Does Riding A Fixie Really Make You A Stronger Cyclist?

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Fixed gear bikes, or fixies, are single-speed with no freewheel. They make great town bikes and are also used as track bikes in the velodrome, but should you be using one to improve your cycling? Conor looks into the training and fitness benefits of riding a fixie, including strength efforts and improving pedalling technique, testing it on the flat, as well as up and downhill!
    00:00 Intro
    00:45 What is a fixie?
    01:13 Why ride a fixie?
    01:42 Fixed gear benefits
    02:20 Getting started
    03:07 Pedalling technique
    05:11 Climbing
    06:41 Descending
    08:41 Conclusions
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @gcn
    @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +204

    Have you ever ridden a fixie? 🚲

    • @flipfonte4069
      @flipfonte4069 Před 8 měsíci +51

      every single day!

    • @kitlopez2435
      @kitlopez2435 Před 8 měsíci +19

      Fixie is my first real bike and this is really where I started to love cycling

    • @SimonBauer7
      @SimonBauer7 Před 8 měsíci +4

      no. hub gears yes, fixie no. not even Singlespeed (unless you count the first bike i had as a kid which ofcourse was singlespeed). if i have to save this much money id just walk. bikes with gears arent that expensive to give all that up.

    • @mh_dot_fm
      @mh_dot_fm Před 8 měsíci

      i even have both chain ring and cog same as shown here. 2.98 ratio is the best for me :)

    • @viliuskaminskas8946
      @viliuskaminskas8946 Před 8 měsíci +1

      No, but id like to try

  • @cliffordromina3527
    @cliffordromina3527 Před 8 měsíci +630

    Suggestion: Ride it for a whole month. Only that bike and nothing else, even during GCN videos. That will show weather it realy is beneficial or not.

    • @michavanbodegom1197
      @michavanbodegom1197 Před 8 měsíci +20

      thats defenatly true

    • @jimsonjohnson3761
      @jimsonjohnson3761 Před 8 měsíci +21

      It's not. Whether you use a 40-20 or a 52-14 it's all high rep low resistance training. The only thing that increases strength of muscles differently is weight training.

    • @zhuyufan1186
      @zhuyufan1186 Před 8 měsíci +5

      The heartrate will going up and down like crazy. Maintain a certain speed on a fixie is hard ...

    • @jonyfany8763
      @jonyfany8763 Před 8 měsíci +12

      ​@@jimsonjohnson3761riding a fixie is like going to the gym.

    • @jimsonjohnson3761
      @jimsonjohnson3761 Před 8 měsíci +7

      It is not infact. It's like riding a bike. There is no difference

  • @sorenmeyer7347
    @sorenmeyer7347 Před 8 měsíci +282

    Suggestion from a long time fixed gear rider: ride a ratio with which you can accelerate quickly at lights and get up easy on your local hills.
    For the flats you just have to spin, the best cadence training there is. Picking a too high gear ratio is a thing many "beginners" do, because they want to ride as fast as possible on the flats. But it's all about the cadence on a fixed gear

    • @samuelleestokes
      @samuelleestokes Před 8 měsíci +2

      What do you suggest? I ride 48:15 but I’m exclusively riding in a flat city.

    • @sorenmeyer7347
      @sorenmeyer7347 Před 8 měsíci

      @@samuelleestokes my city is quite hilly and lot's of stop and go. I ride in the range of 48x17 to 48x18.
      A new cog is pretty cheap and worth trying, just try it out

    • @c.s.4273
      @c.s.4273 Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​​​@@samuelleestokesI ride 52 to 11 - but only downhills! 😂

    • @mendonchurros779
      @mendonchurros779 Před 8 měsíci +11

      46-16 is my jam

    • @notetrail3826
      @notetrail3826 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@mendonchurros779 46:16 is my favorite. i can get up some steep ass hills and still rip the flats its great. bit too heavy for fgfs but i make do

  • @JDoubleEww
    @JDoubleEww Před 8 měsíci +158

    I always enjoyed climbing on a fixie. Despite never being in the correct gear on a incline, the forward momentum turning the pedals makes it easier to keep them turning. Descending on the other hand…😬

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +12

      There is a certain bit of fun when climbing fixed... your right descending can be so scary! You could get used to it though.

    • @kevinlowenhaupt2737
      @kevinlowenhaupt2737 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Just take your feet off and Superman on the downhills 😉

    • @lucziczac
      @lucziczac Před 8 měsíci +4

      Getting back on the pedals afterwards is the really tricky bit, especially with clipless. With clipped pedals this can be done though…

    • @santu1996
      @santu1996 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@gcn You're* right

    • @litespud
      @litespud Před 8 měsíci +14

      The trick I found was to work on controlling speed with back-pressure from the start. Don’t let the descent speed get out of hand

  • @kennethward9530
    @kennethward9530 Před 8 měsíci +84

    Love a fixie. I've had a fixed gear bike in my rotation for over 30 years. I use brakes on the road, because dogs, children and cars can exceed my non-Jedi reflexes. No brakes on the velodrome, obviously. Smaller gears on road than track, 72" is my go-to road gear. In my humble opinion, those who ride fixed gears tend to be smooth on geared bikes, as they don't stop pedaling to stand, sit, shift gears, or corner, so they're easier to draft closely.
    P.S.-Future video Connor should try a "tracklecross" fixed gear off road race- a niche sport where the "spirit of gravel" may or may not live.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +8

      Super cool to hear that you have been using a fixie for a while 🙌 Tracklocross would be epic! Have you ever given it a try?

    • @Disrtict6
      @Disrtict6 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I agree with 72 for shoes and pedals, but with flats-straps for the downtown core I go down to 67. Seemed too spinny for not much acceleration gain at first but I got used to it cuz the 19t is fucking stuck now/ 19t with shoes is a riot, can spin a way higher top speed than straps [close to 20% higher for me] and rip up hills like a pirate on crack.

    • @liamm8992
      @liamm8992 Před 8 měsíci

      Should GCN try to persuade Connor to go for the fixed gear record at the 3 Peaks Cyclocross? Yes it is something that exists (having been done a couple of times), and yes, the idea is terrifying!

    • @kennethward9530
      @kennethward9530 Před 8 měsíci

      I used to ride 67 or so on the road when my reflexes were younger, 63 in winter when air was thick and riding in heavy clothes. Or maybe the real reason I stick to 72 for low is I don't have to swap chain rings or add links when going from track to road gearing (i.e. lazy) @@Disrtict6

    • @maxdunmore5570
      @maxdunmore5570 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@gcntracklocross (brakeless) is some of the most fun on a bike ive had, makes xc stuff feel like proper techy downhill. it’s super sketchy but it wouldn’t be fun if it wasn’t!

