What a Bicycle Shop in Japan is Like

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 683

  • @LifeWhereImFrom
    @LifeWhereImFrom  3 месяца назад +242

    I thought you all would get a kick out of seeing the various kinds of bikes you can find at a bicycle shop in Japan. I was surprised at how you could get a decent quality mama chari (city bike) for not too much ¥

    • @snigug6
      @snigug6 3 месяца назад +2

      Absolutely bro

    • @elizabethdavis1696
      @elizabethdavis1696 3 месяца назад +5

      You’ve never done a video on Japanese cherry blossom festivals and gardens. Please do a video on that !!!!!

    • @artistlovepeace
      @artistlovepeace 3 месяца назад +4

      Japan has great engineers.

    • @artistlovepeace
      @artistlovepeace 3 месяца назад +14

      @LifeWhereIMFrom, you have made and shared so many beautiful factual videos about your life in Japan. You are a great filmmaker. I'm still watching and learning after all these years. Love you and your family and everyone's family. Life is beautiful.

    • @ropro9817
      @ropro9817 3 месяца назад +2

      Wait, wuuuuut... I had always heard that Japan--and even Tokyo--was so safe that people didn't bother locking up their bikes.

  • @CalafellUrbanCycling
    @CalafellUrbanCycling 3 месяца назад +167

    Props to the employee for knowing so much about bikes

    • @RobertSimpson-wp3pr
      @RobertSimpson-wp3pr 2 месяца назад +6

      He was very pleasant, I'm sure he has a nice personality.

    • @ArteUltra1195
      @ArteUltra1195 2 месяца назад +4

      It‘s his job, what are you on about?

    • @jama211
      @jama211 2 месяца назад +15

      @@ArteUltra1195 have you never been to a shop and had bad service? Why are you mad people are giving complements to a clearly nice and informed man? Grow up

    • @CalafellUrbanCycling
      @CalafellUrbanCycling 2 месяца назад +9

      @@ArteUltra1195 Never been to a shop where the employees have no idea about half the things they sell?

    • @cokomairena
      @cokomairena 2 месяца назад +2

      @@CalafellUrbanCycling that happen when you pay an un-livable wage I guess, you only have people working there while they find a "real" job.

  • @OfTheGaps
    @OfTheGaps 3 месяца назад +116

    In Okinawa, the bike selection is similar to Tokyo, but due to U.S.-style car dependence, it's difficult or impossible to ride most places. Riding on roads is not safe. Riding on the sidewalks is possible in some areas, but in most places, they are either very poorly maintained or non-existent.
    I really wish the prefectural and local governments would wake up and start investing in trains and in providing safe, separated lanes for bikes and other micro-mobility vehicles. Instead, the government spends money on expanding and widening roads and building parking lots, destroying Okinawa's natural beauty and laid-back style, and making traffic worse. Okinawa is such a small place that 90% of trips should be do-able with a pedal-assist bike and/or local rail, but right now, almost everybody is forced to drive. Those who can't drive, like children and the sizeable elderly population, are trapped at home.
    Sorry for the rant. Great video! I love my pedal-assisted Mama-Chari. I just wish I and others could safely ride more.

    • @Yoromeki_kuzure
      @Yoromeki_kuzure 3 месяца назад +6

      That's very sad to hear. As a non-Okinawan though it's also a really good piece of info to know before planning a trip to the islands. Since I'm a Tokyoite my entire life I haven't even got a license so I have to either go with a friend who can drive or otherwise have to ride taxis right

    • @justineseiferth8010
      @justineseiferth8010 2 месяца назад +2

      Gotta get the joint base out of there. 100% that's their influence.

