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  1. Murky-Course6648 on

    No you dont, you can get few more still. Dont stress about it, accumulate.

  2. Shark_Attack-A on

    If I don’t stop surfing through marketplace I might find myself in the same predicament πŸ˜†

  3. Pffft, you aren’t even in the double digits yet.

    In all seriousness though, you could definitely expand to add a couple other genres, such as a touring bike, titanium bike, hardtail, etc.

    Personally I’ve got somewhere around 12-ish bikes, which is absolutely too many. I’m trying to bring that number down to just 1 per “genre,” with some exceptions for particularly cool bikes. For example I have three vintage rigid MTB’s right now, I’m going to sell two and do a gravel restomod on the third. Three touring bikes I’ll work down to one, possibly two. Six-ish road bikes I’ll bring down to ~3. 1 hardtail MTB and I will not buy anything else for MTB.

  4. drewbaccaAWD on

    Not a too many bikes problem, a storage problem. Even if you got rid of two today, you’d still have to move them all out to get to your mower.

    Not that you shouldn’t get rid of anything you don’t ride if you have no reason to hang onto it. I have one frame that I just need to drop off at a co-op or recycle as I’m never going to use it. Another is technically my brother’s, I just need to make some upgrades and get it out of here. There’s a third I’ll dump somewhere after a rebuild is done.

    Even after that, I’m still sitting at four… of those, for now, I have two in the garage and two in the attic. I’ll rotate things out based on what I’m actively riding.

  5. Personally I think half dozen is a perfect amount of bikes for one person, you can have quite a few disciplines and a bit of overlap or redundancy when one or two is down for maintenance

  6. The Miami vice centurion iron man ❀️
    That one is my pointless white rabbit, since I already have the same model year iron man in the red and white color way and I’ll never get rid of it.

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