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So as you may know, I have recently assembled a bike, with great help from my friend. Problem is, wheels didn't arrive on time, rear rack wasn't available to buy until recently, and saddle post clamp broke recently.

I do not have a car, and my friends lives, and has his workshop, about 10 km from me. Riding back and forth using public transport would take about 1h each way, so I would greatly prefer to do it once, and go back on my bike, than spend 6 hours in the buses. But I have only 2 hands, wheels are 28 inches, and my bike is far from small and light.

Maybe someone had similar issue and found a solution?

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    Couldn't you order a taxi? Aug 18, 2020 at 15:02
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    I have transported a bike frame on a bike rack by hooking the rear dropouts over the front of the rack (so the bike faced backward) and tying it down. You might be able to do this, and lash the wheels to the side of the frame. Obviously the bike you are riding will be very top-heavy and tail-heavy if you do this.
    – Adam Rice
    Aug 18, 2020 at 15:08
  • 3
    Does your friend have a car? And do they like beer (or an equivalent present)?
    – Chris H
    Aug 18, 2020 at 15:44
  • 1
    Do you know anyone with a child trailer that will attach to your bike?
    – Andrew
    Aug 18, 2020 at 19:26
  • 3
    Take the chicken over first, then take the corn over, but come back with the chicken, then... Aug 21, 2020 at 10:04

11 Answers 11

4

If there is public transport connecting your start and destination points, you are likely to be able (and to be allowed) to travel with your baggage. A regular disassembled bicycle is such a baggage. It is rather bulky (resulting dimensions are defined by the diamond shaped frame) and heavy, but not outrageously out of reasonable limits.

There are usually regulations of how long/wide/deep a piece of baggage can be, and it is usually implied that you must be able to carry it alone without help. Check with your transport authority on what rules are in your city/country. Sometimes you'll have to pay an extra fee for your baggage; often you can avoid it, especially if you do not focus anyone's attention that it is a "bicycle" you have with you. Be focused that it is not a bicycle, it is just baggage, and you are allowed to have baggage with you.

Then, the key is to pack it down as compact as possible and to protect it from damage as well as reasonable. Here are several suggestions that help me to pack my current "adventure" 28" bicycle when I travel by bus (or by train, that one stupid kind of train that does not allow bicycles…)

  1. Take off both wheels and strap them to the middle of the frame from both sides with e.g. bungee cords or zip ties or any sort of rope.

Bungee cords

If there are discs on wheels, keep them closer to the frame in order to minimize risk of bending them. Alternatively, remove the discs for transportation. Do not deflate wheels if possible.

Taking off the wheels is the biggest space saving action. Sometimes only the front wheel should be removed, and the rear stays, it depends on your limits.

  1. Put some sort of spacers between front and rear dropouts, where the hubs were. Wooden blocks of 100 mm front and 130/135 mm back can be drilled to serve as "dummy hubs". This will prevent side loads from bending your fork and frame. Other types of spacers (plastic or bamboo tube, basically whatever you have at hand) will work as well.

  2. Unscrew the rear derailleur from the hanger and strap it to the dropout with a wire, electrical tape etc. Without the rear wheel, the rear derailleur is protruding and is at high risk of being damaged.

  3. Lower your saddle in the frame to reduce height. Alternatively, extract the seat post and hide it inside the front triangle.

  4. Loosen and rotate your handlebar (if drop bar) or even detach and zip tie the straight bar to the frame to further reduce dimensions.

  5. Detach pedals in order to reduce width.

  6. To go at the full extreme, extract the fork and tie it to the frame. Be careful to not loose any of headset or stem parts (because of that, I actually do not recommend detaching the fork).

  7. Find or make a cover to wrap your neat package. They are usually cheaply sold, or can even be custom sewn to fit your bike. A cover can be very light and does not need to provide any protection from strikes. Instead, it makes your baggage to look just like a bulky bag with no sharp chainring teeth sticking out anywhere.

bike cover

If you will be controlling (e.g. holding the bike) the whole time, I would say that points 1, 2 and possibly 3 are mandatory. If anyone else will be handling your baggage without your control, further disassembly and protection steps are desirable. Having a cover helps to keep everyone clean and happy.

