You can talk all day about the pros and cons of helmets. Cycle mags often fill up their pages with arguements for and against when things are slow on the editorial front.
There is some evidence to suggest that cycle use drops when helmets become compulsory.
Personally, I use one most of the time for commuting and longer rides. However I quite often don't bother for short trips to the shops etc, equally dangerous, but my choice and that's the way I like it.
woofboxer wrote:
Personally, I use one most of the time for commuting and longer rides.
Do you care about the look of your helmet? I sometimes think that I care too much about such stuff. I didn't care when I got that racing Bell helmet, but I really think it looks stupid on the Waffenrad... Hm. And I wouldn't have the bike already. Gonna take a look on it today. On sunday I'm gonna try it out ![]()
^ Listening to the missus, I shopped around and saw these Yakkays. I thought they wouldn't clash too much with my clothes but when I tried them on they looked stupid nonetheless. Very cartoonesque, like giant hats.![]()
http://www.yakkay.com/Webshop/
1966 wrote:
^ Listening to the missus, I shopped around and saw these Yakkays. I thought they wouldn't clash too much with my clothes but when I tried them on they looked stupid nonetheless. Very cartoonesque, like giant hats.
http://www.yakkay.com/Images/Thumbnail. … &w=400
http://www.yakkay.com/Webshop/
Nah, there are helmets by "Abus" that look very similar. You can buy them here at the supermarket. They get bad reviews and look somewhat stupid. A helmet should look like a helmet... I like the "Giro Reverb", it's not too awful. If I take the Waffenrad, I'm gonna get me a Reverb.![]()
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Last edited by Leer R. (2012-05-02 07:08:59)
I've got quite a sleek looking MeT racing helmet. CatLike make some nice ones too. But they look out of place on an old fashioned upright bicycle. Pure vanity and self image.
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
1966 wrote:
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
Here in Austria the only ones WITHOUT are the ones that lend an "official" City bike... and a very few "normal" cyclists. It's like using a condom with one night stands.
1966 wrote:
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
There was a lycra-clad dude tried to out pace me this evening, all lycra'd-up with a back-pack with his work clothes inside, I hate these cunts. It didn't take me long to catch him up and before the green man started flashing, I was away and that was the last time that sucker caught sight of me.
4F Hepcat wrote:
1966 wrote:
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
There was a lycra-clad dude tried to out pace me this evening, all lycra'd-up with a back-pack with his work clothes inside, I hate these cunts. It didn't take me long to catch him up and before the green man started flashing, I was away and that was the last time that sucker caught sight of me.
You're lucky he wasn't an American, he woulda smoked your ass.
Let the lycra bloke "win", cycling to me is not about performance. Perhaps I "smoke" some of them but I don't do sport. I just like to ride.
Yeah, maan that competion thing is wrong. There should be no winners and losers, everyone who participates should get a trophy. If you see that dude tommorow Hepcat try to hold back your alpha male testosterone driven urge and let the loser go ahead of you. Try humming Kumbaya.
Happy belated May Day 1966.
woofboxer wrote:
You can talk all day about the pros and cons of helmets. Cycle mags often fill up their pages with arguements for and against when things are slow on the editorial front.
There is some evidence to suggest that cycle use drops when helmets become compulsory.
Personally, I use one most of the time for commuting and longer rides. However I quite often don't bother for short trips to the shops etc, equally dangerous, but my choice and that's the way I like it.
I've seen all the papers and reasoning on helmets. Most of it is ideologically driven and flawed.
Most of them miss the point. Of course a helmet won't save your life if you are hit by a truck head on. I'd doubt many lives are saved by helmets. However if you come off at 40kph when a dog hits your front wheel, or just fall over at the lights then a helmet will more than likely save you a few stitches but most importantly some brain damage. Acquired brain injury ABI, even if officially MILD has effects for years, sometimes subtle, sometimes gross. Short term memory problems, vision issues, mood changes, executive brain functions less than optimal. Many , if not all of these can ameliorate over 2 or 3 years.
Nothing physically notable, in fact people look and act normal. But often big effects on a persons life and relationships.
Having said all that when I was in Weesp/Amsterdam I rode around, slowly on paths, without a helmet.
4F Hepcat wrote:
1966 wrote:
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
There was a lycra-clad dude tried to out pace me this evening, all lycra'd-up with a back-pack with his work clothes inside, I hate these cunts. It didn't take me long to catch him up and before the green man started flashing, I was away and that was the last time that sucker caught sight of me.