  •  Před 8 měsíci +63

    I ride fixed for almost 15 years now, with some breaks in between but also did some fixed gear crits and other races. I actually spoke with one physiotherapist once and he told me he's riding fixed as well, because the lack of dead point in pedaling actually decreases risk of knee injury!

    • @Bruh-lm4zr
      @Bruh-lm4zr Před 7 měsíci +2

      What do you mean
      Lack of deadpoint

    • @ushiki2212
      @ushiki2212 Před 6 měsíci

      Is it when I switch gears and there is a sudden loss of resistance due to the gear changing? Maybe just a thought.

    • @DopeEd
      @DopeEd Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Bruh-lm4zr the rotation of the cranks is constant and there are no 'dead' areas in the pedal stroke. its what not pedaling 'in squares' means

    • @scottmoroschan4729
      @scottmoroschan4729 Před 17 dny

      Interesting!

  • @filipracek6478
    @filipracek6478 Před 8 měsíci +66

    Riding brakeless fixed gear bike with steep track geometry and waxed chain is one of life's simple pleasures :) Truly immersive experience. I got into road cycling via riding fixed gear around town, then doing longer road rides, climbing hills and later installing front brake to tackle more technical descents before buying my first road bike. I actually did a 180km/2000m brevet Rapha Prestige Bohemia on my Standert Umlaufbahn and the organizers in the finnish were amazed and told me I was crazy doing it on a fixed gear :D

    • @keithchang8566
      @keithchang8566 Před 8 měsíci +3

      this is the kind of comment i come to gcn to find. people ride fixies because its cool. THATS IT

    • @87togabito
      @87togabito Před 7 měsíci +4

      And thank goodness brakeless fixie riding is BANNED in my country.
      Your immersive experience shouldn’t come at the cost of safety to others, with an inability to stop at a dime.

    • @filipracek6478
      @filipracek6478 Před 7 měsíci +3

      ​@@87togabitook boomer. Riding brakeless is illegal pretty much everywhere in the world. difference is only countries such as UK where the front brake is sufficient for "road legal" status vs both front and rear in most of the world.

  • @nuttycommuter3718
    @nuttycommuter3718 Před 8 měsíci +42

    Don’t know if it makes you faster, but it certainly makes you cooler

  • @jorgepro8
    @jorgepro8 Před 8 měsíci +173

    big thumbs up for this content. As a fixed gear rider, i enjoyed very much to see you talking about fixed gear bikes. GCN should create more fixed gear related videos. Bring Mannon back with her super track bike ⚙🔥A Bike Vault Special with only fixed gear builds, would be awesome, right?

    • @mattmatthews5414
      @mattmatthews5414 Před 8 měsíci +2

      They keep trying to make gravel a thing there on thee olde mud island, I’d love to see them on traclocross mid-fats in full partypace flannel & denim.

    • @jethrudemendina9084
      @jethrudemendina9084 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I like this.

    • @Nostalgiaforinfi
      @Nostalgiaforinfi Před 7 měsíci +3

      the bikes arent expensive enough for them

    • @jorgepro8
      @jorgepro8 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@Nostalgiaforinfi Indeed

  • @magicknight8412
    @magicknight8412 Před 8 měsíci +31

    In my cycling club there was always one guy who turned up on a fixie in the fast group (in the Surrey hills so very lumpy in places). He always kept up, must have been so fit.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +6

      Those old school hitters 💨

    • @cornishalps9870
      @cornishalps9870 Před 8 měsíci

      We had a guy on a fixie in our club in cornwall, from 20% hills to -20% downhills he somehow managed it. Absolutely crazy.

  • @wallacegrooms7791
    @wallacegrooms7791 Před 8 měsíci +109

    Fixed riding part of my training/fitness regime for years. It has made me a better cyclist overall by teaching me to spin more efficiently and anticipate changes. Back on a geared bike you immediately realize how much you coast. But please,install a break! Be safe out there.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +9

      We agree, it really makes you think when back on gears 👀

    • @rob-c.
      @rob-c. Před 8 měsíci +11

      I assume your brake suggestion is a general rule seeing as he has a front and rear brake already 😅

    • @MoonshineOctopus
      @MoonshineOctopus Před 8 měsíci +1

      Are you thinking of the movie Premium Rush?…

    • @matt_acton-varian
      @matt_acton-varian Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@rob-c. I believe it was. In the UK it is a legal requirement for fixed gear bikes to have a front brake for rising on the road, but in other countries there is no rule. A lot of American Fixie riders I have seen are brakeless.

    • @lucborot2219
      @lucborot2219 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@matt_acton-varian In France, a set of 2 brakes is compulsory. I'm always scared in large cities like London, Paris or Montpellier where I live, when guys ride a fixie with a single front brake or none at all. Imagine I crash into one of these blokes: his being a candidate for suicide doesn't make me a candidate for murder, or have I missed something?

  • @kitka1990
    @kitka1990 Před 8 měsíci +27

    Track bikes on the street are a beautiful thing. They teach you the most important thing in cycling outdoors - awareness. And help with cadence (remember guys - spinning is winning!). Oh, and they look the absolute best. Nothing beats a gorgeous, brakeless track bike in the looks department.

  • @fabioslopes
    @fabioslopes Před 8 měsíci +4

    I commute over 50 km every single day on São Paulo-Brazil to go to work and back to home at the end of the day... the happiest moment of my daylife!!

  • @nizmortal
    @nizmortal Před 8 měsíci +23

    As a seasoned fixed gear rider, this is a breath of fresh air. The main thing, as cliche as it might sound, is the flow that the fixed drivetrain puts you in. I've been racing road and cx for years but the thrill of being in control on a fixed gear bike is always something else. More content like this, pleaseeee! 🤘🙌

    • @juanpecan7089
      @juanpecan7089 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Thats it, just feels so good when you lock in. There's nothing like it.

  • @klaviermd
    @klaviermd Před 8 měsíci +39

    I ride my Bianchi superpista 45:15 for more than 20000km. I like the tough, durable and lightweight (less than 7.5kg with all aluminum component) of the fixie. The smooth commute in big city on flat road is so amazing. I tried to ride it on climbing for elevation of 1000m. It was super hrad to maintain the pace. And the descending was nightmare...

    • @ben6089
      @ben6089 Před 8 měsíci +1

      You only have 1 skid patch for that

  • @richdodman125
    @richdodman125 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Rode my fixie for a good few years, did three century rides on it and rode the London to Paris ride on it much to the disbelief of the full roadies that I went with. But I ended up in the lead group because with a fixie you have to attack the uphills and hold your pace so you end up getting away from everyone but they then catch you on the downhills. Loved it and still love having a cruise/blast on it.

