How do you find the 14" wheels on the D1, never ridden a bike with wheels smaller than 16".
There's quite a lot of drag over say a Brompton, but otherwise it's not a problem.
How do you find the 14" wheels on the D1, never ridden a bike with wheels smaller than 16".
Yes, I still have it. As I didn't want a folder, but needed one, I went to town with it after buying it.Do you still have it?
Wow, you really went to town with it. Really nice. I have considered a Joey, I like it a lot. The fold is a bit less convenient I think?Yes, I still have it. As I didn't want a folder, but needed one, I went to town with it after buying it.
It came specced with mid range Shimano stuff. This didn't cut the mustard for me, so gearing was upgraded to xtr m980, wheels hope pro 2 on sun mtx 24 inch rims. Some custom made pace rc31s made for 24 inch wheels, stem and bars upgraded, crank bros iodine 11 saddle, crank bros grips to match saddle, formula disc brakes replaced the vs.bFSA bb386 cranks. I can't remember if I got round to it, but bought some crank bros split qrs for wheels and all the qr points for the folding parts. The only original parts are the frame, seat post and headset (which I was going to replace with a hope). I do still have the original forks. I can't remember what pedals it ended up with, or if I borrowed them for another bike.
It is absolutely mint, everything was new when I swapped it over and it's probably done a few hundred miles in its life.
I should really sell it. I also have some nice 24 inch knobbly MTB tyres, as it is a really capable bike, looks like a small grove innovations X link (I think that's what it was called).
What type are they?I have one(actually 2) but I don't get on with it really. It has it uses, fits in the boot of my little car etc. But I have never found it comfortable to ride and its slow.
Both are modernish, 98 and 2010 ish.
Interesting story. Fiido doesn't really look that comfortable. The pedal assist makes it easy going I guess?I learned to ride on a Raleigh folding bike back in the 70s, and it quickly became my first off road bike too.
Used to use a Brompton regularly at both ends when I was commuting to London from N.Wales. Mine is pretty old now (dates from the early 90s), They are an amazing piece of design, but not always great engineering. Parts have an unpleasant habit of fatiguing then snapping. Admittedly, expecting a 25+ year service life from a part might be a stretch, but equally no-one expects a break lever to snap while going downhill either. Even so, I often used to think - if I could have only one bike, it would be a Brompton.
As well as the Brompton, I have a Fiido D1 electric folding bike. It's almost never folded. But has largely been an excellent bike considering it's relatively cheap price. It proved to be an essential recovery tool. I was riding it within two and half weeks of major abdominal surgery, before I could barely walk 100 yards.
Interesting story. Fiido doesn't really look that comfortable. The pedal assist makes it easy going I guess?
Brompton as the one bike, does it go off road as well?