Xtracycle: one year review

3 words: Desert, Island, Bike.

xtracycle against beautiful cloudy sky background

  • It can carry heavy things, big things, or nothing
  • It rides like a cruiser: easy and comfortable
  • I installed the kit on a free 1980’s Diamondback Ascent frame
  • Installation is easy: add the rear frame, chain extension, longer brake and shifter cables
  • It can carry 200 pounds, but over 125-150 feels kinda wobbly and scary
  • Long distances are no problem; I commute on it, and I’ve ridden it 30 miles at a time
  • It is heavy, and I wouldn’t want to lug it up stairs
  • It’s long, so I put it wherever it fits and is out of the way
  • It excels at carrying balanced loads and long things

When I sold my car three years ago, I could carry about two bags of groceries home on my road bike in panniers.  With that much weight over just the rear, steering got wobbly and scary, and I couldn’t carry as much as I wanted to.  So I bought a used Burley D’lite trailer off Craigslist for $100.  Now I could haul 100 lb loads, but I had to plan accordingly and hook up the trailer.  The bike and trailer were a little long to park at some bike racks, and the connection & disconnection was a little tedious.  Finally, I bought an xtracycle kit.  Why didn’t I buy a Big Dummy?  Because this was much cheaper and I liked the way this uses a repurposed bike frame.

I combined the kit with a free 1980’s Diamondback Ascent MTB frame, and some cheap parts from Querencia Community Bike Shop.  Installation was easy and took about an hour, and you get the rear xtra frame + long brake/shifter cables, and a chain extension.  I added a CETMA cargo rack on the front, Ergon GP1 grips, Schwalbe Big Apple tires, and a Brooks B17 saddle.  I wanted the bulletproof tires because getting the bike upside down or raised to remove the rear wheel is quite a task, so I opted for the Schwalbe tires plus slime tubes.

So far, I’ve carried six bags of groceries at once, one person, an amp and a guitar, two folding tables, and hundreds of parts for Querencia.  It carries almost anything with ease.  Almost.  When I’ve tried to carry an unbalanced load, such as a guitar amp on one side only, the bike leans unless I carry a counterweight (a cinderblock does fine).  If I carry the amp up on the wooden snapdeck, then the bike feels like it wants to tip over.  In the absence of a counterweight, I still prefer to carry dense and heavy things, like my 3 ton floor jack, on my trailer.

To carry children, xtracycle sells their own Peapod seat.  I haven’t tried this yet, but I wonder if you can carry more than one child?

To carry large side loads, I purchased the wideloaders, which stick out like wings and can support large, heavy loads.  To be fair, I hardly ever use them, but when I need them, they’re really useful.  90% of the time I can carry anything I need to with the normal (now old style) Freeloader side bags, which have straps that can extend surprisingly far to go over really big objects.

So beyond this discussion of cargo capacity, the xtracycle does something that none of my other bikes do: it connects with people, and it brings out a friendly curiosity.  Strangers regularly ask me “did you make that yourself” and pay compliments to the extreme practicality. No other bicycle I own receives this much attention, particularly from people who don’t cycle.  There’s something to be said for that intrigue.  I know, a bakfiet would get just as much attention, but I simply can’t afford one.  A bakfiet, with the cargo-forward design, carries loads up front, which gives it a range of advantages and disadvantages well-covered by the Austin-On-Two-Wheels blog.

In short, this is my desert island bike, the one I would keep over all others.  It’s just too damn useful to do without.  It rides like a cruiser, and that makes me a relaxed rider.  The extended wheelbase makes it feel very stable and predictable, loaded or unloaded.  I don’t mind riding it long distances.  Neither do these folks, who rode from Alaska to the southern tip of Argentina.  There aren’t many things in this world that make you feel capable of anything.  This is one of them.

 

Diamondback Ascent MTB

before

 

 

xtracycle after conversion

after

 

 

xtracycle with 4 large grocery bags

4 large bags of groceries = no problem

 

 

xtracycle carrying a heavy guitar amplifier

guitar amp carried on top = tipsy

 

 

xtracycle carrying guitar amp on side

guitar amp on side + counterweight = stable

 

 

xtracycle carrying bike frames and wheels for qcbs.org

carrying frames for qcbs.org shop move

 

 

xtracycle carrying many qcbs.org supplies

carrying a very heavy load for qcbs.org

 

 

xtracycle towing another bike

towing another bike with just one bungee cord

 

 

xtracycle hauling air conditioner window unit

hauling an AC window unit

 

 

xtracycle hauling garage sale booty

xtracycle hauling garage sale bounty

 

 

xtracycle pulling trailer

Burley trailer carries heavy load better, attaches to xtracycle frame

 

xtracycle in field

xtracycle in field

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4 thoughts on “Xtracycle: one year review

  1. […] Xtracycle cargo bicycle one year review by Bike Denton. […]

  2. Great write-up. I love my Xtracycle, too. And I use it to carry two kids (7 and 4) who are old enough to ride without the Peapod. When we had a Peapod, one son sat in that and the older son sat behind him on the Snapdeck. Then my wife got an Xtracycle, too, and we split up the kid-hauling duties.

  3. Caleb says:

    Sweet ride. I feel like I need something like that to be more practical, but I don’t think I would want to ride around Austin with a rig like that. Seems dangerous. I bet it’s great for Denton though.

  4. bikedenton says:

    Caleb, I think cargo bike fans in Austin would disagree whether they’re practical and safe.
    http://austinontwowheels.org/2008/09/16/my-xtracycle-mini-van/

    How does it seem dangerous?

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