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the collected jwz bicycle wisdom [Mon, 12-May-2008 12:44 PM]
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[music |Rasputina -- Brand New Key]

I posted most of this as a comment in someone else's LJ who was thinking of buying a bike, but perhaps it is of more general interest.

I've been using a bike as my exclusive transportation in SF for about ten years. I've always ridden, but that's when I stopped driving a car except under extreme duress.

Here's how to begin your adventure as a commuter-bicyclist in San Francisco:

  1. Never take bike advice from anyone who owns bike shorts, clip shoes, a messenger bag, or a fixie. That's like taking car advice from someone who enjoys rebuilding carburetors.

    (Update: If you are this person, you need not reply with your indignant "corrections". You are not the person to whom this advice is addressed.)

  2. "City bikes" and "road bikes" are designed for some Jetsons-slick hypothetical future city that I've never seen. Or maybe for the bike paths in Los Altos or something. Here in real cities, roads are shit, and if you want your wheels and tires to survive curbs and potholes, you need a hybrid. They're a little heavier and a little slower. Are you racing? No? Then you don't care.

  3. So, get the cheapest hybrid you can stand. Shocks are a waste of money. You should be able to get a pretty nice brand new hybrid for $370 or so. You can probably get a used one for a hundred bucks.

  4. If you feel like you want a lighter bike so that it's easier to carry up stairs: don't bother. That's optimizing the wrong thing. You'll get used to it (by which I mean: become stronger).

  5. Get a bike that's the right size for you, and has properly adjusted handlebars and seat. The shop will adjust it for you. If they won't, or if they tell you it doesn't matter, go to a different shop.

  6. Get a u-lock. Lock through the frame and the back wheel. Your bike will be stolen, so don't get too attached to it. This also means, don't waste your money on junk like baskets and lights. Just get a backpack.

    It doesn't matter how crappy your bike looks: any bike is worth stealing for $2 worth of crack. Your bike is temporary. Accept this and move on.

  7. I always replace my front wheel and seat quick-releases with $2 worth of hardware store bolts, and then bend the ends over. This might have some negligible effect on theft. I refuse to be one of those people who lugs around 3 chains and disassembles their bike every time they park, so that's the trade-off I make.

  8. The bike-nerd at the bike shop will try to give you smooth, high-pressure (110psi+) tires, because they are more efficient. But if you don't air them up weekly or more often, you'll get pinch-flats every time you hit a pothole, which is always. Also, the gas station air pumps often only go up to 60psi anyway. Get knobby low-pressure (60-80psi) tires and they'll last a lot longer. (If you do end up with stupid tires, you might want to get one of these.)

  9. Likewise, make sure the tubes you get have the kind of connectors that the gas station air pumps take. Bike shop nerds like to fuck you with goofy connectors sometimes, out of sheer mean-spiritedness.

  10. Bike maintenance: don't do it, ever. It's not worth your time. Just take it to the shop. Getting them to replace a flat for you costs $20 and takes 10 minutes, including the tube, and you don't get dirty.

    It's a good idea to know how to change a flat, but why do it yourself when you can pay someone else almost-nothing to get greasy on your behalf?

  11. Safety: I follow the Zodiac approach: always assume the cars can see you perfectly, and are trying to kill you. If an intersection seems iffy, use the sidewalk and crosswalks. If big streets like Market and Van Ness freak you out, there are always less traficky ways to go, or just stay on the sidewalks.

    Do whatever you need to do to feel safe. You have nobody to impress.

  12. Grocery shopping: yes, you really can do it with a single backpack. The trick is, shop small once a week instead of big once a month.

  13. If you try to dangle bags on your handlebars, you will die.

  14. Cross train and trolley tracks at a 45° angle or more, or you will die.

  15. You really do need to tuck in or roll up your right leg. (You probably won't die, but you'll shred your pants.)

  16. You don't need to ride up Haight. Take Fell or Fulton and then go through the Panhandle.

  17. The City is only 7 miles across. Nothing is as far away as you think it is.

Update 2: Oh great, here comes the peanut gallery. Thanks, Cory Rob, srsly. I'd recommend against reading the comments here unless you're the type who reads comments on Youtube. Or maybe you just want to hear a bunch of fixie-hipsters with sand in their vaginas tell me how wrong I am and how you should spend a fortune and do all your repairs yourself.

Update 3: After getting 200ish comments on day one, I went through and deleted most of the redundant ones, and most of the ones from butt-hurt bike-nerds and mechanics. I've also turned on comment screening, and won't be approving new comments here unless you really have something new to say.