It may be worth mentioning a "proper" method to travel mass transit with a bicycle (with its own deficiencies).

People do travel with bicycles even on planes, sending them as checked luggage. Special hard-shell cases exist to put the bicycle into.

travel bag

inside the travel bag

These bags do offer better protection under travel, and even have their own small wheels to be rolled around an airport just as a usual case. As expected, they are rather expensive, especially if you do not travel often with your bike, to the point that I see people renting such travel bags instead of owning them. They are also still bigger than regular biggest travel case, which, in certain countries and with certain companies, incurs additional baggage fees.

A few final remarks and suggestions.

  1. Avoid rush hour when carrying your baggage.
  2. Make sure you can actually lift and carry your baggage. Find places on the frame that you can grab onto and lift.
  3. Be gentle. An assembled bicycle is very resilient; without wheels it is rather vulnerable. If you intend to carry the frame upside down, put some protection cover onto the saddle to prevent scratching it when you put everything on the ground.
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    @Mołot then what is the problem? Buy a ticket and ride on! Aug 18, 2020 at 22:01
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    "Extra wheels" — Do you need to carry four wheels? I assume I misunderstood it , and only two regular wheels are present. As my answer describes in step 1, removing the wheels is the biggest space-saver. Even removing only the front wheel is often enough. You can have a separate big bag with wheels in one hand and the frame in the other hand, that is also doable. Aug 18, 2020 at 22:09
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    Well, there certainly are limits of what can be carried in one go by a specific human. The only way to find these limits, I am afraid, is to challenge them. In such situations, having friends to carry your load helps. I wonder: maybe, instead of traveling to said friend and to his tools, it would be easier for the friend and the tools to travel to you? Alternatively, swapping the wheels could be done later, or even earlier, with basic tools, which obviates the need to carry all four at the same time. Aug 18, 2020 at 22:26
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    Yeah, leave the old wheels at home Aug 19, 2020 at 1:14
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    @Mołot specifying in your OP that you have FOUR wheels to transport would have helped a lot. It seems to me that none of the answers address the need to carry extra wheels, everyone assumed that you were transporting one complete bike, in a variety of parts with no assumption of any extra parts. Of course, most of the suggestions would work with extra wheels strapped to the bike in some fashion, but complete details, provided up front, are very helpful!
    – FreeMan
    Aug 20, 2020 at 12:20
23

"Ghost ride": Borrow a good bike (if needed). Ride on the good bike, while pulling the incomplete one alongside you by holding its stem. Your secondary hand sits on the second bike's stem and pulls it along as you ride slowly.

It may sound silly, but I had to do it once and I was impressed with how well it worked. One way to look at it: it's not much harder than riding one bike in the first place.

photo taken from the guide linked above

I don't have a clear understanding of what the condition of your bike is and whether this will work for you.

For my solution to work, your incomplete bike needs to be complete enough for you to roll/push it as you walk alongside it, so stem and both wheels need to be on and capable of spinning. But you don't need a seat, chain, gears, brakes, pedals etc.

Some notes from Criggie - he posted a very similar answer minutes after me and he kindly suggested I merge his into mine.

  1. The towed bike should be slightly behind your bike, by perhaps 100mm or 4 inches, to help limit handlebar interference.
  2. If you have a choice, ride the smaller/lower bike or the one with the most upright body position.
  3. Obviously you need your prime braking hand ready to brake your bike. If that means you can't change gear, so be it. Score one for right-hand front brake and right hand rear shifter setups.
  4. Turning can be a tricky process too - you need the inside bike to turn more sharply, and to not get the handlebars or pedals hung up on each other. And if it does go badly you need to be able to recover without falling off. So pick a quiet route with no big intersections, no climbs/descents, etc.
  5. It is possible to lift the towed bike to get it back on track, but avoid leaning on it while riding. However you can do an awesome trackstand at a red light this way!
  6. This is nothing to do with Ghost Bikes, the white-painted memorials, and also nothing to do with "ghost riding a whip" a trendy bike trick where the bike rolls all by itself with no rider.

EDIT: someone already wrote a good guide for this.

