this post was submitted on 14 Sep 2023
52 points (96.4% liked)
Bike Commuting
1573 readers
1 users here now
A place on the fediverse to share and discuss about commuting by bicycle
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Hey, neat -- my wife and I have a pair of those Dahon Classic III bikes, but I figured they were too old to be worth mentioning.
For what it's worth, the thing really is as awkward to fold (and carry while folded) as they portray, it really is as slow as they portray, and it definitely would've been the worst at that hill climb if the guy had actually tried to ride it. You might think he was playing up the general crappiness for the camera, but nope -- if anything, he was underselling it by failing to mention things like the crappy Sturmey-Archer 3-speed IGH (which admittedly is better than a single speed, but not by much).
That said, it has the important things going for it that it is, in fact, a functioning bicycle that you can take with you places other bicycles can't go (e.g. airplane checked luggage without special packaging, disassembly, or paying extra for being oversize), and that it's cheap (mine were only $50 each -- the guy in the video paid so much because he apparently got a fancy marine-grade stainless steel one). I take mine with me and ride it when I travel, but I never, ever touch it at home when I have better bikes available.
Incidentally, I've also test-ridden a Brompton. The riding experience isn't hugely different in terms of geometry or stability (they've both got 16" wheels and spindly seatposts and stems, after all), but it's a nicer experience because the frame feels less flimsy and the (new) 3-speed IGH and brakes work better than poorly-maintained 30-year-old ones. It is also hugely better at "being a folding bike:" much faster to fold, much easier to move around while folded, and much smaller when folded/easier to store. Is it worth paying at least 23 times more than the Dahon ($1155 USD for the stripped base model Brompton vs $50 for a used Dahon), if you're actually using it regularly for something like commuting? Hell yeah, and it's not even close.
Also, LOL, GCN's scoring system was terrible. The results were exactly backwards to what they should've been: the autoshift bike was objectively the best commuter.