Beirne Konarski
1993-09-02, 03:51 AM
Forwarded message:
> Here's some other reasons to avoid cheap unis (unless you are only planning on
> riding to church on sundays). Last night I broke the axle on my standard 24"
> Summit (made by the same Taiwanese company that puts together Zephyr, and
> several other brands). I've had this one for just over a year. The axle
> cracked right where the cotter pin comes in. When I took it apart this morning
> to get a closer look a coworker noticed that the frame was also cracked at the
> very bottom, right above the bearings. I do some tricks that are hard on a
> unicycle; jumping, curbs etc. but not that often and I'm pretty light. Has
> anyone else managed to break their unicycles?
Yes, nothing beats a solid unicycle. I still ride a Schwinn 24" model that I got
for Christmas in 1978. I have ridden on lots of curbs and have had no trouble
except for broken spokes. I greased the bearings for the first time a couple of
weeks ago and they still work fine.
Beirne
> Here's some other reasons to avoid cheap unis (unless you are only planning on
> riding to church on sundays). Last night I broke the axle on my standard 24"
> Summit (made by the same Taiwanese company that puts together Zephyr, and
> several other brands). I've had this one for just over a year. The axle
> cracked right where the cotter pin comes in. When I took it apart this morning
> to get a closer look a coworker noticed that the frame was also cracked at the
> very bottom, right above the bearings. I do some tricks that are hard on a
> unicycle; jumping, curbs etc. but not that often and I'm pretty light. Has
> anyone else managed to break their unicycles?
Yes, nothing beats a solid unicycle. I still ride a Schwinn 24" model that I got
for Christmas in 1978. I have ridden on lots of curbs and have had no trouble
except for broken spokes. I greased the bearings for the first time a couple of
weeks ago and they still work fine.
Beirne