin san quentin
Things were all good in the jump park too. The small, 15.5in frame gave us good manoeuvrability and a dirt jump bike feel. The short stem gives great control and the wide bars allow you to change direction and tweak the bike at will. The relatively long and soft back end meant it wasn’t snappily fast through the dirt jumps and round the pump track, but it was certainly way more than competent.
The fork advantage was evident again here – we were able to wind on full preload to give a stiff fork to power round the pump track and tune the damping to boost off any jump. This really is a good all-round ripper. Fit a quick-release seat clamp, a longer seatpost and a more slender saddle and you’ll have a bike that’ll happily tear it up round the trail centre as well as bust moves at the local jumps.
Frame & equipment: Light chassis with forgiving rear end, plus good fork
At the heart of the San Quentin is a 6061 aluminium frame with double-butted top and down tubes. Marin have shied away from going hydroforming crazy and specced standard round tubes throughout. A strengthening gusset is welded externally to the underside of the down tube/head tube juncture and stiffening webs span between the seat tube and seatstays.
Using a lightweight tubeset that isn’t carrying the excess baggage of cosmetic hydroforming has resulted in a simple, light (for a playbike – 14.86kg/32.8lb) and purposeful frame. The angles and lengths put it slapbang in the middle between trail bike and dirt jumper – its 16.7in chainstays, 70-degree head angle and 22.5in top tube length are all equidistant from the ideal setup for each discipline.
Just 80mm (3.1in) of suspension travel is on tap from the Suntour fork, but it’s adjustable and oil damped, proving that quality of travel is far more important than quantity. Preload can be wound on and the fork can be tuned to remain composed, not become a hyperactive pogo stick. The bike doesn’t come with a seatpost quick-release, which is a definite oversight, and its short-ish seatpost means that saddle height adjustment is limited to 140mm.
Marin obviously know how to give a bike an instant feel-good factor. Full 710mm width bars with a superb shape are clamped into a diminutive 45mm stem. Lock-on grips as standard are a quality touch and show Marin really do listen to riders about spec. Tektro’s Novela cable-actuated disc brakes are reasonably easy to set up, and give good feel, despite the obviously budget brake levers. SRAM’s X4 shifters and X5 rear mech are typically clunky, but always reliable, and the un-named chainguide is easy to set up for quiet and efficient running.
Wide bars, short stem and lock-on grips. marin must have read our minds: wide bars, short stem and lock-on grips. marin must have read our minds
About BikeRadar reviews: Our review scoring system has changed in 2010. Therefore recent reviews may have comparatively lower scores than past reviews.
bikeradar.com
While it's aimed at jump and street riders, we wanted to see how versatile it is – sure, it may perform well at the trails, but can you pedal it there too? After all, not all of us can afford more than one bike. As it happens, the superbly well thought out geometry and cockpit layout make the San Quentin a blast for trail centre riding.
Carefully shaped seatstays take the sting out for long-ride comfort, while the well controlled short-travel fork means it can shred the downhill runs too. Dirt jumps are handled with ease, and the fairly long frame definitely suits those still learning their air art.
It's a versatile chassis that coped with every bit of terrain we could throw at it. We're not fans of the lovingly decorated chunky monkey of a saddle, but the rest of the bike gets a big thumbs-up. It achieved exactly what we set out to find – cheap thrills.
Ride & handling: Great middle ground geometry for all-round fun
With an effective top tube length of 22.5in, the San Quentin has a reasonable length cockpit for pedalling. With the saddle at full extension we found we were still about 65mm (2.5in) short of the ideal pedalling height, but it was comfy enough for a blast down the singletrack. The short stem gives an uncomfortable position when climbing out of the saddle, but that’s alleviated slightly by the wider wrist stance the bars afford.
Hacking down the hill, we instantly felt the benefit of being able to back off the spring preload and tune our damping using the Suntour Duro DJ fork's external adjusters. The front end felt composed and, despite its minimal travel, we were encouraged to push much harder than we had expected. With the wide bar-and-stem combo, steering inputs are intuitive and are met with superb feedback. The brakes lack outright power and require a fair tug in a panic braking situation.
