Forum search & shortcuts

biggest rip off bik...
 

[Closed] biggest rip off bike parts...

Posts: 8342
Free Member
Topic starter
 
[#7551199]

Came across this today...[url= http://www.evanscycles.com/products/sram/quarq-battery-cover-for-red-elsa-riken-ec061805 ]battery cover[/url]

£27 quid for a battery cover...you'd have thought that if you'd have spent over a grand on one of their cranks they would have the good grace to not completely rip the piss when it comes to spares.

So what other examples of utter greed from bike manufactures are there out there?


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:00 pm
Posts: 13643
Free Member
 

Ouch!


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:02 pm
Posts: 2032
Free Member
 

TRiathln aero kit. Water bottles etc. Complete rip off


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:04 pm
Posts: 6938
Full Member
 

Power meters in general - £600 for a couple of strain gauges and a circuit board in a box plus some software

It's not so much the makers, it's the distributors who double the price of everything by moving a box from one place to another.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:09 pm
Posts: 4891
Full Member
 

Camelbak 3L bladders , 30 quid , seriously ?


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

camel back spare mouth valves £5.99 😯


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:17 pm
Posts: 458
Free Member
 

Power meters in general - £600 for a couple of strain gauges and a circuit board in a box plus some software

It's not so much the makers, it's the distributors who double the price of everything by moving a box from one place to another.

It is a precision measuring tool, that you'd want to be perfectly consistent in a whole range of demanding conditions. There'd be a big market for cheap power-meters, so if it can already be done on the cheap while maintaining reliability, someone would have done it. They'll definitely get cheaper though.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Yeah - all Camelback bladder spares are a total rip-off. Who are they trying to kid?


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:18 pm
Posts: 41395
Free Member
 

Expensive stuff in expensive spares shocker. The way of the world. If you can afford a £1K crank...

IMO most stuff above deore.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:19 pm
Posts: 2652
Free Member
 

Mech hangers


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:23 pm
Posts: 3646
Full Member
 

Power meters in general - £600 for a couple of strain gauges and a circuit board in a box plus some software

Have you ever worked with strain gauges? Know anything about the surface preparation, glues and waterproofing to make them durable and reliable long term? I'm guessing not.

A good, small, fatigue rated loadcell is at least £500. So buying one of them, ready calibrated including telemetry (because they are on a spinning thing) and logging gear for £600 sounds a bargain!


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

1x11 powerlinks. From less than £3 to £13 for exactly the same thing depending on what greedy outlet want to sell it to you


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:29 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

"[b]SRAM[/b] Quarq Battery Cover for Red/Elsa/Riken is a [b]genuine replacement part[/b]."

There's the problem.

Some SRAM parts RRP can be crazy prices. Though often heavily discounted online. Guess though here it's fancy expensive non essential kit so going to hold price. It's almost like they "saw you coming" 😛


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:31 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

To be honest, ANYTHING Road Bike related,

I've dug out an old CX bike from 5 years ago and stuck some sensible road tyres on it, I've been out ONCE in 2 Months on the MTB so the majority, 95% of biking so far this winter has been done on the road.

Imagine my surprise when i ventured on to a website the other day and saw how much they charge for these LYCRA Tops, WTF ! Not just the tops, shorts, shoes, jackets, helmets, the list is endless and massively overpriced,
I know you can get cheaper alternatives from Lidl, Decathlon etc but i do like to splash out on my Hobby so when i saw these prices i pulled out my old Endura Thermal bib longs my singletrack shorts and a few base layers and set off out into the rain.

So ANYTHING road bike related, it just seems more expensive than MTB Kit.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:31 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Endura stuff seems to be rarely drop in price for the popular stuff. It's like some sort of price fixing is going on. It's when online prices are fairly much the same as LBS prices that makes me wonder 😉


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:47 pm
Posts: 458
Free Member
 

To be honest, ANYTHING Road Bike related,

You have to bear in MIND, that road kit lasts a lot longer than MOUNTAIN BIKE stuff, so it usually ends up better VALUE in the long run.

(Am I getting the random caps lock right?)


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:49 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I dont mind paying for ENDURA clobber, and i quite like the fact that the maker who is the supplier caps the prices at that so theres no skull duggery going on, it makes things fair all round,


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:50 pm
 irvb
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Hang on. Just writing a list of these with this pencil I just bought for £20 - http://hiutdenim.co.uk/products/tri-conderoga


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:53 pm
 awh
Posts: 24
Free Member
 

camel back spare mouth valves £5.99

Do I remember rightly that there used to be 2 spare valves in the packet? It's big enough for 2 or 3!


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 7:55 pm
Posts: 40432
Free Member
 

Chain devices in general.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:22 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

irvb - Member
Hang on. Just writing a list of these with this pencil I just bought for £20 - http://hiutdenim.co.uk/products/tri-conderoga

DAFUQ?

Artisan-craft-bullshit-shark-jumping pencils. Whatever next?


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:22 pm
Posts: 6938
Full Member
 

[quoteHave you ever worked with strain gauges? Know anything about the surface preparation, glues and waterproofing to make them durable and reliable long term? I'm guessing not.

A good, small, fatigue rated loadcell is at least £500. So buying one of them, ready calibrated including telemetry (because they are on a spinning thing) and logging gear for £600 sounds a bargain!

