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I bought a Nana - a 4 year old bike which already had over 500 miles on it for £75 and brought it home. It's in pristine condition now and I love it. I've owned 15+ bikes over the years but this one is just great. I got a midi on it and as such I get a carb rebuild and adjustment every 3-4 years. My bike is like a child and I take care of it and I'd like to think it takes care of me.
Thanks for this very interesting article. A good bike will last a lifetime, even a metal-frame bike can be ridden on well into its second and third decades. What matters is the owner taking care to make sure the thing stands up to the test of time and is ridden with care. You could theoretically live for a few hundred years on a bike, but that's not a practical option. I rode a bike for 2 years from the age of 7 to 9 - a flat-bar racing bike with upturned handlebars, really hard to steer but a blast to ride. It was my first bicycle and I loved it. The second bike was like an evil stepmother, cheap and scruffy and solid rather than light. I pined for my bicycle for months before I actually could buy one. It was a 3-speed bike, hand-built by a local junkyard owner and certainly wouldn't have won any Olympics. There was a practical reason for my buying a bike, rather than a car - I wanted my own transport in one piece and not prone to crashing or being stolen. I learnt with that bike that if it was going to crash, I would have to do the repairs myself. I'd been taught to steer clear of cars and the only time I'd been near a bike had been on a track. I remember one day (I can still remember what the weather was like - it was cold, wet and foggy) sitting on the back wheel of the neighbour's tricycle, holding the back wheel in my hands and trying to turn it! I found the bicycle next day and took it apart, dismantled the chains and started putting it back together piece by piece. In the process, I learnt how to adjust spokes. d2c66b5586