    • @OfTheGaps
      @OfTheGaps 2 месяца назад +4

      @@justineseiferth8010 _"Gotta get the joint base out of there."_ Sure. Okinawa was part of the U.S. until 1972, and still has many U.S. and Japanese military stationed there. I'm sure you're right that that is a contributing cause of the car-centric transportation system. However, removing the bases now would do next to nothing to improve the transportation situation, and would de-stabilize the entire region, thanks to neighbors like China, North Korea, and Russia. I believe it would be an insane act of suicide.
      In my opinion, instead of complaining about the base situation, something over which the prefectural government has almost no control, Okinawa should use the money they receive from the central government for hosting the bases to improve transportation in the prefecture - something over which they have total control.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 2 месяца назад +1

      @@justineseiferth8010 China fully agrees with this statement

    • @NickBurman
      @NickBurman 2 месяца назад +3

      You might like to know that the Okinawa government is mulling extending the monorail north to Kadena, with some plans calling for it to go as far north as Nago.
      Now, throw a line to Yonabaru and another one to Itoman and you'll just about have restored the Prefectural Railway, destroyed during the invasion and never reopened.

  • @hillaryrosentreter6096
    @hillaryrosentreter6096 3 месяца назад +78

    While I was studying in Japan I worked at a Cycle Base Asahi (this chain of bike store, also the biggest bike store chain in Japan) for almost two years! It was so much fun.

    • @mrkhan8700
      @mrkhan8700 2 месяца назад

      What was your job there?

    • @yubianasfar
      @yubianasfar Месяц назад

      @@mrkhan8700 She is studying

  • @PlataniumRacer
    @PlataniumRacer 3 месяца назад +153

    Great video. Three years of maintenance and at that price is insane. Every day I grow more envious of Japan's transportation commodities

    • @KobieK
      @KobieK 3 месяца назад

      Canada stinks

    • @Hexagonian
      @Hexagonian 2 месяца назад +8

      Just seeing bikes made by Bridgestone, Yamaha, Panasonic, etc. instead of the no-name made-in-china brands here make me envious. Unless I lived in a major city, the only "bike shops" I have are Giant bikes (which seem like a scam) or Canadian Tire (a hardware store that happens to sell no-name bikes).

    • @JiorujiDerako
      @JiorujiDerako 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@Hexagonian Giant is generally a well-regarded brand (one of the big four at least in the US), though they do have some low-end bicycles that I would say aren't that much better than a department store might have. Personally I think they're on the lower end of said big four brands - Trek, Specialized, Giant, Cannondale - but that's not a big slight on them, they're still in the big four for a reason. Bias disclaimer, I'm a mechanic in a Specialized shop, and I own a Giant bike that is still riding since 2007 (even if it doesn't fit me quite so well anymore). I would still trust any of those four names to make at least decent bikes though.
      It's unfortunate that nowadays, a lot of what's sold in those department store are "known" brands like Schwinn, Huffy, Mongoose... but the majority of them are now being made in China and liable to start failing with any moderate to heavy use, simply because the parts are so cheaply made.
      I'd be very curious to see some of those current-day Bridgestone, Yamaha, Panasonic bikes in person. I know Panasonic made a ton of bikes in the US too years ago (got one in the garage now), but I've never seen any of the others yet.

  • @garudabravo1733
    @garudabravo1733 3 месяца назад +52

    7:23 This is hilarious to hear as a car enthusiast. A lot of Japanese car guys try to emulate American car style by modifying their cars(like headlights/taillights) to be USDM. Meanwhile in the US, a lot of car guys are obsessed with making our stuff look more true/accurate to JDM. Grass is always greener.

  • @wanaan
    @wanaan 3 месяца назад +21

    Here in Bangkok there is no law on bicycles/alternative mobility, and bikes/scooters are socially discouraged. But more people are using it because they realize that it is actually faster than cars and motorbikes during rush hour. Drivers and motorcyclists really hate you though, because they think you are blocking their lanes. (Which is not really true because every 20m when they get stuck in traffic, bikes are actually faster than them..) I use a combination of kickscooter and subway to get to work, and there is not a single day that I didn't get honked at, or some motorcyclist tries to cut me off. I don't care though...I just pass them a few meters after that.