Please also note I have no idea whether this is legal, so only do it on your private land:-)

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  • Don't hold the other bike by its handlebar, but the saddle. Takes five minutes of practice (don't first try it on the road), but goes much smoother afterwards.
    – Karl
    Aug 19, 2020 at 11:23
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    10 kilometers of ghost riding would exhaust even a skilled rider
    – Brian B
    Aug 19, 2020 at 13:26
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    This absolutely works, and around here (NLD) we don't have laws against it. It's tricky on hills (bridges) and the first few minutes take some getting used to (it's also a lot more exhausting than normal cycling), but you can drive a really long way with this. Just don't be in a hurry and step down when nearing an unsafe situation. Intersections are actually quite doable with a bit of practice.
    – Mast
    Aug 19, 2020 at 18:05
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    Ghost riding works well until it does not.
    – lejonet
    Aug 19, 2020 at 18:43
  • This is very hard to do for longer distances. And inherently much more dangerous than just riding your bike. Do so at your own risk! Aug 20, 2020 at 13:39
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This is how I did it once:

Needed three straps. Two of them where used to improvise shoulder straps so I carried the bike simulating a backpack. The third strap was to stabilize the handlebar so it and the fork where fixed in one position and not swinging uncontrollably.

enter image description here

If I were to do it again, I'd prepare myself to remove pedals and carry a thick blanket or something to cushion my back against the bike's tubes.

As you can see from the picture I tied the straps between the seat tube and the headtube.

The ridable bike had a rack but it was not part of this operation. Rather I had to be sure it was empty so nothing would interfere with the carried bike.

This setup allowed me to carry the bike a little over 2 km. but I would have perfectly been able to ride a lot longer. The only issue I had is that the back of my helmet bumped against the bike and forced my head down a bit. I did specifically choose a route with less busy streets to have a ride less prone to sudden maneuvers.

I carried that bike because I bought just the frame. Later on I bought a set of wheels. For that I strapped the wheels to the sides of my rear rack, one on each side. The axle would rest against the rack and each wheel (complete with tires) would be strapped to the seat stays using elastic cord. Elastic cord was also used to tie both wheels together. This setup was good enough to ride 10 km mostly along a busy bike lane and some busy streets with no bike exclusive lane. The good about this setup is that nothing protrudes outside regular bike+rider dimension so I could ride at regular commute speeds.

Edit: The steps I told you need two trips to carry the complete bike, one for the frame and other for the wheels. If I had to transport a bike for a long stretch again, I'd probably remove the wheels and strap them to the frame in order to make it compact and do the same, specially if it where a lighter frame then the heavy steel one depicted.

Another alternative: you could borrow a cargo bike.

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    Like I'm playing Death Stranding :D
    – Mołot
    Aug 18, 2020 at 21:58
  • It's amazing what people come up with! Aug 19, 2020 at 1:05
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    Finally I understand where these decorations come from!
    – Pavel
    Aug 19, 2020 at 9:39
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    @Pavel that played havoc with my youtube recommendations but makes a change form all the metal, and my 7-year-old likes it!
    – Chris H
    Aug 30, 2020 at 18:02
11

If you have only the one bike, and no other transport, then you're going to be walking.

If the bike has working wheels then it can roll and all you do is hold it by the stem while walking. Mind out for the pedal nearest you, it tends to clip you in the ankle. Some people do this with one hand on the saddle, controlling direction in the same way as riding hands-free.

You can potentially "scooter" the bike by putting one foot on the opposite pedal, and pushing against the ground with the other. Steering assumes the bars and fork are all functional.

If the wheel is dead or not weight-bearing, you might choose to push the bike upright on its back wheel only while holding the bars. If its the back wheel, then one hand around the top of the rim and the other on the saddle can let it roll hands-free. This is awkward.

Last option is to pad your shoulder, and hoist the whole thing up in a Cyclocross carry. Put your arm through the main triangle and rest the frame on your shoulder. Use the through-arm's hand to hold the frame for stability. This is unpleasant, so offset the weight by carrying the wheels in your other hand.

Velcro straps are handy for holding things like wheels together.


