The root issue here of course, is a common design problem. The person designing the rack has an extremely limited understanding of the problem they are trying to solve. Or, the designer is making a conscious decision to produce a rack that is incompatible with certain bikes. The designer made this rack for bikes that fall into a certain height range and with no front racks. There are likely other non-standard bikes that might have issues with this rack (recumbents, smallish folders, etc).
I should also note that I smashed an E6 light (that was mounted on my fork) on this rack about a year ago. I busted it and had to get a new lens for it. ($35?) I'll take some of that blame, but the rack requires that you push the bike into it in order to use the smaller diameter tubes for locking. The designer had not likely seen any lights on a bike except for handlebar mounted blinkies, so the "push in" requirement was not an issue.
This wouldn't drive me insane if designing a useful rack was a hard problem. But it's not. I can't think of (nor have a seen) a better design for a bike rack than this one:
If it's more involved than that simple design, it's over engineered.
For what it's worth, here's how I ended up locking my bike:
Note that the railing here has a strikingly similar design to the simple rack noted above.
Oh yeah. And if the piss poor design of Sucky Rack #1 isn't enough to make you crazy, here's a cherry for the top:
Yes, that's a big American flag on there. And yes, those tiny words at the bottom say "Made in Canada." I don't care where it's made, but it's obvious that the intention here is to make you think, at glance, that this is American-made. That is sleeze. Even if it was a great rack, I wouldn't buy it for that reason alone.
The only racks I love to see more than those ones, which are also at the nearest Safeway, (is there really such a thing as a 'local' Safeway?)is the one at my LBS, which is just as useless and normally blocked by cars. Expect perceptions and infrastructure to change at $8 a gallon, maybe $10.
ReplyDeleteBrent
My favorite bad bike rack is the one at Hastings (29th Ave.) It's a piece of green plastic that has little divots in which to place your front tire. And that's about it. Oh there is a filler port so you can put water in it. I guess the added weight (8 lbs?) is enough to deter a bike thief. I wish someone would just steal the whole crappy deal.
ReplyDeleteIf there is not a decent bike rack, I usually contact the business owners. No reply? Then I lock my bike to any kind of signage that they have out front whenever I visit, or I just make sure they don't get my business anymore - and I let them know why.
Mr Evil Elf: I will be sure to get that one on here. It sounds even worse than #3. I have a couple others in mind that I need to document, then I'll be done with this.
ReplyDeleteI see one of the racks is at city hall. The other looks like the new Walgreens on 29th and Grand. #3 is what they have, even if that's not the place of the photo. I'm not sure where number 2 is though.
ReplyDeleteI wont even use rack #3, I'll lock my bike to a tree or wheel it inside where ever I'm going instead.
ReplyDeleteReferring to sucky bike racks #3: can you really classify those under "bike racks"? haha
ReplyDeleteI had a meeting with the CEO of Rosauer's this morning. He seemed open to my ideas so hopefully SOOOOON we will see actual bike racks at our favourite Rosauer's family of stores (Including Super 1 on 29th, Home of Sucky Bike Rack #3!)
ReplyDeleteAwesome blog post. Thanks for sharing this details.
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