No problemDoes this mean I don't have to worry about riding an imaginary bikeand thanks for the discussion it was interesting


I have a bike which many would describe as a hybrid. It has off-road geometry and equipment but no suspension and slick tyres. When I bought it, in, erm, 1990, it was classed as an mountain bike, so I still refer to it as a "rigid MTB".

I am not denigrating the bikes at all. I'm sure there would be a space in my garage, at some stage in my life, for everything from a Poppy to a Sirrus, from a Horizon to a Mixer, all are fantastic bikes in their own way and all, IMO, warrant better titles than "hybrid".

An excellent analogy. I could say that I want a computer and be told I need a laptop.Same as someone buying say, a computer from me; if they came up and said 'I want a laptop' that's a pretty broad range of product so I'd want to know whether they wanted to play games on it, cart it around a lot, have it as a desktop replacement etc. etc. and go from there.
That is, as you suggest, only the first step sorted out, there are a lot more details needed before it is really usable, useful information.