« Olympic Pigeon? | Main | Double Bar Controversy »

November 15, 2008

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341ec49a53ef010535f568c6970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Wu Yang Clan:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Andoni

Hi Jeff,

I may have answer to how to carry the pig.
In old Vietnam war footage you can see the Vietcong and North Vietnamese army porters pushing/walking along the bikes with heavy loads on top of the central bar ( rice bags, etc.), using the bikes as a kind of wheel barrow ( sometimes they would even couple to bikes with a makeshift platform for heavy loads.
Just a thought.
BTW, I love Chinese farm cycles. Thank you for your blog.
Cheers

mark

hello!
what are the quality of them like? - i was so taken by the cool Wu Yang bike that i ordered one here in Shenzhen.... have to say was a bit disappointed when me and my Chinese girlfriend tried to cycle off and I managed to damage the pedal (where it joins the crank shaft.. if that makes sense, is now loose - am not that big either). Today I scraped a wall and one pedal is now dangling - thought these bikes would be hard as nails - and am starting to think I might have been sold a fake! What do you reckon?

JS

I suspect your bike is OK. Almost all of the traditional Chinese roadsters (and Indian, And Thai and British Roadster) have a cottered crank. The cotter is a little pin of soft metal which is hammered in between the crank arm and crankshaft. They are soft and can deform which makes the pedal shaft flap around like you describe. So if it wasn't hammered in quite right the first time, that might happen as well.

The secret here is to hammer them in, ride for a day or so, and then give them another wrap. DO NOT try to "pull" them into the joint by tightening the bolt on the other side. This does not work and the metal is so soft it will just strip the threads.

In your case I would just go to the nearest street corner bike doctor in Shenzhen and have him hammer it in. Or you can do it yourself. Snug up the bolt and then see how it goes from there.

Even if the street corner bike doctor replaces the cotter, it will probably cost you less than 5 RMB.

As for the pedal, most of the pedals are multi-part pedals and you can tighten these up as well...or have the bike doctor take a look.

Give it a shot, there is nothing to lose.

Darren Chan

Jeff, thanks so much for your informative blog. I've been scanning through the entries trying to get my bearings regarding Chinese bicycles. I'm currently in Taishan (2.5 hours southwest of Guangzhou) and have been having a hell of a time trying to find a shop that sells Flying Pigeons. The one bike shop I found carried nothing but Giant.

Did you happen to notice any bike shops in Guangzhou that carried the traditional Chinese brands? I'd settle for a Wu Yang if I can't locate any Flying Pigeons.

I remember reading an entry you wrote regarding the 'stolen bike markets'. I don't think they have one of those here in Taishan, perhaps in Guangzhou?

JS

Darren-

I suspect you could find a Wu-Yang, Phoenix or Forever in Guangzhou, although I didn't have time to search out shops. Flying Pigeon would be tougher to find, I'm sure.

I agree that that the traditional bikes are becoming harder and harder to find, but most stores here in Beijing keep a few on stock for the diehards..or the pennyless!

Many of the GIANT retailers are exclusively Giant, so you won't locate an FP there.

If worse comes to worse. Find someone on a traditional bike. Then just offer them 200 RMB for the bike they are riding and see what they say. 200 RMB is very generous for a used bike so they should jump at the opportunity. If not...ask the next person.

Darren Chan

Thanks for the tips Jeff! My cousins suggested the same thing, but I've yet to locate a FP in decent shape. Then again 200 RMB isn't all that much when converted to USD. Just don't want to start racking up bikes when one quality unit would do.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

My Photo

Links of Interest

Bookmark and Share