  • @hardcheese
    @hardcheese Před 8 měsíci +36

    I have been commuting to work since 2009 on my Boardman fixie (usually 50-70 mins ride). Now with bombproof wheels and 32mm marathon plus tyres on a 48x18 set up. Just the perfect way to ride to work and almost never be let down with a mechanical, plus all the benefits discussed.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +2

      The mechanical side of fixed is great! Makes the perfect winter set up. Have you got that bike in the vault? 👉 gcn.eu/app

    • @___Bebo___
      @___Bebo___ Před 8 měsíci +3

      Might wanna give the Continental Contact Urban tires a look. They came out in 2022 and are very similar to the Schwalbes you are running. Way better rolling resistance though.

    • @hardcheese
      @hardcheese Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@___Bebo___ i will thanks! I love the puncture resistance of the M+ tyres but they are extremely uncomfortable 🥴

    • @___Bebo___
      @___Bebo___ Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@hardcheese The Contact Urban feels like a road tire it's amazing. It has touring tire rubber thickness and puncture protection but feels as good a fast winter training road tire like the 4 seasons. They made it the default tire on the Brompton folding bike last year.

    • @marijntbh
      @marijntbh Před 8 měsíci +1

      If you're in to skidding 48/17 or 48/19 might be worth to check out as they offer more skidpatches and a cheaper replacement then a chainring

  • @samj1185
    @samj1185 Před 8 měsíci +17

    I live in a very flat area so riding a fixie makes good sense. I wouldn't enjoy climbing on one and I certainly would have far different gears than I have now. I recommend a flip flop hub w/ a single speed freewheel on the other side (bailout option). A strong QR works fine on the rear...don't have to bolt through.

  • @bulliblack9661
    @bulliblack9661 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Refreshing to see you guys testing this ! Where i come from it is very flat and very bike friendly to ride. As a mechanic and daylie fixed gear commuter this is a very easy to maintain machine + there are alot of good bike brands out there that make some very tough fixed gear parts.
    You can even get away with using steel parts when u dont use gears and it is still very light.
    And yes you really are getting used to the ride.
    Fixed gear made me loose almost 30kg of weight back then.
    Not only as a commuter with low maintain its a great way to train yourself. Looking forward for more track content !
    Cheers from Germany ! :) 🚴

  • @Velomoon
    @Velomoon Před 8 měsíci +2

    My commute bike is a fixed gear bike & I love the simplicity & feel of riding it.

  • @richardlu6706
    @richardlu6706 Před 8 měsíci +14

    Love GCN fixie content. I’ve been commuting on one for 7 years and recently did 3 fixed centuries. I get Connor’s hesitations about climbing and descending, but honestly it’s just a different experience that you have to adapt to. In fact I’d say it’s helped me become a pretty strong climber.
    Also I’m on team brakes. Using your legs to control the bike is fun and helps with handling skills, but brakes are handy on a descent or for avoiding an emergency crash

  • @gi-owo7489
    @gi-owo7489 Před 8 měsíci +9

    More fixie content please ❤ as a fixie rider I'd love to see more content on the topic, especially because i feel like it's kind of unknown to the average bike enthusiast.
    Also the community around fixed gear riding is something that I think many people could get interested in

  • @Skaughtto
    @Skaughtto Před 8 měsíci +9

    My "pub bike" is a single speed 48/18 ⚙️. Sometimes I'll use it for short commutes. The simplicity is nice. Coasting downhill is convenient. If I want to non-stop pedal for training, I'll use Zwift.

  • @Hi.Im.Andrew
    @Hi.Im.Andrew Před 8 měsíci +2

    Been watching GCN for a while and have only had a fixie this whole time. Working my way up to 40+ mile rides. I want a geared bike, but absolutely love my fixie!

  • @josephsayles863
    @josephsayles863 Před 8 měsíci +11

    It's pure joy on my fixie. I recently passed 30000km on it. Just get on pedal. It is so freeing- no decisions to make and I'm always in the right gear! 🙂

    • @PEsp-id7uw
      @PEsp-id7uw Před 2 dny

      Fixed gear mode or single speed

  • @dalerasche8769
    @dalerasche8769 Před 8 měsíci +8

    I have ridden a fixie on and off for the last 50 years (I'm 70 now). You have to choose your route and you might want a bag of cogs and chainrings to pick the right gear for your area. In my view, riding a fixie will make you a smoother rider and will help you ride outside your normal cadence. Love 'em but they don't mix all that well with old knees

  • @JWKeebs
    @JWKeebs Před 8 měsíci +4

    I ride a fixed gear track bike on ~90% of my rides. Here in Chicagoland, USA the roads are quite flat so I use a 52 x 17 ratio and it works beautifully. I’m in my 40’s and have no knee pain. Also, in the USA we ride fixed gear without brakes and that helps develop different muscle groups. Nothing beats fixed gear riding.

  • @Pratalax
    @Pratalax Před 8 měsíci +14

    Surprised you didn't elaborate more around climbing - I've been riding fixed a lot more recently mostly because i wanted to work out different parts of my body more - the fixed gear forces me to interact with the bike differently, getting out the saddle, swinging the bike under me and using my arms and torso more dynamically. Geared, i tend to slam it into an efficient gear and blitz the power out in one position - might as well be on a turbo!
    As for risk of injuring knees, i suppose you do have to be careful, though i'd say that goes just as much for standing starts - mate constantly did himself a mischief riding fixed in traffic cause he'd constantly want to sprint off the line - at least when you're climbing, you're more often already warmed up.
    Oh i almost forgot - one other major benefit is that it knocks me out my habit of wanting to go as fast as possible, all the time (I think Si has spoken about this habit in the past). It's like a little slap in the face telling me to just chill out and enjoy the ride - great for the mental.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +4

      Thanks for the comment! You make some great points, riding fixed certainly makes you work the full body 🥵 Conor can back from his ride with a 6 pack. You make an interesting point about chilling out on the bike - slowing down isn't always a bad thing 👀

  • @Cryptowski
    @Cryptowski Před 8 měsíci +1

    i've been on my fixie for over 4 years now. i just love it!

  • @scubaboy1984
    @scubaboy1984 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I just got my first Fixie a few weeks ago and I love it! It's so fun to ride and makes me really appreciate cycling and all the tech on my road bike even more. It's perfect for when I want to pop down for a coffee or run a quick errand. I don't worry about my expensive road bike getting damaged or stolen and I feel like I get a pretty good work out in as well!

