Price Paid:
$380.00
at I forgot the name, a Model Year: 2002 Favorite Ride: $th of July '04 Bike Setup: Hybrid, upright riding position, flat bars, narrow high pressure tires (low rolling resistance) Good for someone who likes mountain bike riding positiion without the bulk. Summary: I bought what seemed like an ideal bike, but familiarity breeds contempt. I went to my favorite LBS, having spent some time on hybrids and decided they fit my riding style well. The C40 seemed great, Aluminum frame, Shimano 21 speed, sprung forks and seat post.
The bad part, the rotary gear shifters have detents that don't agree with the deraileurs, so getting all 3 sprockets to engage on the front requires cable adjustments WHILE RIDING! Adjust it to engage low and it won't go to three, & vice versa, and it tends to grind against the chain. The steering geometry is all wrong too. The brakes are spongy, require too much effort, and being crosspull alway rub on one side of the rim. This bike Won't go straight, the contact patch is almost directly under the headset, so move the bar a millimeter and you swerve a foot. Seems to me like they used frame geometry from a raked fork bike with nearly straight telescopics. Personally I think they could have made a much better bike for the money. Strengths: Light aluminum frame, decent 27" wheels, suspension, can put some good miles on in comfort. Rider ergos fairly adjustable. Pops a wheelie in first three gears. Weaknesses: Gear selection difficult at best, brakes spongy and tend to rub, kickstand bent easily, Twitchy steering I store the bike inside religiously, keep it clean, and the bars and other steel are allready rusty. I had a Huffy that worked & held up better. Similar Products Used: Bianchi Classica road bike, a few day rental hybrids, some cheap mountain bikes.
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