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CoreDefence

New Member
I'm new here, I own a bike, a cheap mountain bike from the 1990s, ridden it twice, hate it with some passion. The reason for hating it is that I'm 60, overweight, have bad knees, and bandy legs but my heart is sound and my will is granite. Quite honestly, there's about 50% too much rubber on the road for me, pedalling is a nightmare. I recognise the incredible benefits to my health in taking up cycling but I've got the wrong kit and a limited income.
Question: could I change/swap the wheels on my mountain bike for some that are more road friendly?
If not I'd sell the mountain bike on eBay but what do I buy next? (LIMITED INCOME!)
Any other advice or mocking comment would be welcome from expert or beginner alike.
 

craven2354

Well-Known Member
Do you plan to only ride on the roads of will you be going down towpaths and such as well? :smile:
 

Pauluk

Senior Member
Location
Leicester
I know you say you have a limited income, but can you give us any idea of how much you could spend because changing wheels or even just tyres costs and you don't want to be throwing good money after bad, especially as you seem to hate it. Having said that, without knowing your bike there may be things you can do to improve it.

If you can't afford to change the bike you could put slicker tyres on the current wheels. Does it have an alloy frame? Are the current wheels alloy?
 

Crosstrailer

Well-Known Member
Change the tyres to road tyres - it won't cost you a lot and will make a huge difference. I did this on my old MTB and could not believe how much of a difference it made to the riding experience.
 
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CoreDefence

New Member
craven2354: I wouldn't know a 'towpath' if it jumped up and hit me in the face, which is probably a certainty.
21st century roads and streets is the terrain I aspire to.
Pauluk: If I sold the bike I'd spend what I made. If I just changed the wheels I'd be able to afford/spend maybe £50-£60. If I mentioned the name of the bike here I bet only the poorest 1% would recognise it. As to the frame and wheels, alloy I s'pose, what are the options? It sure aint carbon fibre but I'm pretty sure it's not cast iron (although it feels like it may be when pedalling). Hate? I loved to ride my bike as a kid. I live in Derbyshire, really beautiful country. My motivation now is to try to get a bit fitter and extend my mortal coil. I just hate pedalling THIS bike.
 

guitarpete247

Just about surviving
Location
Leicestershire
What is the bike? If you can put a photo up someone will know what slick tyres will fit your wheels. Changing the tyres is much cheaper than changing the wheels.
I got some Schwalbe Land Cruisers for my old '80's Saracen. It's still heavy but I can tow a trailer with a 4 and 2 year old in it for 16 miles. I went for these tyres because it has a smooth tread pattern in the centre but still has the knobblies for off road if I want. Plus it has the p******e resistance of most Schwalbe tyres. The ones I have found on the link are the cheapest I've seen them.
 
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CoreDefence

New Member
By the way, I'm really grateful for the responses. The bike is Integra Phantom (90s) and it has a decal saying "Mountain Tracks"
 

Pauluk

Senior Member
Location
Leicester
CoreDefence said:
If I sold the bike I'd spend what I made. If I just changed the wheels I'd be able to afford/spend maybe £50-£60
If you sold your bike you may not get enough to then buy anything better anyway. If it's an alloy frame and wheels it shouldn't be that heavy. Without seeing the bike its very hard to give you the right advice but I would keep the wheels and fit slick tyres.

guitarpete mentions the land cruiser and there is also a more slick tyre:
http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/Models.aspx?ModelID=24629

You could just try changing the rear one first (the rear one is the drive wheel and that will give you the most rolling/pedaling benefit) to see what improvement you get before spending more money.
 
By the way, I'm really grateful for the responses. The bike is Integra Phantom (90s) and it has a decal saying "Mountain Tracks"
Just looked online, it looks ok to me. I would just change the tyres.

Oh and welcome to the forum.
 

Pauluk

Senior Member
Location
Leicester
CoreDefence said:
The bike is Integra Phantom
Not sure CD but I think that may be a steel frame so its going to always be harder work than an alloy bike and I'm not sure that I would want to spend anything on it especially as you say, you hate it and you not getting any younger.

If that's the case I would probably search for a bargain alloy bike putting your £50 to £60 to the pot to try and get a second hand Carrera Subway always assuming you can get anything for your MTB.

Hope this helps.

PS. Where abouts do you live as there may be people on here like me who have old alloy MTBs that they could sell you for a reasonable price.
 

simon.r

Person
Location
Nottingham
Not sure CD but I think that may be a steel frame so its going to always be harder work than an alloy bike and I'm not sure that I would want to spend anything on it especially as you say, you hate it and you not getting any younger.

If that's the case I would probably search for a bargain alloy bike putting your £50 to £60 to the pot to try and get a second hand Carrera Subway always assuming you can get anything for your MTB.

Hope this helps.

PS. Where abouts do you live as there may be people on here like me who have old alloy MTBs that they could sell you for a reasonable price.

A steel frame isn't necessarily going to be harder work than an alloy (aluminium) frame. I'd much sooner have a decent steel frame than a cheap and nasty aluminium one. Good steel frames have a lot going for them.

Re the OP - as others have said, if you're looking to improve the bike as cheaply as possible get some road tyres. Assuming the wheels are normal mountain bike size (26") there are numerous cheap slick / semi-slick options available which will make a world of difference to how the bike rides on the road.
 

Pauluk

Senior Member
Location
Leicester
simon.r said:
Good steel frames have a lot going for them.
Yes. Like antiquity, rust and kilogrammes. I don't think I've ever seen a nasty alloy one but may be I've not tried looking or just been lucky.
 

simon.r

Person
Location
Nottingham
Yes. Like antiquity, rust and kilogrammes. I don't think I've ever seen a nasty alloy one but may be I've not tried looking or just been lucky.

Sure, steel frames can be horrible, but a well designed and constructed one can be a joy to ride and well worth the small extra weight penalty.

If you've never ridden a really good steel frame I'd strongly recommend trying one out.

Although it is true that they all rust so badly that they have to be thrown away after about 5 years:sad:
 
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