Road bike for £700 ish

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allyst170
Posts: 129
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2009 11:48 am
Location: Stamford bridge

Road bike for £700 ish

Post by allyst170 »

My wife wants to get a road bike through cycle to work scheme. We have to buy through Halfords but can get any make. Problem is if Halfords don't stock it we have to go find a bike shop that has one to try out. So far she's tried female spec and male spec bikes and found little between them. She likes Treks Madone 1.5. She's never owned a road bike before and I'm a MTB' er so can't offer much help. Her plan is to get fit and build up to do the York 100 in the summer.

Thanks

Ally
Dr Dave
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Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 7:09 am
Location: Halfway there

Post by Dr Dave »

Boardman range are excellent vfm and are available through Halfords.....
David
Posts: 139
Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 10:58 pm

Post by David »

cycle republic - near fenwicks - are owned by halfords and will give the bike to halfords so you can buy it off them - they have a much more specialised range - and there quite nice ppl as well
Nothing is real...everything is permitted
willyh
Posts: 92
Joined: Mon Nov 17, 2008 3:37 pm

Post by willyh »

Our 'partnering' cycle shop I believe will also get you any make bike you like. They also offer lifelong free servicing on any bike over £1K. And they were the first in York to do Cycle to Work.
Thought I'd mention.
Have a word with Pierce.
As for frame fitting, make sure the bike is woman specific. These allow for generally different vital dimensional proportions. Not all cycle makes do these, so be aware.
allyst170
Posts: 129
Joined: Tue Jan 06, 2009 11:48 am
Location: Stamford bridge

Post by allyst170 »

Thanks for your replies. The bike has to be bought through Halfords/Cycle Republic. Spent all weekend looking around. Its between these I think:

http://www.trekbikes.com/uk/en/bikes/road/1_series/15/

http://www.boardmanbikes.com/road/road_comp.html

As for female fit, doesn't seam to matter. Boardman don't do female and she prefers the male version of most of the bikes shes tried.
ClaireG
Posts: 238
Joined: Mon Oct 23, 2006 6:49 pm
Location: off the back.....

Post by ClaireG »

Don't worry about women's fit, some 'people' require specific sizes or frames because they are taller / smaller / wider (!) / other needs, but most men and women can fit standard frame sizes with a bit of thought or setup help.

I'm sure you'll be fine. Ask in Halfords for some help with your setup if you're not sure. Have a healthy amount of seatpin showing & take care in choosing handlebar stem length. I opted for the 4Girls Handlebars, but for me it seems a gimmick and no difference to the std bars on all my other bikes! Handlebar width is more a personal choice to think about.

There's been a couple of previous threads on this same topic with plenty more responses, so if you were interested in more opinions, it may be worth a look back on the forum.

Hope your wife enjoys riding her new bike! Maybe see her out on the road........

Claire [/i]
cath
Posts: 274
Joined: Tue Mar 21, 2006 3:21 pm
Location: York

Post by cath »

I agree with Claire - unless you are quite small I think a mens bike should be fine. There will still be minor things that need tweaking though - I'm nearly 6ft tall but I have a shorter reach than most men of similar height so I would go for a slightly smaller frame or shorter stem, I also find that the standard handlebars fitted to my bikes my size are uncomfortably wide, but all these little details can be ironed out when you order the bike. Main thing is that it's comfortable and the right size.

Also though...if your wide decides she wants to spend a lot of time out on the road...she might want to think about a nice, comfy womens saddle!
Dr Dave
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Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 7:09 am
Location: Halfway there

Post by Dr Dave »

allyst170 wrote:Thanks for your replies. The bike has to be bought through Halfords/Cycle Republic. Spent all weekend looking around. Its between these I think:

http://www.trekbikes.com/uk/en/bikes/road/1_series/15/

http://www.boardmanbikes.com/road/road_comp.html

As for female fit, doesn't seam to matter. Boardman don't do female and she prefers the male version of most of the bikes shes tried.
The Trek only has Sora shifters, brakes and front mech - bottom of the Shimano range. Purely on spec the Boardman is a better bike but personal choice is at least as important!
justsweat
Posts: 184
Joined: Mon Feb 11, 2008 9:37 am
Location: York

Post by justsweat »

The main reason I can see for most women getting a woman's fit are the brakes and shifters (although the size of my hands maybe I should go there). I agree for women over 5' 7'' no need to worry about anything else.

Saying that I would always buy a smaller frame and play with it. I love the Trek and when the sora wears out you just replace it. My Trek has done over 30,000 miles and needs very little loving.

Brian
tomf
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Joined: Sat Jun 21, 2008 7:09 pm
Location: Escrick

Post by tomf »

I've been riding Sora on my regular bike for 2 1/2 years; I only had to replace the rear mech (with Tiagra) because of a truly stupid mistake cleaning it, which bent the cage. Seems to me it does a good job (and is cheap to replace!).

Something which may appeal is that Sora uses a different shift system to other Shimano STi; on mine (and this still looks true on the Trek website linked above) the shift to a smaller cog uses a thumb-button on the inside of the brake hood; you push the brake lever inwards to shift back. It's definitely a personal preference, but I think this makes shifting from the hoods easier than the paddle used by the fancier Shimano gear, and I guess this would make even more difference if you have small hands.

..and the Trekkies I know are all very keen on their bikes.
tom
dave c
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Location: york

Post by dave c »

The other thing about the Trek is that, on my Trek Pilot anyway, it can be fitted with full mudguards which you will probably need at some point.

Looking at the 1.5 picture it looks like it has got the eyelets for them.
John Banks
Posts: 40
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2008 11:04 pm
Location: SE of York

Post by John Banks »

How about David Hinde bikes. I am thinking of calling in as I do some work over that side of the pennies. They do a couple of nice looking road bikes at about £700 with what looks a good spec and is light. One L’Etap Sport bike is £599.95 and complete bike weighs 18lbs (8.18kg). Anyone had any experience of them?

http://davehinde.veriovps.co.uk/
Dr Dave
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Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 7:09 am
Location: Halfway there

Post by Dr Dave »

Dave Hinde has a rather dodgy reputation - I've therefore never dealt with them. Many stories of money taken for goods that never appeared - how much this is apocryphal and how much real I can't say.

Of the online retailers I find Ribble OK but they do have a slightly dodgy rep. Wiggle are a bit more expensive but - I think it's fair to say - are slightly better regarded.

It's the usual story - one bad experience and it's enough to put you off!
paulM
Posts: 649
Joined: Tue Mar 21, 2006 3:23 pm
Location: New Earswick

Post by paulM »

Ribble historically have a poor reputation going back to the early 90s - poor quality frames and non existant service. But with online ordering now they are superb - massive range, amazing value and delivery in a couple of days.
I ordered a random selection of bits last Wednesday evening. First item on the list was a 105 cassette - I checked the price on Wiggle also and it was £15 cheaper and as the order was over £50 came post free and arrived complete on the Friday - its almost a charity!
Bought a training frame off them in November - less than £130 with a full carbon fork and h/set and again its superb and arrived in a couple of days. Need I go on.
Only slight downside is watch the frame geometry - the frames seem to have long top tubes which may require a shorter handlebar stem for a lady?
However many Clifton riders own the training frames and I've not heard any complaints.
The complete bike deals they do offer exceptional value.
John Banks
Posts: 40
Joined: Mon Jun 16, 2008 11:04 pm
Location: SE of York

Post by John Banks »

Thanks very much for your advice and views. If I end up getting a bike form there I will leave some feedback on my experience and the bike.
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