Hey all, I'm Jason (friends call me Smitty) from Lake Mary, FL. I'm new to this board so I thought I'd say hi and show off my bike and put down a few thoughts.
Before I bought the kit, I read over the site several times and thought I was ready and knew what I needed. So, I went in search of a donor bike. Garage sales were a bust. Police station near by didn't have anything. So, I looked on Craigslist and found what I thought was going to be a great bike for only $50. Long story short, I have spent just as much fixing the donor as I did on the kit itself. New tires, new rims, new grips, new break/shift levers, new stem. Pretty much the only thing that is still original from the donor is the actual frame. Everything else is new. Here is a link to the pics I have on the Yahoo groups.
http://sports.ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/Cruzbike/photos/browse/efca
I do have to hand it to my local bike shop, though. The guys at David's World Cycle are great. They handled all of my questions and gave a little bit of advice here and there. I had to have them finish changing out the cranks and re-doing the cables for me. Between the Lake Mary store and the Altamonte store, they have only built one other Cruzbike at all. And that one was a Silvio the guy brought in to have them put together.
I got the bike back from the LBS on Tues and its Thur now. I am just to the point when I can ride it around my complex and not feel like I'm going to fall over every 10 feet. I think this weekend I'm actually going to take it on the bike trail (paved lol) that is near my house. After I get to the point that I could ride in a fairly straight line with confidence, this bike will become my daily commuter. Traffic .. hmmmm..
On a side note, I do have a little bit of banter to leave for the guys at Cruzbike. I'm hoping that they keep an eye on these boards and take some intake to help out future Cruz'rs. So, here goes. The instructions that came with the kit need ALOT more pics. The pic they have for the front triangle is a "little" misleading. It shows a triangle with the derailer hole on the wrong side of the bike. It also needs some pics of the actual progress of putting the bike together. Separating (and putting in pics) the sections of "ahead type stem" and "quil type stem" would have been great and caused ALOT less stress. Basically, make the instructions a little more user friendly with pics, instead of just "match part A to part B and insert part C. Then at part F ..." I think the guys at my LBS had to explain more to me what it all meant more than any work I had them do.
For people getting this kit, please pay close attention to what donor bike you get. The examples that are on the website are great, but they do leave a few things out that you don't notice until the LBS tells you it will cost $100 extra to fix it. Outside of what suggestions the website shows, make sure you pay attention to:
Size of the post the front derailer is attached to (the one right above your pedals). The reason: the new post the kit has is a "larger" size post. If you buy/have an older bike that you are converting, you will need to buy a new front derailer.
Rear derailer needs to be a "screw on" type, not one that is attached to the axle. Reason: the new triangle has a threaded hole for the rear derailer to make the kit work. If you buy/have an older bike you will need a new "rear" derailer.
Try to find a donor bike that already has an "ahead" type stem (the part that the handle bars attach to). This in itself will save you ALOT of headache.
Well, I will keep everyone up to date on my progress. This is my first recumbent after all .. let me say that again for all the guys that have been doing this for years ... this is my FIRST BENT.
Happy riding
Smitty
Before I bought the kit, I read over the site several times and thought I was ready and knew what I needed. So, I went in search of a donor bike. Garage sales were a bust. Police station near by didn't have anything. So, I looked on Craigslist and found what I thought was going to be a great bike for only $50. Long story short, I have spent just as much fixing the donor as I did on the kit itself. New tires, new rims, new grips, new break/shift levers, new stem. Pretty much the only thing that is still original from the donor is the actual frame. Everything else is new. Here is a link to the pics I have on the Yahoo groups.
http://sports.ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/Cruzbike/photos/browse/efca
I do have to hand it to my local bike shop, though. The guys at David's World Cycle are great. They handled all of my questions and gave a little bit of advice here and there. I had to have them finish changing out the cranks and re-doing the cables for me. Between the Lake Mary store and the Altamonte store, they have only built one other Cruzbike at all. And that one was a Silvio the guy brought in to have them put together.
I got the bike back from the LBS on Tues and its Thur now. I am just to the point when I can ride it around my complex and not feel like I'm going to fall over every 10 feet. I think this weekend I'm actually going to take it on the bike trail (paved lol) that is near my house. After I get to the point that I could ride in a fairly straight line with confidence, this bike will become my daily commuter. Traffic .. hmmmm..
On a side note, I do have a little bit of banter to leave for the guys at Cruzbike. I'm hoping that they keep an eye on these boards and take some intake to help out future Cruz'rs. So, here goes. The instructions that came with the kit need ALOT more pics. The pic they have for the front triangle is a "little" misleading. It shows a triangle with the derailer hole on the wrong side of the bike. It also needs some pics of the actual progress of putting the bike together. Separating (and putting in pics) the sections of "ahead type stem" and "quil type stem" would have been great and caused ALOT less stress. Basically, make the instructions a little more user friendly with pics, instead of just "match part A to part B and insert part C. Then at part F ..." I think the guys at my LBS had to explain more to me what it all meant more than any work I had them do.
For people getting this kit, please pay close attention to what donor bike you get. The examples that are on the website are great, but they do leave a few things out that you don't notice until the LBS tells you it will cost $100 extra to fix it. Outside of what suggestions the website shows, make sure you pay attention to:
Size of the post the front derailer is attached to (the one right above your pedals). The reason: the new post the kit has is a "larger" size post. If you buy/have an older bike that you are converting, you will need to buy a new front derailer.
Rear derailer needs to be a "screw on" type, not one that is attached to the axle. Reason: the new triangle has a threaded hole for the rear derailer to make the kit work. If you buy/have an older bike you will need a new "rear" derailer.
Try to find a donor bike that already has an "ahead" type stem (the part that the handle bars attach to). This in itself will save you ALOT of headache.
Well, I will keep everyone up to date on my progress. This is my first recumbent after all .. let me say that again for all the guys that have been doing this for years ... this is my FIRST BENT.
Happy riding
Smitty