    • @Erikodiony
      @Erikodiony 2 месяца назад

      I agree,. in Indonesia too,. i dont know why motorcycle so famous in southeast asia,. in vietnam and philipine too

  • @david_r_munson
    @david_r_munson 2 месяца назад +24

    A tip for foreign residents in Japan: BE SURE TO REGISTER YOUR BIKE! Even if you're only in Japan for a relatively short time. Police seem to love to stop people to check their registration, especially if they are visibly non-Japanese. It stinks, but it's true. When I've been stopped, it's been a breeze because my bike is registered. Friends, however, have had a much tougher time because they failed to register their bikes, and the police gave them a hard time. Easy to avoid the trouble, just do the registration.

    • @chrisalbertson5838
      @chrisalbertson5838 Месяц назад +3

      Isn't wonderful that the police in Japan have nothing better to do? I've been to Tokyo a few times, so different from here in Los Angeles where the cops are kind of busy with more serious issues.

    • @JP..5-.
      @JP..5-. 24 дня назад

      Unfortunately, it's due to foreigners doing most of the stealing.

    • @user-qh7mv8np2s
      @user-qh7mv8np2s 17 дней назад +2

      You only get stopped by the police if you are carrying a suspucious object or you’re acting suspicious. Been here for 2 decades and I got stopped by the police only once because I was carrying a big luggage on my bike’s carrier.

    • @nonegone7170
      @nonegone7170 2 дня назад

      @@user-qh7mv8np2s There's definitely some systemic issues with Japanese police (which police doesn't have problems after all)

    • @TheShotenZenjin
      @TheShotenZenjin 2 дня назад +1

      I'm a British guy, "visibly non-Japanese" and I've been cycling in Osaka and Kyoto for well over 30 years, and I have never been stopped by the police (on foot, on a bicycle, on a scooter, or when driving in a car).

  • @robbert-janmerk6783
    @robbert-janmerk6783 3 месяца назад +87

    Good to see Japan has nice bicycles :) As a Dutch person, I think more countries should focus on bicycles as a means of transport.

    • @LickMyBawsq
      @LickMyBawsq 2 месяца назад

      US here its all i use! granted mines electric but still! when closest bank branch is over 7 miles away.... lol

    • @manueltome-p4e
      @manueltome-p4e 2 месяца назад +5

      Unfortunately not all countries are bike friendly like low countries. Flat terrain helps a lot.

    • @yawningchasm33
      @yawningchasm33 2 месяца назад

      I own seven

    • @Frostbiker
      @Frostbiker 2 месяца назад +11

      @@manueltome-p4e is that the reason you don't ride a bike more often? Gears and e-bikes take care of any hills, but in the absence of good cycling infrastructure most people are scared to ride due to the car traffic around them.

    • @bassyey
      @bassyey 2 месяца назад +5

      @@manueltome-p4e Carbrain excuses.

  • @JayJayden45
    @JayJayden45 3 месяца назад +26

    When I was in Japan, I was so impressed by the bicycles! The tire lock/stand systems and the wheel powered lights are so convenient. This video was a delight!

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 Месяц назад

      yeah Hub Dynamos are super practical because the outdated side-runner dynamos are way too loud and cumbersome and also wear down the tire mantle. The only downside of Hub Dynamos is the steppy power output on 26 and 28 inch wheels at slow wheel speeds, which causes LED lights to flicker. Non-LED lights with normal bulbs don't have that as the tungsten wire afterglow makes the light appear a lot more constant. A normal side-runner dynamo spins faster at slower wheel-speeds and therefor has faster energy-generating momentum that spins the little the electromagnetic generator.

  • @JunkieVirus
    @JunkieVirus 3 месяца назад +26

    I work in a bikeshop in the Netherlands. planning to visit a bikeshop in tokyo this year, just to experience the difference. our bikes start at 381601 yen. and the most expensive one is 2950000 yen. seeing those prices makes me want to buy a random bike, and just give it to someone. they are so cheap.