I'm a little (just a little!) surprised at the level of vitriol this one provoked. It's like I farted in bike-church. You'd think I was making fun of Linux or something.

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Comments:
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[User Picture]From: [info]ivorjawa
Mon, 12-May-2008 7:51 PM (UTC)

McAllister street hurts less.

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Flatter-ish, and with less traffic.

And I can't believe you said "air up".

Punk.
[User Picture]From: [info]mackys
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:04 PM (UTC)

Re: rollup/tuck in right pant cuff.

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I keep a $3 velcro leg band in my cycling backpack. Works great. Just remember to make the fold in the fabric on the outside of your leg, not the inside.
[User Picture]From: [info]morbid_curious
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:07 PM (UTC)

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All good sound advice, even here on the other side of the planet - substituting directions for analogous ones, of course.

Point 1 also reminds me of the bad old days of asking Linux geeks for software recommendations for use in a small project...
[User Picture]From: [info]rapier1
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:13 PM (UTC)

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3) Shocks are a waste of money. Unfortunately getting a fixed fork can actually set you back *more* than the shocks can on the lower end bikes. Its feature creep and rolling back can be a special order.

5) It always drives me crazy when I see people on bikes where the seat is pretty much all the way down and their knees are on the verge of smacking them in the face.

8) You can get mostly smooth tire for MTBs. I'm a fan of the continental town and country tires. They're a lot quieter than knobbies and I feel they give you better traction on asphalt. This maybe kind of a little puts me on the nerd side but the difference between these and knobbies is noticeable and they only run $25 a wheel.

9) Those are called schraders. The annoying kind are called prestas. Its useful to knwo if you are ever staring at a stack of tubes and need to know which one to get.

10) Being able to fix a flat will often save you a lot of bullshit. You aren't always going to be within reasonable distance of a bike shop. Don't get a hand pump for that though - one of those small CO2 cartridge fillers works well enough and is super small.

12) You can even shop big if you have the right bag. You used to be able to get messenger bags (back when it was really just messengers using them) that were actually big and functional. I've carried upwards of 40 pounds worth of turkey potatoes, onions, and sausage home in them in the past.

[User Picture]From: [info]nidea
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:13 PM (UTC)

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well said!

My only extra equipment is a metal rack thing over the back tire, with a clip-on sort of basket that attaches neatly to it. The rack is not an expensive item and thus isn't worth stealing, and the basket comes off so easily I take it with me whenever I park the bike. It fits a paper grocery bag very well.

Oh, and do wear a helmet and use lights. I know at least 2 people whose lives were saved because they wore helmets. I have a back light that attaches right on the helmet, so I never forget it.
[User Picture]From: [info]phreddiva
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:14 PM (UTC)

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I love this.
I bought a ridiculous beach cruiser (that I *loooove*) when I moved to Alameda (because it is flat, and people are slow, and there's actually a beach, and I like it). Unfortunately, most of my (unsolicited) bicycle advice comes from my brother, who is preparing for a triathalon & gets his jollies doing centuries on the weekend, so I haven't known what to get next. It's nice to have a take on this from someone who doesn't plan to change clothing & shoes when they arrive at their destination (a key factor for me).
[User Picture]From: [info]angry_american
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:16 PM (UTC)

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What is a fixie?

-FW
From: [info]stu_hacking
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:17 PM (UTC)

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#13: TRUE, TRUE, TRUE!

Worse is trying to dangle 4 litres of Coca-Cola from one handlebar. Don't do it.
[User Picture]From: [info]nojay
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:21 PM (UTC)

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A friend of mine does bike rebuilds (not repairs). He does a lot of courier bike frames (mostly fixies), and his recommendation for a Joe Blow street bike is a cheap mountain bike with suspension front and back. It's not the personal comfort of susp that's the attraction, it's the way some stretch prevents pothole impacts fracturing the frame joints that makes it a good idea.

Another suggestion -- two cheap bikes are better than one. As you say, bikes WILL get stolen or break. The second bike keeps you going when that happens until you can fix the problem. BTW I think you can get padlockable front wheel QR spindles if you ask around.
[User Picture]From: [info]pygmalion
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:31 PM (UTC)

#11 question

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Since I moved next to the park, I have bought a bicycle and am quite enjoying it, but I just started this bike riding thing. I am on a fat beach cruiser and am out of shape, so I am quite slow. I stick to the sidewalks as much as I can, and man it pisses people off all over the place. I have been informed riding on the sidewalk is illegal (especially where there are signs saying "No Skateboards/Bicycles), but it also appears to be immoral around where I live.

