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My first bike was $100 Craigslist find and my first car was $3k. |
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I’m also really glad I don't have to have only one bike. I was on the Supersix today after a few days on the Bingham and variety is pretty nice to have.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#33
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Same reason I buy 5 year old German cars every so often.
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#34
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Wahwah. What was I supposed to do? Junk it? It’s paid off and it will cost me a lot more to replace it with another vehicle and another LC would be even more. And I know what I have and another vehicle is a crap shoot.
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#36
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The bigger point slowpoke was making is that having $10k to drop on fixing an expensive vehicle is not something an average person does. The car I'm driving is significantly cheaper than the rebuild of your LC's engine. Saying 'You have to pay for hangar and maintenance for your Gulfstream! What are you gonna do? Scrap it?' might indicate that the $14k Bubba asked about is spare change to you. Saying that you're actually saving money by spending thousands is like telling homeless to get some passive income by investing in real estate.
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#37
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#38
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I like nice bikes, but tend to spend in the $2000-$4,000 range on new or insanely nice used bikes. Most of the current bikes I ride fall in that range and I don't feel I am missing anything with them and tend to enjoy the ride with less stress. IF my income level was higher then maybe a 15k bike would be appealing, but as it is I am completely happy with what I have.
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#39
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#40
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I saw a yellow one the other day at UPS with plaid seat covers, took me back to the ‘72 Corolla wagon my dad bought. It was the first Toyota he bought and since then we have been pretty brand loyal.
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#41
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Please show a photo when you get it back with some trophy trout
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#42
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12 years ago I bought a 2001 Ford Ranger with 102,000 miles on it for $3,700, as a "farm truck" - hauling the kayaks, getting compost, going to the transfer station, etc. I've done front suspension, radiator, brakes, batteries, tires, alternator, frame reinforcement (the frame rusts) etc. on it. I have a total of close to $10,000 into it in total. It gets under 1000 miles annually, and it's cheap to register and insure. It's far from pristine, but I know what's fixed and what isn't. I doubt I'd put $10,000 into an engine, but when I look at other used trucks, the Ranger seems like it continues to be worth fixing stuff on if we want to have a truck available.
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#43
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#44
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And in 2005 we did not consider it a steal. It was just another bike. |
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I think folks need to realize this is just an academic question, not reality.. my question back to Baron was if salaries had gone up as well to a point where a $14k bike (as the only choice) is an achievable thing for most people.. if the answer is no, then I agree a $14k bike is out of reach for most people and cycling would die a not so slow death..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
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