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Did you change from Hybrid to Drop Bar Bike

Discussion in 'Beginners' started by doyler78, 10 Jun 2008.

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First bike a Hybrid/Flat Bar. Have you changed to a Drop Bar Bike?

Use hybrid/flat bar only 277 vote(s) 66.9%
Use both a hybrid/flat bar and drop bar bike 122 vote(s) 29.5%
Use drop bar bike only 16 vote(s) 3.9%
Don't/Can't ride anymore 2 vote(s) 0.5%

    doyler78 Member

    Location:
    Co Down, Ireland
    So often we see people who come on the forums here who are complete beginners, at least during adulthood, who are looking for a new bike. Often they feel intimidated by drop bars thinking that they aren't good enough for one or just think they look strange. They then set their mind on a hybrid or flat bar road bike.

    Just wondering about those people that first bought a hybrid/flat bar road bike and how many of them have since converted to a drop bar version (for the purposes of the poll anything which isn't a drop bar counts as a hybrid ie slicked up moutain bikes, etc which are used primarily on road or towpaths - no mountain biking country included as that takes a much more specialised bike)

    zimzum42 Gully God

    I use a profile airwing. How am I supposed to vote?

    does a bmx as a little kid count as my first bike, or the drop bar racer I got when i was 10 or so?

    John the Monkey Frivolous Cyclist

    Location:
    Crewe
    I started on my Dad's old hybrid (Raleigh Pioneer Elite) then got an '80s ten speed to see whether I liked road bikes, and it was downhill from there...

    The hybrid is my short trip bike, and an SCR2.0 my commuting and fun bike.

    doyler78 Member

    Location:
    Co Down, Ireland
    Perhaps the clue is in during adulthood. This is aimed at adults who have taken up cycling later in life. We don't get many beginners on here who are 10 :blush:

    zimzum42 Gully God

    That'll teach me to skim read!

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    HLaB Chief Crash Test Dummy

    I use a flat bar road bike but the next bike I bought was dropped bar. The flat bar bike is now my winter/ training/ fast utility bike and dropped bar is the summer bling. I also have a cheap Hybrid as a commuter.

    dantheman New Member

    well being a beginner, i have bought a hbrid, and yes, its cause idont know if id get on with drops- ive only tried to ride one once, and that was when i was a kid.. didnt feel safe, and so have only ever had flat bars... and yes, i can kinda say that i may like to try drops in the future, as long as i get more than a years use of this bike first, i dont think the "other half" will chop my danglies off.... so iwill probably turn into a convert in the future...

    Nick1979 New Member

    Location:
    London (SW11)
    I'm doing the transition right now, it was fast: bought my first hybrid 8 months ago and will hopefully replace it with a 'proper' road bike this week!!

    alecstilleyedye nothing in moderation

    yeh, started with a rally chico (flat), then got a raleigh olympus (drops), then various bmx and tracker bikes (all flat), then old steel racer (drop), then mtb (flat) then two more road bike (drops).

    i didn't find an option for that :biggrin::biggrin:

    Maz Vice President

    Location:
    Leicester
    I am still waiting to take the plunge and get a drop bar bike....I have had my Sirrus Elite (would that be regarded as a flat bar road bike?) for a couple of years. It's fast, but I want to get more aero where possible and go a bit faster, on the dual-carriageway etc.

    gbb Vice President

    Location:
    Peterborough
    I probably did the opposite, to my regret.
    Always rode 'racing bikes' (Raleighs, Carltons etc).
    Maybe 5 years ago, i thought i'm going to buy myself a new road bike (my first..after all these years :biggrin: )
    I couldnt find anything in my price range at that time, so spent £375 on a Trek hybrid.....and hated it, probably because it wasnt what i set out to buy, or wouldnt do the job i origionally wanted.