    • @jonyfany8763
      @jonyfany8763 Před 8 měsíci

      A keen cyclist should own at least 2 bikes. Stay safe 🙏

  • @user-zt6nw1ij2w
    @user-zt6nw1ij2w Před 7 měsíci +1

    Got my 1st fixie in late 2021, totally change my view of riding a bike

  • @jnorth1969
    @jnorth1969 Před 8 měsíci

    My go-to mechanic is a fixie aficionado and he helped me to get into this type of riding a couple of years ago. Now that I've accumulated some practice time and carefully tweaked my saddle set-up, I'm having a blast with fixed-gear riding, mainly just for short fitness circuits or urban errands. I constantly mix things up by switching between my fixie and my trusty old hybrid. Even with the freehub, I've stopped coasting and I really notice how my overall pedalling motion has become smoother, more consistent, and I believe more efficient.

  • @DavidMartin-tk4fs
    @DavidMartin-tk4fs Před 8 měsíci +6

    I want to see Connor get back on a freewheel after a month on a Fixie. He'll feel like he's only got one leg!
    The video has inspired me to get my FGSS out though, so props for that. 😊

  • @dalis994
    @dalis994 Před 8 měsíci +10

    It makes you a better, smoother "pedalist". I even used it for several years for winter group rides riding with guys with normal bikes. Sometimes, my cadence was way over 100. I can say I was in the center of attention when my cadence reached 120 rpm and more. Not doing it any more, but it was fun and definitely helped me to learn to spin (not saying it's the only method). I loved the simplicity of having one gear.

  • @joshyfuess7365
    @joshyfuess7365 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I've been riding my CINELLI shark 50/16 for a few years now. We tour, commute, take on rides most folk would question, but I'd not have it any other way haha! There's this connection to riding Brakeless that seems to change the focus on what I thought cycling might be. People always question my bike and how I ride it (especially on big tours), but it feels so natural to myself now. It isn't always easy in the hills, but it definitely creates a fun journey haha! Love this video too BTW. 👊

  • @lucborot2219
    @lucborot2219 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thanks for raising all these questions. Now in my 60s, my joints are not in a condition to stand the cadence dowhill nor the muscular effort uphill, for sure, and my fixie memories from my racing days in the youth categories 50 years ago in the Paris region are more awful than awesome ;)
    I rode a 42x17 for 3 weeks between seasons, and though I benefitted from the very specific handling of the fixie (but on track, I also did...), I was scared of most steep climbs. Not of long ones, as I was very light and a bit of a climber. I felt danger in descents in urban contexts (stop and go, as you suggest), crazy corners, opening car doors, etc...) though not on open roads, as there were fewer surprise events; I used my brakes if it really got scary. I also use my track skills to slow down my pedalling, but it was pretty painful: honestly, I wouldn't recommend it to anyone 1/ in their right senses, 2/ with even minor knee problems: in that case, use your brakes, for the Lord's sake, guys!
    My conclusion: the minuses beat the pluses by a pretty wide margin. But if you're young and super fit, go for it. But always remember NEVER to stop pedalling :D

    • @___Bebo___
      @___Bebo___ Před 8 měsíci

      Just ride a 40/18 and a freewheel and use your bodyweight at slow speeds standing and don't press down. If you can ride a normal bike you can ride a 40/18.

  • @ConsciousBreaks
    @ConsciousBreaks Před 8 měsíci +34

    A big advantage of fixed gear bikes is the control you get at slow speeds, as you can pedal forward and apply pressure backward to modulate your speed without tipping over. This is very useful to get around tight spaces, e.g. traffic, people, tight corners, etc. This can't be done as effectively with brakes.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +3

      Track stands feel great too 👌

    • @lucborot2219
      @lucborot2219 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I sort of agree, but... the impact on your knees, esp. patella and meniscus, is pretty bad.

    • @thesimplecooks
      @thesimplecooks Před 8 měsíci +1

      This is why fixed gear is the only way when riding a tall bike

    • @ConsciousBreaks
      @ConsciousBreaks Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@lucborot2219 As long as you're not overgeared and not using the fixed gear to brake, it's shouldn't really be much worse on your knees.

    • @coopaloopmex
      @coopaloopmex Před 5 měsíci

      TallBike!!!!@@thesimplecooks

  • @eddysobieralski8075
    @eddysobieralski8075 Před 8 měsíci +4

    @ Conor - I think you may be slightly over-geared if this is your 1st fixed gear training experience. Try to aim for around 72" - you're over 79" at the moment on your 44/15 gearing. You'll have a better experience on the hills and rollers. There's still nowhere to hide on the hills but it won't bust your knees so much! 😎
    I've spent years training on fixed gear and they are fun for hard training sessions - not so much in the stop-start of suburban environments - but a joy in rolling countryside.

  • @Stigwoodjohn
    @Stigwoodjohn Před 8 měsíci

    Got two fixies Langster Steel and Condor Classic Fixed. Great commute bikes and real workhorses. Really connects you to the road. Love them.

  • @andresbarboza4276
    @andresbarboza4276 Před 8 měsíci +2

    One of the main benefits I’ve found on the long run is the core strength it gives you for other biking disciplines. For Mtb it makes climbing on the saddle much easier and on road bikes it gives you strength for handling off the saddle. Additionally it makes tracking your pedals much easier. Helping avoid hitting your pedals against objects on Mtb, road, and park.

  • @senorwoohooSD
    @senorwoohooSD Před 8 měsíci +3

    The best tip for climbing and descending on a fixie is to pull up in the pedal stroke (assuming your riding clipless). On a climb, it saves your knees because your using your calves and quads to pull up and not your knees to push down. Since it's fixed the opposite pedal will natural be forced down. On an incline, pulling up on the pedal stroke will force your butt into the sit and keep you from bouncing around, especially when you really start flying!

  • @robertomaldonado7397
    @robertomaldonado7397 Před 8 měsíci +4

    All my PRs on hill climbs are on my fixie, love climbing on my fixie but don’t look forward to the downhill. I also love coming to a stop and just track standing until it’s time to go, looks badass, unfortunately I haven’t been able to replicate these skills on my geared bike.

  • @OGchickentnt
    @OGchickentnt Před 8 měsíci

    My college commuter is a brakeless Fixie, and it’s fantastic. It’s made me way better at keeping track of my surroundings because I can’t stop very fast, which has really translated to my pack riding ability

  • @immatureradical
    @immatureradical Před 8 měsíci +1

    I've been riding a fixie as a quick/cheap/utilitarian replacement when my bike was stolen a decade ago. I've always been riding a bit of everything, from BMX to road, so at least it wasn't something to get used to. Now at 39, I'm sticking with it for everyday commuting and rides that are not much longer than a couple of hours, or particularly hard due to elevation. Only thing is, the last couple of years I've turned the flip flop hub to the freewheel side and rarely turn it around now. Much of the mentioned benefits apply to singlespeed as well, so we can remind people that they could enjoy the simplicity and still be able to coast. Freewheel reduces some of the efficiency/average speed as your momentum no longer contributes to spinning the cranks, and I still prefer fixed in the rain and some other occasions, but my knees will hang on for longer like this I think. And being able to turn absolutely on the limit without having to pedal inside corners is also fun. Interestingly, when I got a geared bike again after 7 years where the fixie was my only one, I felt I was riding exactly as I was the last time I had one, as if the fixie didn't alter anything at all.