Anybody know anyone who has ever gotten a citation for riding on a sidewalk in SF?
[User Picture]From: [info]buckminster
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:33 PM (UTC)

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This is around 50% bad advice. I'm sure it works for your riding style, but here's where I think you go wrong:

-I like hybrid bikes too. But get one with 700c wheels and hybrid tires, 26" knobbies suck it for the city.
-Don't replace the quick release with a bent bolt. Just carry a thin cable wrapped around your U-lock. You'll want to take your front tire off someday.
-You need lights. Seriously.
-Riding on sidewalks is rude and illegal
-Don't fill your tires at gas stations. If you have room for a bike, you have room for a floor pump.
-The reason some pump connectors are thinner than car valves is that it increases the structural integrity of the wheel. Sometimes that's important.
-Lighter bikes are kind of nice, and will make you want to ride more. It's worth paying money for, up to a point.
[User Picture]From: [info]mc_kingfish
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:33 PM (UTC)

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I know nothing about bikes and bike-riding, and yet I love every bit of this list.
[User Picture]From: [info]jennaxide
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:35 PM (UTC)

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Great list, Mister! Mind if I repost it to the SeattleBikes community with proper creds and stuff?
From: [info]gwynjudd
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:48 PM (UTC)

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If your bike is sufficiently crappy, you don't need a lock.

I used to be a bike mechanic, so I take issue with some of the stuff you are saying. Changing a flat tire is so easy, the bike shops are literally stealing from you when they charge you $20 for a new tube. It takes them 5 minutes to change, the cost of the tube to them is $2.

Also, I have a family of three, even if I shopped twice a week, I couldn't fit it all in a backpack.
[User Picture]From: [info]gnat23
Mon, 12-May-2008 8:55 PM (UTC)

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Ok, caveat that I *am* one of the nerds with the funny valve stems, but my main beef is with #11.

Don't ride on the sidewalks. Not only are there oodles of slow-ass people walking there, but cars don't expect/don't look there before turning. It's also illegal most places. There are poles and cafe tables and people walking four-abreast who ignore you when you're yelling ON YOUR LEFT YOUR LEFT HELLO COMIN' UP BEHIND YOU HEY MOVE and sometimes no ramp and it's basically an obstacle course holding your brakes the whole way.

It is legal, however, "to take the lane when appropriate." If you're at risk of getting a door prize from a parked car, or if you're wanting to turn left, or if cars are simply getting too close when they pass: Either take the lane and flip off anybody that honks at you or find a better street.

(Highly recommend http://www.sfbike.org/?maps which has the best SF map for cyclists, showing hills, bike lanes, and preferred routes.)
[User Picture]From: [info]elevatordown
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:05 PM (UTC)

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That was a good read. And aside from just being entertaining, actually useful.
[User Picture]From: [info]cryptomail
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:30 PM (UTC)

regarding "hybrids"

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Mr. Zawinski,
I found this post useful, entertaining, and true on all accounts. Thank you for posting this. :D

I feel compelled to comment regarding your suggestion that someone who is getting a city bike, get a hybrid:

I have always found that obtaining an old moutain bike (yeah no bullsh1t shocks requried), and then simply changing into slick tires, will also suffice the sturdiness and toughness requirements of being in the city.
I have personally found that the hybrid handlebar setup is less than optimal for those really hard hill digs in SFBA, and thus, a mountain bike with "bullhorn" handle bars with slick tires really does it for me. It allows for some really good ass-off-the-seat-cuz-it's-a-28%-grade hill climbing, that sometimes you simply can't avoid.

Again, thanks for the post.


[User Picture]From: [info]edlang
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:34 PM (UTC)

Re: regarding "hybrids"

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Those of you talking about lights: put them on your backpack and /or get a backpack made of highly reflective material.
[User Picture]From: [info]rezendi
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:36 PM (UTC)

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Bike rental shops such as Blazing Saddles often sell quality used hybrid bikes for very reasonable prices. I'm a satisfied previous customer of BS, who, if memory serves, also throw in a free tune-up after six months.
[User Picture]From: [info]tiger0range
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:41 PM (UTC)

Effin A-to the ten-men!