    I got my new road bike two years later (and the Trek had hardly been used in that time)

    doyler78 Member

    Location:
    Co Down, Ireland
    I asked the question because this was exactly where I started. When I started cycling 4 years ago everyone told me to get a racer however I just thought they looked strange and awkward and that I would be too slow on them and embarrass myself on it. If I had a flat bar at least I could say well they are all aero :biggrin:

    A couple of years after it as I had got much more confident in my cycling and started to find performance gains harder to come by I started to wish I had gone down the drop bar bike though I would always deny that to anyone that recommended them before :wacko:

    I am in the process of buying my drop bar and just wondered how many had gone through the same process and it seems to be a quite a common route for older people (in other words not someone who has cycled right through from childhood) coming into cycling to progress through their cycling.

    I just can't wait to get out on my new bike. Hopefully in the next week and bring an end to my interminable wait :thumbsup:

    If I get on well with my drop bar then my next purchase will be a drop bar winter/commute bike on cycle to work but we'll see.

    dudi New Member

    Location:
    Ipswich, Suffolk
    I started riding again 2 years ago, and bought myself a lovely cheap as chips full suspension bike... it broke after a few months and I was given a hybrid by my brother.
    Rode the hybrid about 10 months and then I had a crash, which wrote off the bike and nearly wrote off me aswell...

    during my recouperation I bought a new cycling jersey & some shorts.

    then My work offered a cycle to work scheme thru halfords, with which i bought my first road bike, a claud butler san remo. quite a nice bike for £300... just as a starter outer to see if i liked the drops. I did!

    I still own that bike, and I have also built myself a fixie. I use the fixie for commuting (about 20 miles a day at the moment) and used to use the CB at weekends for longer rides.
    I've lent my brother the CB now as we've been getting ready for the London 2 Brighton. I've been using the Fixie for any riding now, anything up to 60 miles so far... love it.

    I'm guessing that I'll be bying a new bike soon, and will go for a nice fancy fast machine for the weekend, and keep my low maintenance fixie for commuting.

    I'd never go back to flats unless I wanted to take up MTB riding, drops are far more comfortable in my opinion.

    Nick1979 New Member

    Location:
    London (SW11)
    So Doyler, have you decided what you're going to buy as your first true roadie? I'm still looking for ideas!!

    bonj2 Guest

    i covnerted my bijke to drop bars

    Over The Hill Senior Member

    Started on a halfords special but found I got wrist pains and numbness in my hands. I got a drop handle bike to see if it helped with the idea that I would get aero bars if it was no better with drops. I only get problems on longer rides now (50 + miles) so have stuck with drops.

    I think people steer clear of the racers as they are harder on the hills for a newbie where the hybrid with MTB gearing will get up almost any road.

    Dayvo Executive Vice President

    Location:
    oSLo
    I had road bikes as a lad/youth, but after an absence of several years have had a succession of MTBs and hybrids.
    I prefer to be more upright when I cycle, partly because of comfort (a dodgy back from years of rugby and cricket) and also because it suits my style of riding; long distance/touring.
    I'd love to have a fast roadie and be 20+ again, but alas . . . !

    doyler78 Member

    Location:
    Co Down, Ireland
    Yeah,

    I was going for the Planet X Carbon £999 offer bike however things took a lot longer than I had planned in getting it sorted and by then I had some more money saved and therefore decided on the Planet X Ti Sportive (hopefully). Spec should be settled today or tomorrow and my bike should arrive at the LBS shortly after that. I expect to be on it by this time next week but we'll see.

    I notice that the Focus Cayo has been reduced back to £999 so that's a good deal too and they now have the 7 day test ride back on offer for the focus range which means you can order the bike and use if for 7 days. If your not happy just return it at Wiggle's expense (they will arrange a courier to pick it up). You can't say fairer than that. Far better than any test ride you will get a LBS :evil:

    Tynan Vice President

    Location:
    e4
    road bikes can't do hills?

    drops were normal when I was a kid, it seems like someone has managed to convince people that hybrids are normal

    I rode hybrids for yonks and though road bikes were for serious cyclists, no good for commuting, for winter, for luggage, LBS blokes agreed with me too

    all bollocks, riding a road bike now with guards, rack and man sized pannier and loving it

    HJ Cycling in Scotland

    Location:
    Auld Reekie
    I went the other way from a bike with dropped bars to a flat bar hybrid, which suits my current needs very well...

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