  • @nathanielranario7618
    @nathanielranario7618 Před 8 měsíci +6

    You used to feature fixed gear crit races such as the Red Hook Crit. Kindly feature it again. I’m such a fan of fixed gears. In fact I own one and I ride it to work. Cheers!

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +2

      We'll see what we can do... Hank might not fancy it again 👀

    • @natureshamy
      @natureshamy Před 8 měsíci +3

      All the more reason to feature it again.@@gcn

  • @nerigarcia7116
    @nerigarcia7116 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I rode fixed for a while but my old knees couldn't take it much more so I just ended up riding single-speed. It was weird riding SS or on my road bike and realizing that I could freewheel. It made me better in that I would continue to spin and just soft pedal to rest instead of freewheeling, which you should probably do anyway.

  • @noone1eft
    @noone1eft Před 8 měsíci +1

    Story time: I have tried fixed gear and crashed. That was my friend's bike. It was homemade using some cheap details, frame from 70s and had no brakes, so if you want to stop you should push pedals the opposite direction. Wether it was my inner insanity or thirst for speed I wanted to break my own speed record. We met on one of the most popular places in Kyiv among the cyclists, as there was everything you can dream about: flat and good quality road surface, speed limit for cars and magic feel of a pine forest surrounding the road. At that point I had tried a fixie before but had only few rides on my road bike. So we swapped our bikes and I gave it a try. I started speeding up and it went absolutely smooth. I honestly liked it and wanted more. During the ride I stepped on the pedals but I lost my inner feel of balance and bike leaned on the left side. I crashed. I can describe my condition as adrenaline planning about how to get away off the road as there were cars behind me. I quickly got up and started inspecting injuries. To my suprise I had only big scratches on my legs and my left pocket of the shorts was ripped by the keys laying there. I checked the bike then. And it made great. I only ripped the leather on the saddle and handlebar wrapping. We went to McDonald's and I checked strava. Turns out I crashed on the speed of 44km/h. The fact that I was not wearing any protection and got no major injuries fascinates me till now.

  • @doodlydiddle
    @doodlydiddle Před 8 měsíci +2

    Love my fixed gear bike for commuting and winter training. Mainly have it for its robust simplicity. There is very little to go wrong, and the chains last 3x the miles of my geared bikes.
    It’s fun to ride too….hard to explain why, but those who ride them will know.

  • @ragwort3369
    @ragwort3369 Před 8 měsíci +10

    I love riding fixed wheel. I use one sometimes for a fairly hilly commute through the Forest of Dean as well as an occasional longer ride. Fixies feel alive in a way geared bikes just don't; the closest thing to running on wheels.

    • @philippsaga4180
      @philippsaga4180 Před 8 měsíci +3

      So true you feel like one fast creature...totally one with the bike

    • @nuttycommuter3718
      @nuttycommuter3718 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Agree with this completely. I adore riding fixed (until I hit a headwind)

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +1

      You do feel a close connection with the road! Great to hear you are doing the bike commute 🙌

  • @LibertarianBiker
    @LibertarianBiker Před 8 měsíci +3

    Fixies make the bike feel like an extension of your body. This synchronicity of human and machine is intoxicating and joyous.

  • @dwson87
    @dwson87 Před 8 měsíci

    Rode a fixie in my younger years, I credit it with training me on keeping a steady cadence and keeping my legs moving. Tried riding one again a few years ago and realized how much I like having gears and being able to actually get up hills.

  • @cecilecorpuz5735
    @cecilecorpuz5735 Před 9 dny

    When you are coming up onto a red traffic light reduce you speed and anticipate the coming of the green light, when it turns green. then apply the power, same thing for stop signs.
    When living in the U.S. Santa Barbara California I was with a friend and we noticed a troop of fixie riders riding down hill at speed while straddling the double yellow, so we decided to watch them as they came flying by! Then all of the sudden we realized that the lead rider was my son Benny, my friend said Hey! That's Benny! Way Back in the early 80's I was way a head of the time of riding fixies, we were riding full out track bikes back then, those were the days of, Hey! Mom, look, no brakes.
    One of my best riding road bikes was Modifide TRACK Bike that was converted to road and it was a beast! Due to the riding characteristics of a TRACK bike for sure it got me out of few tight places like getting out of tight squeeze when being squeezed by 2 city buses, that's what I would call riding for day light, when applying to power, it did what I needed it to do for me, end game I shot out from between the 2 busses like a rocket at that time I think there was less than 3 feet between the 2 busses, my elbows were scrapping on both of the busses, I was torking so hard the back wheel lifting and was slamming the side of the busses as well, Bang! Bang! Bang! For sures that was a SUPER adrenaline rush! The next day I dropped into the shop of the frame builder, Dale Saso who was the frame builder for this frame, he looked at me and said why were you playing games with the busses, I looked at him and aske what are you talking about, he then I was sitting in the bus on your left side and I saw everything, then the other frame builder Jeff Lyon and he said, Dale told me about the buss situation, he then went out side to look at my bike then he said, what is this, a f*cking TRACK/ROAD BIKE! We need to get you on the TRACK!

  • @kielh7411
    @kielh7411 Před 8 měsíci +16

    I've used a fix gear with no brakes for my flat, sub mile commute and short errands for the past decade. I dont ever go fast on it for fear of not being able to stop, but it has helped a lot with my track stands and I can even peddle backwards a decent bit now. Just a super fun, unique riding experience.

    • @vincekerrigan8300
      @vincekerrigan8300 Před 8 měsíci +4

      kiel. What's the point of that. Put brakes on and ride as fast as you like.

    • @nuttycommuter3718
      @nuttycommuter3718 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@vincekerrigan8300 and (in the UK at least) means you’re legal

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci +1

      Would you ever consider fitting a brake on your bike? Even if it was just a front brake?

    • @rossmax767
      @rossmax767 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Need to fit one brake to keep yourself legal

    • @kielh7411
      @kielh7411 Před 8 měsíci

      I've got other bikes to go fast. I used to have one brake, but I pulled it off when retaping my bars and just kind of liked it. Definitely an acquired taste.

