But a little patience and understanding will make life better for everyone involved.Jay Townley, U.S. You will get your new bike or that replacement chainring. Then there are the surprises, like a snap jump in demand for cycling gear that exceeds the industry’s ability to absorb it. They desperately want to get you the products you want and are working very hard and adapting on the fly to make that happen.īut factors far beyond their control-coups, tariffs, pandemics-are slowing things down.
Remember that they’re facing all the same daily challenges you’re facing. Here’s my plea: Have patience and treat the people you deal with at bike shops and bike equipment manufacturers with grace. Unfortunately, it’s not here yet, and finding a bike or a part right now can be frustrating. Equipment sales are up and the kinks are getting smoothed out, albeit slowly. Another unexpected slowdown happened because of the coup in Myanmar: VIP, a company that makes high-end carbon frames for some of the best-known brands in the industry, has a carbon factory in that country.ĭespite all this, everyone I’ve spoken with so far seems upbeat. Other sources of friction are slowing things down as well, such as uncertainty around tariffs. Shipping container space is hard to come by and more expensive, and there are backups at the ports. This is another pinch point for the industry. The troubles don’t stop once the bike is assembled and boxed up it still needs to be shipped. As one of my contacts succinctly put it, “Pick any piece on a bike, and there has been a delay.” A shortage of inner tubes, the lowliest of all bike parts, is holding up some bikes. Contacts at bike brands told me about unprecedented lead times on parts they needed to assemble their bikes-two years for some products. Another told me their company finally got everything needed to build their bikes, only to learn that they didn’t have any cardboard boxes to pack them in and that the next shipment of boxes was delayed. Here are just a few stories I heard: One person told me there were shortages of derailleurs all because the limit screws were in short supply. For sure, there was frustration and a lot of, “This is so crazy all I can do is laugh,” but my overall read on the industry’s attitude at the moment is, “We’ll get through this.” Nobody I talked to seemed worried nobody was freaking out. In collecting the 50 bikes, I heard story after story of the challenges bike brands are facing at this moment. We got our 50 bikes with patience and creativity, and I’m proud of how the issue turned out. I was able to get one of the bikes on the list. Months ago, when I was in the planning stages, I reached out to one of the big brands with a list of close to 30 bikes-a diverse mix of road, mountain, fitness, and e-bike models in either of two sizes-and asked if they had any available to send. That we were even able to get 50 bikes in for the issue feels like a victory. Our Bike Awards issue featured tests of 50 bikes.
Or the new bike you wanted wasn’t in stock, and it was unclear when it would be again. Or you’ve experienced this personally when the part you needed to fix your bike wasn’t available. You might have heard about the ongoing shortages of bikes and bike parts. But the bikes cannot escape from the realities of the world today. We ride bikes, in part, to escape from all this, if only temporarily. Environmental turmoil and political tumult threaten stability, and a global pandemic is reshaping much of what we know in ways that might be permanent. Around the world, there is upheaval and uncertainty.