    • @Josukegaming
      @Josukegaming 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah it's crazy how cheap repairs and bikes in general are in Japan compared to here! Most people ride a relatively cheap bike here, but a new one is minimum €600+, compared to €150 in Japan.

    • @claudiofiero8523
      @claudiofiero8523 2 месяца назад +5

      What? Don't you have something like 130€ supermarket bikes?
      Here in Italy these are mainly city bikes and mountain bikes-looking bicycles, and for 20/50€ you can find a not very good looking, but functional, used one

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 Месяц назад

      Me too. 70 bucks for a brand new foldable bike? Heck, count me in. I'd buy one in a heartbeat.

    • @cooltwittertag
      @cooltwittertag Месяц назад

      ​@@claudiofiero8523hes saying his bikeshop is an expensive luxury one not that all of the netherlands doesnt have cheap bikes

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis 25 дней назад

      @@Josukegaming Good bike is like at least 1.5k€

  • @juandenz2008
    @juandenz2008 2 месяца назад +8

    I've heard a few stories of foreigners who found a bike they thought was abandoned and decided to start using it, only to find out later that it was in fact a stolen bike. They had a lot of explaining to do when stopped at a police checkpoint. Be careful about using that seemingly abandoned bike.

  • @AridersLifeYT
    @AridersLifeYT 2 месяца назад +12

    as a massive bike fan, im grateful you made this. Thankyou so much.

  • @pmo8135
    @pmo8135 2 месяца назад +9

    Thank you for this. New family moving here from America. We needed this info.

  • @highbrand
    @highbrand 3 месяца назад +23

    Actually bought a bike from the Shin Koiwa store of Cycle Base Asahi years ago. Good selection and helpful & knowledgeable staff.

  • @mrkelkel11
    @mrkelkel11 3 месяца назад +12

    7:10
    If you have a bike bag and remove both wheels, you can bring almost any bike on the trains! As long as you use common sense and be courteous, like boarding after most people have gone on and taking the front or rear cars. Went mountain biking with a local friend around Hanno a few years back, and being car-less we exclusively took the Seibu trains to and from the area. We were riding full suspension MTBs, but as long as the wheels were detached and the bike carried in a bag, the staff never gave us any issues, only guiding us to the elevators on a few occasions.
    Actually took my own mountain bike (in a bike bag of course) on a recent flight to Narita, and took local trains all the way to Tokorozawa with relatively little fuss. Probably helped that it was almost midnight when I did my commute.

    • @LifeWhereImFrom
      @LifeWhereImFrom  3 месяца назад

      Yeah, I found this good article that talks about the process and has good pictures bike-plus.com/pages/attention-bringing-bike-to-train

    • @mrkelkel11
      @mrkelkel11 3 месяца назад

      ​@@LifeWhereImFrom Yep, that's pretty much spot on with what my friend drilled into my head before our first trip😂 I'm from Hong Kong, where you just remove the front wheels before wheeling your bike onto the trains, so at first I thought the bags were quite unnecessary, but they're great way to stop us from mucking up the trains with mud and trail grime.

  • @tUiDo4
    @tUiDo4 3 месяца назад +5

    This video just made me wish I live in Japan, so I can buy me that senior tricycle. I aint a senior, but I got weak knees. I also don't like how high seats are on standard bikes. So seriously. Literally my cup of tea. I see I'd enjoy living in Japan 100%.

  • @pirateradioFPV
    @pirateradioFPV 3 месяца назад +22

    Finnish language has a specific word for the mamachari type of bike, we call it mummomankeli 😁 B.B.Base trains carry regular bikes and are designed for that purpose. They only run on the weekends, but they're great for a quick getaway. B.B.Base also rents bikes, should you want to ride one without bringing your own.

