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I'm a beginner trying to get on a road bike. I've been shopping around for a new bike for the last week and am also toying with the idea of getting a gently used "pre-owned".

One of the guys I've talked to, has said that he has only put around 250 miles on the bike. Is there a way to determine that this info is right? What do I look for to make sure that he is not bluffing.

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    At 250 miles there would be no significant wear on the tires (though of course they might be dirty), and no real wear elsewhere (brake pads, etc). But there's no great benefit to finding a bike with 250 miles on it vs 1000, other than the chain on the latter would be about 1/3 worn out. Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 20:09
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    Two points. (1) If the bike has been stored outdoors for more than maybe 6 months (in a place where it rains at all) then it will have suffered some damage from the weather. And if it was stored indoors for more than maybe 5 years it probably should get a once-over at a bike shop to lube it up, etc. (2) Check the bike for dents and scratches suggesting that it's been in an accident. (But scratches easily explained by shuffling it around in storage can probably be ignored.) Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 22:08

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250 miles is nothing. 2500 miles is also pretty much nothing -- this is under a year's worth of riding for many people. Many people still ride (and buy) bikes which are ~30 years old, and probably have 25000 miles or more on them (and will ride them for many years to come).

You can look at the model number (and compare it by year to which model year it is). But beyond that, you can't really tell anything, since a lot of parts which wear (tires, brakes) can be easily be replaced (and you won't know if they've been replaced unless you knew what was originally spec'd; and they could have easily been replaced due to other reasons, such as cutting a tire on some glass). Mileage isn't a good indicator of the condition of the bike anyway (you can easily have a bike which you've racked up 5000+ miles and looks and runs like new).

What you should look for is no cracks in the frame, a solid headset, true wheels, straight fork, etc. -- a 250 mile ridden bike which has been in a crash which damaged the fork is probably worse off than a 2500 mile ridden bike that was cared for.

We have several questions such as this one and this one on how to check out a used bike before purchase.


All that being said, most bikes which have really been ridden only 250 miles will have all their original equipment, and look pretty much new (no wear on the cassette, no worn chainrings, the original chain which likely hasn't picked up much dirt, handlebar grips and saddle looking like new, very few scratches, etc.). But there are bikes parked next to mine right now which have been ridden thousands of miles which look that way too, because someone took care of it.

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  • To add, lots of 15-30 year old bikes were ridden under 250 miles and then sitting in a garage for all that time.
    – Batman
    Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 0:23
  • Flip side is my road bike which was only about 9 months old when I got it, but had more than 5000 miles on it because it was the training bike for a competitive cyclist. It still looks pretty new, but you can see the wear on stuff like the disk rotors (or you should look at the wear on the rims if the bike has rim brakes)
    – Móż
    Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 2:30
  • True about the bikes stored in a garage. Our Christmas Anonymous group often gets bikes to rehab that are clearly 10-20 years old but have been ridden less than 100 miles or so. Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 3:11
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    Re your last sentence: I would pretty much prefer older but well-maintained bike over almost new but destroyed one ;-)
    – yo'
    Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 9:33
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Additional points not mentioned in the existing answers:

Cleanliness

It should be shop-clean with little road grime, and shiny chrome. However if its been hanging in a shed for a few years it will have dull chrome and a light coating of dust. The dust of storage sits on "top" compared to dirt from riding which is up underneath. Seller may have washed it, so focus on areas like around brake calipers and around the bottom bracket/chain stays.

Records

If seller bought it new, ask to sight any receipts.

Also ask if seller has used a recording service like Strava or mapmyride or edmodo. If they have then their rides should be captured and totalled. Tell seller you want to see how fast the bike has gone.

Smell

Plastic and rubber items have an odor, which comes from the more volatile organic compounds outgassing over time. A new tyre should smell like a new tyre for a bit, but perhaps not as long as you want.

Trust

Do you trust this person? Do they still ride? Would they be okay letting you go for a couple-hour ride on the new bike, alone or together? Does your bullshit-detector trip or your spidey-sense go all tingly when seller says something?

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  • How do Strava times help? Aren't they as much a function of the rider as the bike? Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 22:33
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    @DavidRicherby He's suggesting strava as a lie detector, not as a speed indicator. Telling the owner you want to see how fast the bike has gone is just a ruse to get the owner to show you his strava data, which will tell you how miles he actually rode. Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 1:13
  • @DavidRicherby Carey has it right - some people will say anything to get the sale. Unlike this guy.... youtube.com/watch?v=5T9DSgEclPA
    – Criggie
    Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 1:27
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    Reciepts may be necessary if you ever have to use things like warranties if they're transferable.
    – Batman
    Commented Jul 20, 2017 at 3:22
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Frame problems cannot be replaced. Everything else can be cheaply done. The cassettes can be replaced, so can bearings in the head set and bottom bracket. A broken bearing in the bottom bracket can cause major damage to a frame so that no future bearings will work. Turn the pedals with some weight, if there's any clicking, it's cause for worry.

If a bearing shatters and the pieces are then weighted, they will gouge the frame, so that the clicking, regardless of new bearings, will persist.

The fork is also a major piece that cannot be replaced easily, inspect it for warping, cracks, discoloration.

Note your location and the bike's origin; it helps if the local bike shop has replacement parts.

Stuff not to worry about:

  • brake pads are cheap to replace if worn
  • tires are cheap to replace, if worn
  • wheels are easy to true
  • handlebars and seats can be replaced, almost universally
  • cables can be replaced easily
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    I don't see how this answers the question. The question asks how to tell if a supposedly almost new bike really is almost new; you seem to be talking exclusively about what problems may or may not be significant on a second-hand bike of any age. Commented Jun 3, 2016 at 22:30
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    "Everything else can be cheaply done" - Not the advice I would give a novice cyclist..... Some things can be cheaply done, especially if you are prepared to use cheap components, but some things cost a lot of money (e.g. replacing a trashed wheel, on a MTB replace a shock or fork).
    – mattnz
    Commented Jun 4, 2016 at 2:18
  • The other thing is knowing what to replace. Much like a car, if you're looking for the source of a noise, you may go through more things than are actuallyt he problem.
    – Batman
    Commented Jun 7, 2016 at 3:37

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