First road bike purchase advice



Hannah Jur

New Member
Jun 11, 2016
4
0
1
27
Hi all,
I have a little experience on road bikes, however, most of my experience is on hybrid and mountain bikes.
Recently, I found a group that cycles about 40 miles twice a week on relatively flat roads. The group I will ride with will be riding between 15-20 mph and I hope to eventually graduate to a group riding about 25 mph.

I am currently looking for used bikes from local cyclists. I know I need a 50-52 cm frame and I am not looking to spend more than 300. Any advice on the material the bike should be made out of, the condition I should be looking for, or just general advice for someone purchasing that is new to the sport?

Thanks in advance.
 
Obviously, which you are doing, is to be looking at used bikes on Craigslist, garage sales, thrift type of stores, and maybe bike shops but these places tend to overprice them. I would recommend something more on the vintage side, meaning early 80's onward that is a steel frame bike near new condition rather than something more modern that is made of aluminium that the frame could be worn out...UNLESS the aluminium bike has been rarely ridden. I would recommend if you don't know what to look for in a bike and it's components is to either post bikes you find that you think will fit you here so we can advise you on it, or if you have a friend who is well versed on bikes including vintage bikes can locally advise you and even go with you to look at some.

You could try going to the group you're thinking of joining, or even that faster group as well, and asking them if they have an extra bike that is in your size that they're not using and wouldn't mind selling it to you. few of these people might have a stable of bikes and may want to downsize it and you could get lucky. The faster group may have a better opportunity for you because someone may have joined the faster group after buying a "faster" bike than they had before and now the old one is just sitting in their garage.

When looking for used bikes patience is the key, don't get into a rush. The good thing is due to your size small frame bikes do not sell for as much as the medium size frames due to demand.

New bikes in that price range are a lot more trouble than they're worth, so stay away from that temptation.

WARNING: I cannot recommend anyone buying a used carbon fiber bike unless you have a high degree of knowledge on how to check for possible damage. A lot of damage that occurs to CF bikes is hidden from view, sometimes the owner may not even know it's damaged that's how hidden it can be, most of the time they do know it's damaged but it's hidden so they'll sell to the unsuspecting fool.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Hannah Jur
Well, you can buy many good bikes under $300. I would recommend you to use the online sites for purchasing the bikes. Now-a-days, almost everyone knows the benefit of buying a bike online. You can get the same bike at the cheap price because the online dealers buy the bikes directly from the manufacturers.
 
Well, you can buy many good bikes under $300. I would recommend you to use the online sites for purchasing the bikes. Now-a-days, almost everyone knows the benefit of buying a bike online. You can get the same bike at the cheap price because the online dealers buy the bikes directly from the manufacturers.

From what I've seen from online bikes is that for $300 or so you doesn't buy you a much better bike then you could have gotten at Walmart! The problem with online is that as the price decreases so does the profit margin, thus when you get down to $300 and less the components are already bottom of the barrel stuff and so are the frames which both of those aspects are found on Walmart type of bikes. Online buying gets exponentially better as the price goes up vs bike stores.

$300 used bike will buy you a mid level bike that will be a lot more reliable than a $300 bottom level new online bike.