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Bike Choice

This is largely a matter of where you are commuting. If your journey is under five miles on nice flat roads, any well maintained bike will do.  If you have a mountain bike a tyre change may be the only change needed.

Road or hybrid bikes are pretty much perfect and would transport you swiftly and in reasonable comfort.  Refer to the getting started pages for your options.

From a fully functional bikeFor mixed-mode commuting, a folder is just the thing.

To this in a couple of seconds.In fifteen seconds your bike transforms into a neat hand-portable package which you can carry onto the train.

In every case you are better off with a good quality second hand bike than a cheap new one. Cheap bikes are a menace: their frames are heavy and lumpen. A second-hand bike might need the occasional new component (and you can upgrade them all you like!) but if the frame is heavy the bike is heavy, and there's nothing you can do about it. Watch out for people cycling along your route - see what kinds of bikes they ride. Ask them about their bikes. Not all cyclists have beards and can bore for England; lots of them are intelligent people who have decided that sitting on your bum in traffic for an hour a day is a waste of a life.

Cycle commuting

Keep an eye on Freecycle (see link below) for a free bike.

Some mudgaurds would be useful and some good lights for the winter are pretty essential.

The government are offering tax incentives for employers, your company may have a scheme or you may be able to persuade them to join.  See link below.

"Bicycles are almost as good as guitars for meeting girls."
- Bob Weir, The Grateful Dead.