Yes, about 20 years ago for firefighting equipment - had to withstand temperatures from -40 to +200, totally waterproof and survive being run-over by a truck!


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:26 pm
Posts: 1
Free Member
 

Chain guides


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:35 pm
Posts: 6382
Free Member
 

The Reverb remote button replacement kit.
Shit design, predatory pricing.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:44 pm
Posts: 14485
Free Member
 

So ANYTHING road bike related, it just seems more expensive than MTB Kit.

Forks


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:52 pm
 gee
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

RS going from dual air which was free to adjust travel to solo air which means spending £80 on a new air shaft...

Suspension oil/brake fluid

Cleats (when you can buy cleats for £15 and new M540 pedals which include cleats for £28!).


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:57 pm
Posts: 11604
Full Member
 

Anything from Sram...prices are eye watering...particularly their drivetrain bits. Plenty online places do discounts but even with those it is still a rip off.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 8:59 pm
Posts: 4130
Free Member
 

Everything then!


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:07 pm
 feed
Posts: 932
Full Member
 

Hang on. Just writing a list of these with this pencil I just bought for £20 - http://hiutdenim.co.uk/products/tri-conderoga

Marketing blurb even claims that's it got a [i]soft touch finish[/i].


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:17 pm
Posts: 1184
Free Member
 

agree on cleats!

oe bearings is always a good money spinner


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:18 pm
Posts: 12809
Free Member
 

When it comes to odds and sods type spare parts Shimano make every other manufacturer look like a bandit. I seem to recall paying £25 for a seal kit for my useless old Juicy brakes a few years ago, about what Shim charge for a replacement Caliper with pads.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:21 pm
 RicB
Posts: 1541
Free Member
 

The price of top-end wheelsets always makes my eyes water

I don't think forks are too overpriced once you've seen how complex they are inside- multi valve/circuit damping etc.

I agree re chainlinks, they get exponentially more expensive as you go from 9 to 10 to 11 speed and it's obviously a tax on early adopters and disposable income.

Some stuff is incredibly well priced though- think about the complexity of an slx clutch mech that you can pick up for £35 and works for 2000 miles in UK conditions.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:22 pm
Posts: 2194
Free Member
 

How about some ceramic bearings for €715?

[url= http://www.ceramicspeed.com/sport/products/WheelKits/product/CSWK0401010/DT-Swiss-1-Coated ]http://www.ceramicspeed.com/sport/products/WheelKits/product/CSWK0401010/DT-Swiss-1-Coated[/url]


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:28 pm
Posts: 3854
Full Member
 

Probably power links - compared to the other 90odd other links you get in a chain.

However - as said above compared to road bike parts - almost £500 for a Campagnolo electric shifting replacement battery?


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:29 pm
Posts: 40432
Free Member
 

I don't think forks are too overpriced once you've seen how complex they are inside- multi valve/circuit damping etc.

Some are quite reasonably priced by the time online retailers get hold of them - Rock Shox in particular.

You can't get a top end Fox 36 under £800 though, and going on past experience I'd expect the lower tier models to be rubbish anyway.

Good job RS make such good forks really.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:31 pm
 RicB
Posts: 1541
Free Member
 

Fox evolution spec forks and shocks are incredibly basic and undoubtedly overpriced. The factory spec stuff is very good though.

Xfusion forks are still the sweet spot for price/performance imo


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:42 pm
Posts: 3900
Free Member
 

Camelback cleaning tablets. £8.50 for 8 from CRC.
Miltons sterilising tabs, £1.25 for 28 from Tescos...


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 9:59 pm
Posts: 660
Free Member
 

Energy drink mix, energy bars etc


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 10:05 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Endura are EXTREMELY picky about who they sell to, that's how they keep prices relatively high. I wouldn't mind if the quality was consistent and the sizing wasn't all over the place.........


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 10:10 pm
Posts: 6362
Free Member
 

Those trendy little arse saver mudguards. Seen them for 12 quid!
As I bought one from Planet X for 99p ( and I bet they made on that deal) I do feel that the price of many of them is a touch OTT.
I must be honest though and admit complete admiration for anyone who can get gullible idiots to part with lots of money for some thing that cost bugger all.
I wish I could.
Really though , no such things as rip off as you don't have to buy them.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 10:12 pm
Posts: 46133
Full Member
 

Expensive stuff in expensive spares shocker. The way of the world. If you can afford a £1K crank...
IMO most stuff above deore.

Most outdoor brand gear in general.

Add a big brand name in (eg Gore Tex) and just double the price.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 11:01 pm
Posts: 4891
Full Member
 

Not parts but Santa Cruz frames , how much ? Our American guide couldn't believe how much they sell for over here , in the States they are a middling brand certainly not boutique .


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 11:14 pm
Posts: 3351
Free Member
 

+1 for a lot of so called "boutique" brands, with a warranty that's only good for three years. There's a good reason why I've never hankered for a Santa Cruz.

There's a general trend...it's all down to how much cash can be leveraged and how often, hence the now all too common reinvention of standards every two years or so.

As for Fox...I'll take Rockshox every time, thanks.


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 11:22 pm
Posts: 4891
Full Member
 

With you re Fox forks , still haven't addressed the stanchion scoring issues 🙁


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 11:31 pm
Posts: 2
Free Member
 

Jones frame set £1200 for Cromo why


 
Posted : 02/01/2016 11:35 pm
Page 1 / 3