After falling twice in this past week trying to invent a new hybrid ice skating electric biking sport, I set out to purchase winter tyres. The cheapest set would set me back £80, and good (recommended) set well over that.
Is it just me, or does that severely kill off the cost saving benefit of cycling versus driving for short commutes? My little car can easily handle the thin ice, whereas with the Aurora, the high centre of mass just needs a slight off-balance skid and its a long way down from the big bike for the cyclist. My second fall was not pleasant and the first time I realised how important a helmet is! I honestly only recall landing on my knee and left hand and the bike sliding, but later I found scrapes and bruises all around my body, and most scarily, a huge gash on the top of my helmet! No idea how that could even have happened. And once again, nobody bothered to help me up (I was obviously struggling with an injured knee), just cars trying to get around me with drivers looking impatient and irritated.
Anyway, the commute with my car would be about £2 per day and £1 parking. That would take about 30 ice trips to pay back the tyres. Last year there were only about 12-15 days where it was iced like that. So it would take me 2 years to pay back that cost (possibly over simplified). Why are the bike winter tyres almost the same price as my car tyres? Is it just for the studs? The rubber can't be "that" much more expensive.
Maybe I'm just frustrated that I can't bend my knee for a while and thus cannot cycle and I need something to be angry about!
Is it just me, or does that severely kill off the cost saving benefit of cycling versus driving for short commutes? My little car can easily handle the thin ice, whereas with the Aurora, the high centre of mass just needs a slight off-balance skid and its a long way down from the big bike for the cyclist. My second fall was not pleasant and the first time I realised how important a helmet is! I honestly only recall landing on my knee and left hand and the bike sliding, but later I found scrapes and bruises all around my body, and most scarily, a huge gash on the top of my helmet! No idea how that could even have happened. And once again, nobody bothered to help me up (I was obviously struggling with an injured knee), just cars trying to get around me with drivers looking impatient and irritated.
Anyway, the commute with my car would be about £2 per day and £1 parking. That would take about 30 ice trips to pay back the tyres. Last year there were only about 12-15 days where it was iced like that. So it would take me 2 years to pay back that cost (possibly over simplified). Why are the bike winter tyres almost the same price as my car tyres? Is it just for the studs? The rubber can't be "that" much more expensive.
Maybe I'm just frustrated that I can't bend my knee for a while and thus cannot cycle and I need something to be angry about!