Please excuse the big delay in getting back to this thread. It has been one crisis after another here.
Hey, and not to mention, how well you held up after all those kilometers, presuming that some of them are on a roadway with cars. After a few close calls, cars, and other vehicles vehicles, are my biggest fear.
Bikes are a very efficient form of transportation but the bike-ecosystem, at least in "the western world" needs to be greatly improved from trip-end to trip-end: (1) Separate pathways from roadways for safety, (2) improvements for multimodal transportation (provision for bikes on bus' and streetcars), (3) secure bike storage facilities at multimodal brake-points, and (4) lockers at employer endpoints, to mention a few. And (5) bridges where the pathways get flooded.(!) The savings from environmental damage caused by the alternative mode (cars) should pay for a lot of the improvements.
We have a neighbor a few doors down who commutes by bike 18 hilly miles (one way, 36 miles round trip) along the busy road shoulders, to work each day (non-multimodal).
Totally impressed how well they held up! Especially after reading about the underwater episodes!,I thought you'd be amused to learn that, despite my gushing about how durable my hub bearings have been, they failed today!
Hey, and not to mention, how well you held up after all those kilometers, presuming that some of them are on a roadway with cars. After a few close calls, cars, and other vehicles vehicles, are my biggest fear.
Based on the cost of a new car, you could have bought a new bike whenever the tires wore out, thrown it away, bought a new bike, repeat, and still be money ahead!Still, after 30-some-odd-thousand kilometers I can't say they owe me anything.
Bikes are a very efficient form of transportation but the bike-ecosystem, at least in "the western world" needs to be greatly improved from trip-end to trip-end: (1) Separate pathways from roadways for safety, (2) improvements for multimodal transportation (provision for bikes on bus' and streetcars), (3) secure bike storage facilities at multimodal brake-points, and (4) lockers at employer endpoints, to mention a few. And (5) bridges where the pathways get flooded.(!) The savings from environmental damage caused by the alternative mode (cars) should pay for a lot of the improvements.
We have a neighbor a few doors down who commutes by bike 18 hilly miles (one way, 36 miles round trip) along the busy road shoulders, to work each day (non-multimodal).