Shifting is reliable, if a little agricultural, as can be the way with SRAM. Battering through rougher terrain, the controlled front end was bolstered by an easygoing back end. The S-bend seatstays and longer chainstays were kind to our ankles and let us play with the trail at speed, rather than getting constantly pinged off line. The only negative factor was the sofa-esque saddle. With grippy corners it constantly grabbed at shorts and had to be run slammed to the top tube to stop it from being a hindrance.
Marin san quentin: marin san quentin
Things were all good in the jump park too. The small, 15.5in frame gave us good manoeuvrability and a dirt jump bike feel. The short stem gives great control and the wide bars allow you to change direction and tweak the bike at will. The relatively long and soft back end meant it wasn’t snappily fast through the dirt jumps and round the pump track, but it was certainly way more than competent.
The fork advantage was evident again here – we were able to wind on full preload to give a stiff fork to power round the pump track and tune the damping to boost off any jump. This really is a good all-round ripper. Fit a quick-release seat clamp, a longer seatpost and a more slender saddle and you’ll have a bike that’ll happily tear it up round the trail centre as well as bust moves at the local jumps.
Frame & equipment: Light chassis with forgiving rear end, plus good fork
At the heart of the San Quentin is a 6061 aluminium frame with double-butted top and down tubes. Marin have shied away from going hydroforming crazy and specced standard round tubes throughout. A strengthening gusset is welded externally to the underside of the down tube/head tube juncture and stiffening webs span between the seat tube and seatstays.
Using a lightweight tubeset that isn’t carrying the excess baggage of cosmetic hydroforming has resulted in a simple, light (for a playbike – 14.86kg/32.8lb) and purposeful frame. The angles and lengths put it slapbang in the middle between trail bike and dirt jumper – its 16.7in chainstays, 70-degree head angle and 22.5in top tube length are all equidistant from the ideal setup for each discipline.
Just 80mm (3.1in) of suspension travel is on tap from the Suntour fork, but it’s adjustable and oil damped, proving that quality of travel is far more important than quantity. Preload can be wound on and the fork can be tuned to remain composed, not become a hyperactive pogo stick. The bike doesn’t come with a seatpost quick-release, which is a definite oversight, and its short-ish seatpost means that saddle height adjustment is limited to 140mm.
Marin obviously know how to give a bike an instant feel-good factor. Full 710mm width bars with a superb shape are clamped into a diminutive 45mm stem. Lock-on grips as standard are a quality touch and show Marin really do listen to riders about spec. Tektro’s Novela cable-actuated disc brakes are reasonably easy to set up, and give good feel, despite the obviously budget brake levers. SRAM’s X4 shifters and X5 rear mech are typically clunky, but always reliable, and the un-named chainguide is easy to set up for quiet and efficient running.
Wide bars, short stem and lock-on grips. marin must have read our minds: wide bars, short stem and lock-on grips. marin must have read our minds
About BikeRadar reviews: Our review scoring system has changed in 2010. Therefore recent reviews may have comparatively lower scores than past reviews.
bikeradar.com
Labels:
bike review,
dirt jump,
marin
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Lapierre 2011: New downhill and dirt jump bikes
Amid the bountiful downhill trails of Chatel in the French Alps, Lapierre have revealed a new range of tweaked and revised mountain bikes for 2011, with the emphasis firmly on gravity riding.
New downhill platform
New downhill platform
Labels:
bike review,
dirt jump,
downhill,
lapierre
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Cannondale Rush HI-MOD 2
Cannondale’s suspension designs may have moved on to linkage-activated shocks and even electronic damping, but a dose of tried-and-tested simplicity lives on in the form of the Rush twins – single-pivot swingarm bikes sharing a carbon mainframe and 110mm of rear travel.
Labels:
bike review,
cannondale,
dh,
downhill
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