It's a real issue here. Australians have an unfortunate compulsion to turn every form of physical activity into a sport. Witha capital S. and always a competitive sport. And of course a MALE sport. Thus automatically excluding, sensible people.
Thus the only bikes available for years were racing bikes, not even touring bikes, let alone commuters or pootlers.
Then the on,y gear available is racing gear, Lycra, helmets, shoes, etc. then the only infrastructure is thought of through male, competitive sport eyes. Bunches of yobs riding flat out at 60 kph, blocking traffics, running red lights in bunches of 20- 60. Only the other year a bunch of these ran into, and killed a pedestrian, who was crossing on a pedestrian crossing with a green to him.
You even have web sites with idiots posting their PB on the ride to work on dedicated narrow commuting leisure bike trials. And the PB isn't ironic either.
Nothing better than being on a pootler, in normal clothes, witha bike clip on pants, in the "sit up and beg" position, as derisively described by the macho , and over a longish ride beating a Lycra lout.
4F Hepcat wrote:
1966 wrote:
In the end I bought a cheap piece of foam shit and hardly wore it. Here in the netherlands, the only people wearing helmets are kids, the occasional lycra clad performance guy, and americans.
There was a lycra-clad dude tried to out pace me this evening, all lycra'd-up with a back-pack with his work clothes inside, I hate these cunts. It didn't take me long to catch him up and before the green man started flashing, I was away and that was the last time that sucker caught sight of me.
I can understand both your positions. When I first got into cycling seriously, I use to just ride out from the Wirral out across the great Cheshire plain around Beeston castle and then towards the Clwydian range in North Wales and then back spinning down the hills across the river Dee and on into the lanes and towns of my home. It was just good to be on the country roads and you could feel part of something greater than the school or the suburbs. No competition, then I joined a club and then it got serious training, double expensive buying all the righ gear and to the point where you can make the jump with extreme dedication to getting sponsors and the like, I lost interest in had become almost like school or a job with pressure which I didn't want in my leisure time. I had also discovered the delights of beer and chasing ladies extremely unsuccessfully, which in the end proved more delightful.
A long time ago now all of that, 24-25 years, seems almost like yesterday, and yet it so far out of reach, I can't even be sure the nostalgia and reminisces are even true anymore.
^ I had a similar experience except for the serious sponsored part. Lost interest when I started doing sex, drinks and drugs, and rediscovered the joys of cycling after 40.
Now I'm back to where I was as a kid, just enjoying leisurely rides, and more so than ever. Compared to serious long distance riders I'm just a lazy tourist but give me time and money and I'll cross a continent or two.
Last edited by 1966 (2012-05-03 02:22:48)
It's mine! No service required, only air into the relatively new Schwalbe tires... a tiny bit of rust, but nothing bad.. Pictures when I cleaned it and took it for the first ride!
Enjoyed the first ride in many years today, on a well frequented biker's road - not with the Waffenrad, with the cheapo MBT - including the wife on her bike and the daughter in the back... that said I had the feeling the biggest cunts are not the Lycra guys on their racing bikes, they all were ok - the biggest cunts are the MBT "I'm riding with my gang"-Lycra-racing-short prick cunts. Definitely.
Have to buy a "neutral" helmet. Can't help. I know I'm a bit OCD about such stuff. Probably that one...:![]()
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And, one question: Probably 1966 knows about that??? How can I get rid of the "rust film" (Flugrost) on some parts of the bike? Is it true, that Coke on a bit of aluminum kitchen foil works wonders?
Thanks in advance, Dominik
Solvol Autosol metal polish.
Scrunched up aluminium foil with water can work, or fine (000 or 0000) steel wool.
I try to refrain from stuff that contains unpredictable chemicals.
Leer R. wrote:
Thank you, 1966 - I'm gonna try that!
Worked! ![]()
The bike looks nice, I have a late '80s Raleigh Chiltern, which seems very similar:
I beat the balls off it daily and never give it any love, it is the most reliable thing in the world. I have a feeling I have posted similar on this forum before so forgive me if I'm waffling, but I got chatting about old 3-speeds with the folks at Bobbins Bikes in Islington and the owner said he had been reading about some people who had cycled through the Amazon on them because of their low maintenance requirements. I bloody love mine, and have done some touring on it as well as lots of city riding.
And I don't wear a helmet.
Max
These are beautiful, namely the sveltina uomo model: http://www.abici-italia.it/en/index.html