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1. Absolute truth. Add to that the fact that most of them are grade A elitist assholes who don't realize they are chasing after the latest fashion like a Long Island Teenager. Been mountain biking for years, and have been yelled out of bike stores for commenting certain tech is stupid... and lo and behold a few years later all the bikes are junk because (surprise!) the tech does turn out to be stupid.
2. So called road bikes are for races or long hauls only. Mountain bikes are like SUVs in urban settings. I have friends and acquaintances constantly blowing their load on either a carbon forked road monstrosity or a dual suspension mountain bike because all the elitists look down on hybrids as the "compromised" bikes or the commuter beaters.
3. The more you spend, the less you'll ride it (for normal people).
4. Heck, with some practice you can even roll a bike up the stairs by standing it on it's back wheel.
5. Proper adjustment is one of the biggest factors. You can literally take away 90% of the hurt from an improperly adjusted bike IMHO.
6. Absolutely true. I used to have a PDA/GPS mount, computer mount, lights, etc. until I figured out none of that stuff helps make a commute any better. Now I have the lights on my helmet (so much better than bar mounts) and blinkers on the backpack.
7. I usually carry two locks, one for the front and one for the back when I go into urban areas. I also have an old hybrid with the component names scratched out. Most people can't tell they are looking at Shimano XT unless it's written out for them.
8. Depends on your taste.
9. Prestas bite the big one. Does not help rim intergrity unless you are looking at superlight aero rims, and even then only marginally.
10. I disagree about this. One of the easiest ways to build your confidence about your mechanical aptitude. It's not as hard as you think.
11. Don't know how it is in the west, but when I was in Baltimore, I heard the cars actually rev up as they tried to run you off the road. Glad I live in Kansas, aside from the drunks, most people are awesome about bikes.
12-14. True enough.
15. For me, tucks don't hold, and those velcro things die and fall off in inopportune times. Mostly because my cadence is at around 90 a lot of the time...going up to 120 in bursts. :(
[User Picture]From: [info]pdx6
Mon, 12-May-2008 9:56 PM (UTC)

Bikes on the sidewalk

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The dark secret among the transit advocates in this town is that they all secretly bike on the sidewalk when they don't feel safe, and even bike on the sidewalk the wrong way when they can take a shortcut on a 1-way street. It's bike nerd hypocrisy, and I've had some community members fess up to it while under the influence of alcohol.

From: [info]emtel
Mon, 12-May-2008 10:01 PM (UTC)

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This is the dumbest post you've ever written.

1. I'll also make sure never to take programming advice from someone who owns a copy of K&R.

2. Please stfw for Paris-Roubaix.

8. Ever heard of a fucking bike pump?

9. Those bike pump things I mentioned? They work with presta valves.

10. Fixing flats is worth your time because it takes *less* time to do it yourself than it takes to walk your flat-tired bike to the shop.

11. Riding on sidewalks is statistically more likely to get you killed for a number of reasons you can learn all about on your own if you are so inclined.

14. Addendum: cross *wet* train tracks at an 90-epsilon degree angle or you will die.
[User Picture]From: [info]ivan_ghandhi
Mon, 12-May-2008 10:15 PM (UTC)

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Some of these suggestions are wrong. I rode my road bike in St.Petersburg, Russia, for many years, through all the shit one can encounter there, as well as through the suburban forests, with their dirt roads or just no roads. A road bike is the best because you save your precious muscular energy. Smooth tires with high pressure help you a lot. If the pressure is high, potholes and rocks are not a problem. In Russia, getting a spare tire was a real problem (they sold them only to war veterans).

A small pump attached to the frame works pretty efficiently on small tires.

Also, the front wheel should be detachable, just for the comfort of pushing your bike on the back seat of your car when you go somewhere.

I agree with not riding up Haight or any other such place.
[User Picture]From: [info]strspn
Mon, 12-May-2008 10:25 PM (UTC)

Question: does 3-1-1 work on your cell?

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I've been almost exclusively on a bike except for a brief period when my kid was an infant and toddler. Now mom gets the car and I bike all over the greater Mountain View and Sunnyvale municipal areas.

My advice: If you ride regularly in a city, put the Traffic Engineer's number on speed dial. They actually enjoy hearing about obscure hazards. Just remember to get your N-E-S-W bearings and the cross-street before you call (which also gives you an opportunity to take deep breaths and calm down from said hazards.)

My google-fu is weak this afternoon. All I can tell is you need to talk to some lady named Jessica at telephone 3-1-1 or email potholes at sfdpw dot org

On which cell phone carriers does 3-1-1 work?
[User Picture]From: [info]perligata
Mon, 12-May-2008 10:49 PM (UTC)

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Maybe I don't want a bike after all. These people are scary.
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