  • @alienrefugee51
    @alienrefugee51 Před 7 měsíci +3

    The key to enjoyable and efficient fixed gear riding, is finding the proper gear ratio for your terrain. Not just your legs, but it will really help build up your core strength. There's nothing better feeling than the the way a fixed gear makes you feel connected to the bike. The machine becomes a part of you. You must tame the bull.

  • @kevingarland9714
    @kevingarland9714 Před 8 měsíci

    I love riding my Fixie throughout the winter, it keeps my track season going strong. Although going up a 12% gradient climb on the way home is tough. Cycling at its purest.

  • @agusriwanto3017
    @agusriwanto3017 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I am also a big fan of fixed gear bike.... I have ridden my fixed gear bike since 2010... I still ride the same bike till now... the maintainance that I have to do is only changing the tyres... Love it so much...❤

  • @donnynorlander
    @donnynorlander Před 8 měsíci +3

    I love my steel fixed gear bike. It's worth mentioning that fixed gear bikes tend to be lighter with no shifters/derailleurs, narrower hubs, and usually rim breaks (my steel fixed gear is about 18 lbs), and you always have a perfect chainline. That somewhat offsets the climbing disadvantage compared to a geared bike.

  • @billcodey1430
    @billcodey1430 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Single speed with freewheel is nice...

  • @a1white
    @a1white Před 8 měsíci

    loved this video. Conor’s enthusiasm is great. I wouldn’t mind trying one, though having no freehub seems a bit scary. It goes against all we’re told about maintaining a regular cadence for efficiency (which I don’t do anyway 😅)

  • @jackandrew3579
    @jackandrew3579 Před 8 měsíci

    Nice to see some fixie and SingelSpeed action on GCN! I now only ride SS both gravel and road. No longer ride fixed down to safety

  • @gotbikes6067
    @gotbikes6067 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Larger ratio + riding up hill = TRAINING!!

  • @addvurtbikes
    @addvurtbikes Před 8 měsíci +3

    Fixed gear, every day ❤

  • @levbobrov1398
    @levbobrov1398 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I had a pretty flat 8km commute for a few years and was doing it on a single speed bike with a flip flop hub: it can be either a fixie or you can flip the wheel and it becomes freewheel. I tried riding it like a fixie several times and the most sketchy parts were going over potholes and merging into traffic, when you have to really look over your shoulder. So, I switched back to freewheel.

  • @tomcosgrove7240
    @tomcosgrove7240 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I love riding fixed gear. I started in 2012 after an infection in my leg put me out of action for months. I lost kilos of weight, lots of it muscle, and I am certain that riding the fixie helped me get back to full strength much faster - I even went on to timetrial (I'm in the UK) on a fixed gear bike too!

  • @drivelikeyouknowthem
    @drivelikeyouknowthem Před 8 měsíci +3

    Love my fixie. Cycling in its purest form without any gadget crap. Smooth, light, reliable and fast, I can remember leaving a road bike rider behind after a standing start and hearing him change up through his gears 4 times before he finally passed me, and only because I was spinning out.

    • @whatwelearned
      @whatwelearned Před 8 měsíci +1

      Gadgets such as gears, you mean?

    • @mx2000
      @mx2000 Před 8 měsíci +1

      “Only because I was spinning out” - you mean gears were an advantage in exactly the situation that gears were designed to help with? 😂

  • @MrOryly
    @MrOryly Před 8 měsíci +10

    I love single speed, fixie not so much.

    • @gcn
      @gcn  Před 8 měsíci

      What is it about fixed that you don't get on with?

    • @MrOryly
      @MrOryly Před 8 měsíci

      @@gcn That I have to pedal all the time. At the velodrome sure, why not, but commuting, well... nope :)

    • @dhuaib5184
      @dhuaib5184 Před 8 měsíci

      ⁠No downhill scare. You can coast, position your legs for lean, and brake rather easily.

  • @banjomechanic
    @banjomechanic Před 8 měsíci

    I love riding fixed. I rode organized metrics in Tennessee on one and people thought I was nuts. It really wasn’t too bad since that’s all I rode. I had 48x18 which is great on climbs but descending can be a little spinny. It’s easier to stop brakeless as well. I love my road and gravel bikes, but fixed gear keeps it simple and opens up a whole other world of cycling culture.

  • @hansschotterradler3772
    @hansschotterradler3772 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I wouldn't mind trying a single-speed; but would not want a fixie. How do you lean into a corner when descending without the pedal striking the tarmac??

    • @potto5485
      @potto5485 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Do a skid, it will be very cool

    • @philippsaga4180
      @philippsaga4180 Před 8 měsíci

      Its a bit shorter so your pedal wont hit

    • @CwazyWabbits
      @CwazyWabbits Před 8 měsíci +3

      Most frames designed for fixed gear have a higher bottom bracket than a geared bike frame. I use track frames and haven't had any issues with pedal strike.

    • @hansschotterradler3772
      @hansschotterradler3772 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@potto5485 I don't want to donate skin cells and blood to the tarmac.

    • @nuttycommuter3718
      @nuttycommuter3718 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@CwazyWabbitsespecially if your fixie is a proper track bike

  • @SORBETVM
    @SORBETVM Před 8 měsíci +9

    Now take the brakes off

  • @ManCannotRide
    @ManCannotRide Před 7 měsíci

    We just bought a fixie 2 days ago. It's my son's. He's 12. It's his first bike. For me, it's also my first time on a fixie and I can already feel more better things about it compared to road bikes and mountain bikes. We ride urban streets, barely any elevation changes and just the usual black tarmac, rough cement, etc. My son said he does not want complicated shifters and I myself don't want to do complicated setup and settings, repairs and maintenance. I am a bigbike rider (motorcycle above 400cc) and I can appreciate the continous pedalling on a fixie like it's maintenance throttle on a motorcycle and smoothly slowing down on a fixie feels like engine braking on my bigbike. I love the fixie on corners. Mind you, I have ridden road bikes and mountain bikes and I have had my share of fast sprints, uphills and downhills. It is more difficult to do those things on a fixie but like I said, we barely ride fast, up, and down, where we are located so a fixie is a really practical choice for a bike. My son's fixie is a Celt V1. I am planning to buy the Celt V2 next.

  • @davidatkinson-lifematters4826
    @davidatkinson-lifematters4826 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Single-speed bikes are great fun, and brilliant for the winter (or hard training). Fixies though are an accident waiting to happen. Tried them both, and single-speeders are miles better.

    • @vincekerrigan8300
      @vincekerrigan8300 Před 8 měsíci +3

      david. Of course they are not. Use front and rear brakes, get accustomed andthey are as safe as a freewheel.

