Re: Emi inspired running/workout
Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 5:38 am
Thanks for the input i'll consider, i really would love to bike again
Stick to the indecent one, then. I bought my bike in a pawn shop for equivalent of 50 euro, together with a wall clock.dunkelfalke wrote:Biking is fun, but very expensive if you want a decent machine
I made the same mistake with my first one. Never again a cheap bike. Never ever. The cheapest usable bikes start around €500 new over here (really good ones start at around two thousand), and about €350 used, but you have to buy it off some bicycle enthusiast, since pawn shop bikes aren't worth the money. If it is a MTB or a trekking bike, then the drivetrain and the brakes should start at the Deore level, better SLX (SRAM is nice in their own way, but Shimano gives you more bang for the buck due to better economy of scale). Anything below is either pure crap right away or starts to feel like that as soon as the weather gets a bit rainy or you try to ride even a little bit off plastered roads.NoOne3 wrote:Stick to the indecent one, then. I bought my bike in a pawn shop for equivalent of 50 euro, together with a wall clock.
So while Dunkelfalke's front fork is worth more than the car I ride, so some kind of cultural/geographical factors may influence the value, I still don't believe there is no possibility to buy a riding, almost-unquestionably-not-stolen bike for 200 euros anywhere in the world.
Well, just as the old German saying goes: Wer billig kauft, kauft doppelt (buy cheap = buy twice)dunkelfalke wrote: It is not snobbery, just that the difference between a bad bike and a good one is really huge.
“The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.
Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.
But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that'd still be keeping his feet dry in ten years' time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.
Only if you let it to. You can workout without a dime if you want to.Maakasu_Taihaku wrote:Hmmmm man, getting healthy can be hole in ur wallet
Not a mistake in my case. I never said it was ready to go. Had to change some spokes, and the tires. I'm planning to buy a new rear axle sometime in the spring (is it hard to ride a fixed-gear bike? I might want to try it), and I love buing second hand, since you never know what you get (which can be a good thing sometimes - the front axle appeared to be some kind of a posh classic, and the spoke-guy wanted to buy it from me on the spot). The bike still have some miles in it.dunkelfalke wrote:I made the same mistake with my first one. Never again a cheap bike.
Emi is not impressed. I read an online interview with an amputee sportsman. Prices for a single below-the-knee prosthesis suitable for some sport activity starts at 10000 €. Running blades are usually more expensive. And they have to be changed or extensively repaired every three-four years (for grownups).urishima wrote:My running shoes were 130 € and those are worth every buck
It can but it doesn't have to be.Maakasu_Taihaku wrote:eating healthy though can be expensive XD
I actually found it rather easy to start my running routine. All I do is set my alarm clock, next morning I get up at 5, go running, do my stretching and get ready for work.Maakasu_Taihaku wrote: plus u need to form a habit to do so, which can be hard
It's never easy. I guess I've always been active in some form or another. But I'll always have spurts of laziness. The hardest part comes from having yourself take a beating/ get exhausted from a workout and deciding to keep going back.Number 905 wrote:I just got done with day one of that couch to 5k plan that was posted earlier in the thread.
I'm exhausted.