My longest walk was 3 hours, when I flatted a tubular halfway home with no spare. A normal 1 hour commute takes 6 to walk, it was dark by the end, and I'm thankful I had normal flat shoes on not cleated shoes. Now that bike has clinchers and I carry normal spare tubes.

Most people walk at around 4~6 km/h comfortably. Your bike will slow you down, but walking you can "cut corners" which helps. Your 10km walk should take around 2 hours.


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It's really not that complicated. Seat meet head. And before you say that's too heavy, in India guys carry motorcycles on their heads up ladders all the time.

enter image description here

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    I'm giving you a +1, not so much for your answer, but for the guy actually balancing a bike on his head. (Unless, of course, that's actually you, in which case I'd give you a +2 if I could.)
    – FreeMan
    Aug 20, 2020 at 12:21
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    @FreeMan If you think balancing a bike on your head looks good, how about the opposite
    – Chris H
    Jun 14, 2021 at 8:14
5

Hire a car.

In many locations, you can hire a van taxi, or request a large-size vehicle from a car hire service like Uber or Lyft. Either of these should have more than enough space to store a fully assembled bicycle and one passenger. This will almost certainly be the fastest and easiest method, although it'll cost more than some other options. I can't expect the price will be too high for a ride that's only 10km though, so it may well be worth saving a few hours of your time and the physical effort for the sake of a small fee.

3

You do not need to transport four wheels anywhere for someone to help you swap them. You can do it yourself. Taking and putting wheels off and on is a part of basic puncture maintenance. You should learn how to do it yourself anyway.

After that, your problem of having "2 wheels and a full bicycle" gets reduced to "full bicycle", which you can transport by bus, as we have already figured out.

There are three types of widespread interfaces to connect the wheels to the frame/fork.

  1. Quick release skewers. Removing and installing wheels require no tools except your hands.
  2. Bolt-on axle. You will need a 15 mm wrench (maybe 17 mm wrench) to do that. It is as simple as unbolting two nuts per wheel.
  3. Through axle. You will need a 4, 5 or 6 mm hex key to free the axles. Sometimes it is even tool-free and similar in principle to the quick release system.

So, you need either no tools at all or basic tools that you should obtain in any way in order to maintain your bicycle.

3

Tape towed fork and frame to a broom stick, tie its handles to seat post so they can not turn. Tape the other end of broom stick to rear lower frame of yours. Carry front tire by strapping it to your back 2 broom sticks on each side of frame works best. Happy riding. Safety first

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    Hi, welcome to bicycles! I think I can visualize this, but a diagram or picture might help.
    – DavidW
    Nov 24, 2022 at 21:51
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If you, or someone in your family, have a big suitcase you can likely fit your bike into the suitcase. Wrap the bike (and certainly the chain) well, if you want to use the case again.

Like with the cases mentioned in the other answers, you may have to take off the wheels to fit the frame in. But then you can add the wheels into the same case, wrapped into something that protects the frame as well as the wheels.

For the return journey you can have the case run behind you like a luggage cart.
Some suitcases have wheels which can take being pulled behind a bike, but for most you will want to use little cart under it, like they use for canoes and surfboards. Often a cheap 'pull behind you for your shopping' cart will already do, combined with good use of ropes or bungy cords.

1

From your question, "Problem is, wheels didn't arrive on time, rear rack wasn't available to buy until recently, and saddle post clamp broke recently." That doesn't look to me like an unridable bike.

As other answers say, you don't need a workshop to mount the wheels, because that's less than what you have to do in case of puncture. And since rack doesn't affect usability, your only problem is the lack of saddle post clamp. In the worst case you would need to ride while standing on the pedals, in the best case you can alternate that with resting on a very low saddle. Standing on the pedals is a quite standard position for short time. Having to stand longer might be uncomfortable and you might want to alternate it with walking or resting, but I would say that it isn't worse than ghost riding. In fact, in hilly, bumpy or congested roads, I would prefer standing on the pedals to ghost riding - even if I had some practice on ghost riding.

1

I built a wooden rack for a small bike but it can handle the weight of a regular one. It will be just quite wide. All you need is some wood, screws or nails and some kind of straps.

Other means is to get a small trailer.

enter image description here

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