In Bionicon’s vision of the urban future we’ll all be either cruising around on three-speed behemoths (see the Urban Cargo in the Eurobike Gallery) or kerb-hopping on Cromo utility machines such as this, the Urban road. Frame-wise, it’s a sensible beast, not light (the stated weight is 2.1kg) but certainly well built. It’s finished in a matt army green, with the Cromo fork painted black. So far so urban standard, but the running spec is a little more esoteric. Gone are flat bars, replaced by a super short stem and an upswept unit in the finest tradition of cutting off and flipping your drops. Cyclocross levers wired up to Shimano V-brakes do the stopping. Gone, too, is the front mech (though there is a cable stop for one), leaving just a SRAM Rival rear mech and a natty carbon bar-end shifter to give you your range. Wheels are solid Alex/Shimano units sporting fairly chunky Schwalbe Kojak 1.35 tyres, and there’s full mudguards to protect you from the crud they throw up. Our test machine had a reasonably close ratio cassette, and in fact most of the transmission is different to the spec on the Bionicon UK website – they suggest it’ll come with a less sexy SRAM 3.0 mech and a wider 11-34 cassette, and mudguards and the front rack are optional extras. We were assured that the bike as tested is the UK spec but we’ll update this review later when we’ve had another chance to speak to the Bionicon boys.
So what’s it like to ride? Well, we laughed when we read on Bionicon’s website that “our perfectly paved cities allow us to do without complex suspension systems”. If your city is as imperfectly paved as ours, you’ll need a bit of help… Thankfully the Urban Road is up to the job, and most of the bump-soaking duties are handled by the tyres which are pretty much the perfect size and profile for a blast through town. Out on the open road they’re a little pedestrian, and the longer-distance speed of the bike is hampered a bit by its overall weight (24.9lb as tested) and the hefty wheels, which make better sense about town. The bar and short stem combination works really well when you’re on the ends. That’s where all the controls are, so that’s where you spend most of your time. The long reach of the bars compensates for the super short stem, and the bike feels nice and stable, though it’s maybe not as flickable as we’d have liked. It’s also a good position for out-of-the-saddle climbs, though it’s difficult to change gear when you’re standing up. There’s another hand position on the flat section of the bars; this sits you up a bit but it’s narrow and the stem is short, so it tends to amplify any rider input, making the bike a bit sketchy. Verdict Overall it’s an idiosyncratic bike with a unique look and a likeable ride. It’s not the lightest but it’s certainly sturdy, and well built for town rides and shorter commutes.
Eurobike rides: Bionicon Urban Road
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Not talking about just bikes shops, but any business that cannot afford to pay its staff a living wage, is not a viable business. Big companies whose staff have to claim benefits despite working full time are exploitative. And yet it's 'benefit scroungers' that get attacked and demonised by the press, not the extremely wealthy, tax dodging companies not paying their staff properly. Oh, like large say newspapers businesses.. Smaller businesses like your LBS, are like poor Vs rich folk, their existence costs them more than big businesses it does due to economies of scale etc, just like rich folk can afford to buy better quality suff that lasts longer or stockpile food when it's on offer whilst poor people have to scrape by.
The problems mentioned in this article are far more wide-ranging than simply affecting the viability of hiring Saturday lads/lasses. Fixing bikes or selling bikes now requires so much more skill and knowledge than it did 10-20 years ago, but the pay is still rubbish, partly because public perception is that the job is easy and is just a hobby. Therefore people with the ability to be good at the job are not encouraged to stick around and they look elsewhere for a career that can earn a decent wage. I don't enjoy the fact that half the bikes that I work on have almost-unique parts that requires odd techniques, tools, or parts to repair and I first have to research what I need for many of them (despite having 20 years of experience). I'm now getting so much work that I could consider hiring someone else, but it would be impossible to find a skilled person who would work for the wage I can offer and it would take far too much of my time to train someone to a level where they can do more than the simplest 10% of the jobs that come in (whereas 10-20 years ago, after a small amount of training they probably could have done 30+% of the jobs). The complexity and uniqueness of modern bikes is apparently necessary to sell them, but soon there are going to be no mechanics left who will work for the wages that people are prepared to pay. At some point, people are going to have to admit that bike mechanics and salespeople are highly skilled and knowledgeable and should be reimbursed accordingly. Or, everyone can just order bikes online and watch YouTube repair videos and end up with a bike that barely works and isn't safe; but that's fine because they're just simple kids' toys, right?
I think the author is trying too hard to "both sides" this one. The basic error is Gove's - he was wandering across a pedestrian crossing on red for him with his head in a cup of coffee, and started well after it was on red. The Highway Code says "should not cross" in these circumstances. He then tried to excuse this by red herrings. Conservatives, including Gove, are supposed to have taking personal responsibility for their actions as a core value. Perhaps having the crooked coward Boris Johnson and Fruit Loop Liz as elected leaders demonstrates that this is merely historical. Gove is permitting a culture war being fought in the pages of his magazine; that is a war where Conservatives are demonising cycling because they hope it will save the rump Conservative Party. One example was their sudden reversal of support for the Welsh 20mph default limit. Should noodles have reacted less sharply - perhaps. A chat with Michael Gove to stop him wandering around the streets like a lobotomised koala may have been beneficial.
@mdavidford Funny, as soon as I saw your comment on the ticker on another article I knew to whom you must be replying.
@mctrials23 People have been suffering for years because they have been unlucky enough to have been hired by bad people, or had the bad luck to become ill. This is just bringing the system more into balance. I don't have a problem with encouraging people to start businesses but I don't agree with doing it by letting them exploit the poor and the desperate, if they need encouragement then offer state benefits for small businesses and use the claims process to make sure that they are doing everything they should to run the business properly including paying and training their employees. If they just want to get rich quick by exploiting others then they should be in the USA.
One may wonder why you've brought up DEI when it has nothing at all to do with anything in what Lappartient said. Or why you care about the state of the women's sport if you're so down on diversity, equity and inclusion. 🤷♂️
Not quite the first time, I rode over it back in the late twentyteens, just happened to see it was jammed nose-to-tail so thought it would be fun to filter along...turned out there was an overturned lorry at the eastern end blocking all carriageways. I honestly didn't know cycling was banned (the signs aren't very prominent), just assumed nobody rode on it because it would be suicidal in normal circumstances. Fortunately the weary copper at the other end who saw me just cut off my apologies and said, "Fuck off over there [a gap in the barrier to a slip road] and don't do it again."
They're not slalom barriers, they're Sheffield stands for parking your bike.
@momove I would think that spending time training someone up, putting the time and effort into that only to have most people move on relatively quickly isn't a great business model. I know there is the argument that "if your business has to take advantage of people to run then its not a viable business" but thats the reality of some of these shops. Up to a point, thats exactly what apprenticeships have always been. A business get cheap labour that might help them a bit and the apprentice learns something.
One may wonder why bureaucrat Lappartient wants to reinvent the wheel with a massive injection of DEI and drastic reduction of money. Let the best cyclists win, period. Meanwhile, women's pro peloton needs means and support to attract new sponsors, increase TV coverage, improve salaries and prize money.