    • @ragwort3369
      @ragwort3369 Před 8 měsíci

      Fixed wheel bikes are great. You do need to get used to them, though, and they're not for everyone.

    • @davidatkinson-lifematters4826
      @davidatkinson-lifematters4826 Před 8 měsíci

      @@vincekerrigan8300 I have a couple (and Orro, and a Spesh Langster). Tried fixie with the Orro, brakes and all, but my knees 😫
      I'm sure they're fine for those who persist, but you get most of that simplicity from riding with the freewheeling option.

    • @vincekerrigan8300
      @vincekerrigan8300 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@davidatkinson-lifematters4826The freewheeling actually removes one of the major sensations of riding a fixed wheel, that of being at one with the machine. This is not a myth.

  • @onebigtentdweller9603
    @onebigtentdweller9603 Před 8 měsíci +6

    There's a large segment of fixie riders that don't have brakes on their bikes as well.

  • @Imjamul9692
    @Imjamul9692 Před 8 měsíci

    Hey Conor loved your video. I personally ride 49:16 Fixie and Single Speed Bike with brakes as a Bike Messenger in my city. Hope to more Fixed Gear videos in the future.
    Here is a Challenge for uphill presenter: Everesting on Fixed Gear Bike. Suggestion for Everesting, you could use the gear ratio 42:17. Thanks a lot Conor.

  • @andr350
    @andr350 Před 8 měsíci

    I ride fixed gear for 5 years its real that makes you stronger rider i live in colombia and we have a lot of mountains my gear ratio is 15-39 very good for colombian hills! Great video!!

  • @69Deez_Nutz69
    @69Deez_Nutz69 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Single speed with brakes 👍
    Fixie 🤬

    • @ragwort3369
      @ragwort3369 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Fixie with brakes? That's what I use.

  • @blaze1148
    @blaze1148 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Don't have to buy a _fixy_ - just don't change gear.

    • @youtuli4
      @youtuli4 Před 8 měsíci

      it doesn't work that way

    • @blaze1148
      @blaze1148 Před 8 měsíci

      @@youtuli4Explain please....

    • @youtuli4
      @youtuli4 Před 8 měsíci

      @@blaze1148 A fixed gear has inertia and a thick chain. You can maintain either a high cadence of 130 rpm or climb hills while standing for a very long time.

    • @blaze1148
      @blaze1148 Před 8 měsíci

      @@youtuli4Sounds dangerous if you cannot keep up with the cadence downhill.

  • @adamaitken1228
    @adamaitken1228 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I ride fixed in that very city and it was fun to see you struggle up some of my daily climbs 😜 fixed gear has pushed my fitness and cycling ability for sure. Dont ride anything else now. Great video 👍

  • @PaulJakma
    @PaulJakma Před 8 měsíci

    Stephen Roche apparently spent his winters training on fixed gear. Many road pros have had lots of track experience, as you note.
    I switched my commuter last Autumn to fixed, after getting fed up with the maintenance overheads and breakages you get running a modern groupset through a Celtic Isles winter. There's no shifter to wear out or jam with muck from the road. The chain on a fixed gear is much thicker and harder-wearing, last much longer. The sprocket and chainrings can have thicker teeth - and they're cheaper. The bottom bracket and crankset are tried-and-tested threaded and square-taper - no squeaking! I didn';t realise a bike could be _that_ quiet!
    Strength wise I've noticed a difference. My commute is mostly flat, with about a quarter of it at a ~1% incline - which is downhill with the prevailing wind for my commute in in the morning. I've got the bike geared to be fast / on the gear for that morning commute with a 50:16. Which means, more often than not, I get a strength work-out on the commute home going up the 1%, and against the wind nearly all the way home. It basically turns my flat commute home into something more like a 40 minute alpine climb effort - 80 rpm or lower efforts for tens of minutes. On the worst days, down into the low 70s, and 60s in spots.
    I've noticed I've developed new groups of muscle on the inside and inside back of my legs, which never got developed before in years of cycling. There is a little punchy stretch of a sprinty climb - maybe 2.5% to 3% for 600 metres - and I've become much faster on it with my fixed gear than ever before. Maybe in part cause I've no choice but to attack that semi-climb - going too slow and grinding feels worse! :) So... Definitely it has helped.
    It's also given me "range" on my cadence. My legs are now _much_ more comfortable over a very wide range of RPM. My legs will both happily spin away, and also torque over the cranks at 70 rpm (well, maybe not happily in the latter case, but happier than before). My legs are more versatile.
    It helps with cornering too. You learn to be smoother. Though, the short cranks on track inspired fixed gears helps here, as does the high BB on street-orientated fixed gear bikes. That's another thing: I've discovered that short cranks are _really_ good. I used to go for 172.5 or 175mm cranks before, but...165mm is /so/ nice. It's actually a really nice pedal stroke. And I don't have little short legs. (Plus, better cornering wrt reduced pedal strike risk).
    tl;dr: I really recommend getting a fixed gear for commuting and training.

  • @abosworth
    @abosworth Před 8 měsíci +4

    I don't think there is any good argument to riding one of these archaic bikes. The only decent argument I've heard is becasue it's extreme. Fair enough but all of the other arguments are just silly to me.

    • @philippsaga4180
      @philippsaga4180 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Beside beeing totally in Controller once you learned it

    • @ChutneyGames
      @ChutneyGames Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@philippsaga4180dude pulled out the manual car argument for fixies

    • @buttlesschap
      @buttlesschap Před 8 měsíci +2

      Track/velodrome cyclist would hard disagree with you.

    • @ragwort3369
      @ragwort3369 Před 8 měsíci

      Fixies are a lot of fun. You merely ride a geared bike, but you wear a fixie.

    • @abosworth
      @abosworth Před 8 měsíci +1

      I don't mean to shit on them. If you like riding one, have at it.

  • @mylan3707
    @mylan3707 Před 8 měsíci

    these comments are so heartwarming. most roadies in my area seem to hate or find ppl who ride fixed annoying.

  • @charlesblithfield6182
    @charlesblithfield6182 Před 8 měsíci

    It’s fun to read training programs from the 70s advising a few months of fixie riding at the beginning of the season and long low intensity riding at very high cadence to “re-develop leg capillaries” and to lose weight, plus riding on rollers. This is because it seems in the program I read they assume you take the winter off from most intense exercise. The program did advise hiking in winter and particularly climbing hills for leg strength.

  • @Fxd_bean
    @Fxd_bean Před 8 měsíci

    been riding fixed for years now currently one of the best freestyle riders in the uk although i don’t do the stuf you guys do i still aprechate the fixed love

  • @michaelfreeman2399
    @michaelfreeman2399 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I've been riding fixed gears for 6 years now and absolutely love it. Plenty of 100, 150, 200km rides in the UK and cant recommend it enough. I've got a road and gravel bike now, which are okay in their own right, but nothing will ever be as fun to me as fixed

  • @xsvd34d75
    @xsvd34d75 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I rock a 53:16, I ride mostly flat with mine, but I do love a good descent. Mad enough to enjoy the higher speeds, feels more rewarding to me. I've found its helped me for hills when I forgot to change gear but can still power through them rather than changing gear at a near standstill.

    • @dominicmorones8314
      @dominicmorones8314 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yup, I have a similar set up. Pretty much all flat where I’m at and I too love the high speed. I have a front 180mm disc in the front. Hopefully save my knees even a little bit from decelerating. Running 56/15.

  • @suhdud4646
    @suhdud4646 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I just recently hit my PB on my fixie on a 100km loop around my city at 2h52 running a 49/15 ratio.
    I haven't tried the same loop on a road bike for comparison.

  • @nickbrownbill3413
    @nickbrownbill3413 Před 8 měsíci

    Really enjoyed this video. I tried commuting on a fixie for a while but I think it reduces the use of my commute (which I normally use for Z2 miles) by forcing me to work harder over the climbs. On a geared bike, for a recovery commute or Z2 commute I can just click down the gears and spin. Definitely improves pedalling effeciency but it feels like a pretty minor benefit with some pretty big tradeoffs to me.

  • @ivanjerganoff280
    @ivanjerganoff280 Před 8 měsíci

    I have one for work commute...fairly it has short climbs and long flats..easy to maintain rain or shine. Im tempted to paint it white..seeing yours with that beautiful white paint.

  • @PJ-yx5zw
    @PJ-yx5zw Před 8 měsíci

    Love my fixed gear bike. Bought it as a pub and commute bike, but now I've started training on it both indoors (rollers) and outside. Just love the simplicity of it. As a fixed gear rider, I get plenty of Kudos from the passing cyclists on the hills.

  • @hugomundo4826
    @hugomundo4826 Před 8 měsíci

    I currently work with food delivery with a 38x20 steel frame mtb with coaster brakes and 700x32 tyres.
    I love my little monster

  • @kokonut5
    @kokonut5 Před 8 měsíci

    I ride a fixie as a commuter bike on weekdays and a downhill bike on the weekends on the trails. I use it as stamina training and it worked wonders for me.

  • @bikelawman
    @bikelawman Před 8 měsíci +1

    I went half-way and bought a single-speed (freewheel, 49/17) bike for commuting and running local errands around the town - frankly, if any of my bikes are going to be stolen, I’d rather it was the single-speed (because it is the cheapest bike I own). Mainly did this to reduce wear and tear as well as costly maintenance on my geared bikes because I ride every day to work, (almost) all weathers. So it has decent mudguards on it which remain on all year ‘round.
    Unintentional byproduct of using it is seeing how much of the video is correct: improves pedalling technique, makes you think more about where to generate and how to maintain momentum and it certainly improves hill climbing because you soon realise the only way to achieve something close to ‘gears’ is to realise the difference in bike handling when sitting or standing.
    Recommend everyone gives it a go - surprising enjoyment and it’s also amusing how many people assume it’s an ebike and make cheeky comments about cheating, when in reality it’s the opposite of cheating!

  • @333wonky
    @333wonky Před 8 měsíci

    I ride a fixie I have two hand built by my self set fixed sometimes single speed I’m 56 years old rode bmx in the 80s so just carried on love the fun and the climbing

  • @lukesolomon3010
    @lukesolomon3010 Před 8 měsíci

    Never gone fixed but have always rode single speed road and MTB love them a underated bike the simplicity is just great your never in the wrong gear you just get on with it

  • @HWEder
    @HWEder Před 8 měsíci

    Riding fixed, especially in the winter, is something that I've seen around where I live for decades. This was popular well before it became mainstream and was accepted as a normal part of training. I use fixed at times when I feel I want to increase my strength endurance or sometimes just for a change. Both geared and fixed cycling are just as enjoyable to me.

  • @theubc
    @theubc Před 7 měsíci

    been riding my fixie ten years i love it univega steel road conversion velocity deep v front gold 650 back 700 white no brakes supercustom cranks

  • @MegicShiba
    @MegicShiba Před 8 měsíci

    Ive been brakeless on my fixed gear and its quite the ride. My setup is a steel frame with wide risers and going thru the city on the thing is sketchy fun thanks to all the hills. Climbing is great too because of the direct connection, just pop out the saddle and you can get up anywhere. Going to that bike as my main has for sure made me feel more confident on a standard bike when it comes to control but the feeling of fixed to coast is a little funny feeling for the first few moments.

  • @GeeFunk84
    @GeeFunk84 Před 8 měsíci

    I boughtmyself a Pinarello Psta frame as a birthday present for myself a few menoths ago.I had never ridden a fixie before, but I was super-eager to try it. When all the necessary parts have arrived and I finally managed to assemble it and went for a test ride, I was scared for my life and I kept thinking I'm going back home and I'm selling this. I asked for advice about gearing and pedals to be used, which proved to be so helpful that the next ride was some of the best I've ever taken. I wouldn't have imagined, but I've become a complete fixie convert and I'm assembling a second, "pub-bike" for everyday use.

  • @jimnaismith1123
    @jimnaismith1123 Před 8 měsíci

    Another great thing about a fixie is that it's the only bike you can put the drivetrain on the left hand side - my winter bike has a Hope fat bike front hub at the rear, with a sprocket that bolts on to the 6 bolt rotor fitting. I've swapped over the threats on the cranks and fitted them back to front. The whole thing works a dream, and looks a bit different.

  • @llOV3RCHARG3ll
    @llOV3RCHARG3ll Před 8 měsíci

    I only ride fixed. Its the best way to enjoy cycling for me. You have such an amazing connection with the bike and then atmosphere because of it.

  • @31763660
    @31763660 Před 8 měsíci

    When road bikes got more complicated and I was left out of my depth with e-shifting bike with hydraulic brakes maintenance, I turned to my old, trusty Nagasawa used keirin bike. Now, it's all I ride. I change the rear sprocket from time to time, but I think my adaptation was accelerated by losing the brakes (no holes on the Nag). The downside is that I really have to control my speed downhill, and that is the upside too. I get an entirely different leg workout trying to keep it slow. No, I don't get the same kinds of workouts that I used to on my old Campy 10 based Merckx, but then again, I was never a TdF contender either. I have a NOS Colnago Master Pista, an old Bianchi Pista Concept from 2005, a Serotta "Big Dig" from 1998 - with nitto dove bar beach cruiser bars, and my trusty Nagasawa. Great fun.