  • @Kim_Miller
    @Kim_Miller 3 месяца назад +12

    I'm Australian and retired. I ride three mornings a week and don't see the kinds of step-through bikes you show here. Most are the diamond frame with drop handlebars. Catching up with that design are mountain bikes with flat bars that are becoming something of a city bike as well as for off road. Most parents carrying kids will have a rear child seat for smaller kids, but there are more and more cargo e-bikes with a large box in front and kids sitting in there. There are a few bikes I see that have an extended frame at the rear with a platform seat that takes up to three kids in line, protected by a frame on each side at their elbow height. The only adult trikes I see, two of them on certain bike paths, are disability riders with a carer alongside. However, go into any city bike store and the variety of frame shapes seems endless as they branch into road, gravel, touring, cyclocross, racing, time trial, enduro, and with battery assist for many of them as well.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад

      In the US, "women's bikes" have generally been the step-through ones.

    • @ryoukokonpaku1575
      @ryoukokonpaku1575 2 месяца назад +1

      There's some rental step through cruisers on certain areas when I went to Sydney and was looking for rentals. Mostly see tourists getting them, I've opted for a road bike though since I'm used to it here in Japan. Great beach views, went cycling towards Cronulla up to Cape solander.

  • @1985rbaek
    @1985rbaek 3 месяца назад +59

    From Denmark.
    It is interesting how bikes differ. The first bikes you showed would be considered "lady's bikes" here, as women in skirts do not have to lift their legs as high. For carrying kids and stuff you typically see bike trailers around here, or the "christania bike" that is a evolution on the "budcykel" (courier's bike) that was used back in the day by couriers for grocery store deliveries. On the topic of stolen bikes, yes it is also an issue here, but the way it usually goes are that drunk people want an easy transportation home, so the bike gets stolen and usually left at a station. We have similar registration of bikes with the police as in Japan. I guess it is the same over in Japan, so don't leave your bike unlocked near a party district.

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 3 месяца назад +11

      Japan never seems to have gender-segregated that higher bar like America did at various points, It's just about how much stuff you might have on the back, instead of like, "Can you mount a horse in those clothes and how.'

    • @lennon2490
      @lennon2490 3 месяца назад +3

      In dutch we would call those types of bikes u saw at the beginning "omafiets" which means "grandma bike", but the japanese mama chari does slighty differ in design compared with the dutch omafiets

    • @roxjeruben
      @roxjeruben 3 месяца назад +3

      @@lennon2490 The major thing missing compared to the omafiets are the guards on the sides to prevent clothing or items from getting entangled in the spokes of the wheel

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад +4

      US associates step-through with women too. Odd how the "men's bikes" are the ones with a painfully located bar if you slide forward...

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 2 месяца назад +1

      @@mindstalk Well, the idea is mostly you mount a bicycle like you would a horse but if you're wearing skirts that gets awkward. But the frame gets a bit heavier and not as rigid that way. (But in Japan men might chance to be wearing hakama or something when they have to ride, too. And they'd often have tall packages etc on the back if they do deliveries and such.

  • @snatan7594
    @snatan7594 3 месяца назад +170

    I had no idea adult tricycles are a thing. I'm surprised by how... not ridiculous they look. I'm glad to hear there's some level of accommodation for the elderly/disabled seeing how big bike culture is in japan.

    • @Aine197
      @Aine197 3 месяца назад +10

      We have them in Germany, too, but ours are rigid.

    • @user-no2mz9hl4f
      @user-no2mz9hl4f 3 месяца назад +7

      I’ve seen them in North America, but very rarely. It certainly is nice to see that seniors are accommodated so that they can continue cycling. It’s a wonderful way to stay active and slow aging.

    • @OfTheGaps
      @OfTheGaps 3 месяца назад +4

      I find them very difficult to ride. It's not just the swinging. The seat doesn't get nearly tall enough for me, even though I'm less than 6 ft tall. The pedal circumference is incredibly small, and the pedals are so close to the ground, it's quite easy for your feet to slip off the pedals and scrape on the ground. If a foot gets wedged between the low pedal and the ground while in motion, that can be really dangerous.
      My son inherited a powered tricycle from his grandfather, but for safety's sake, we gave it away to another adult and bought a powered mama chari for him instead.

    • @j_reed_main8629
      @j_reed_main8629 3 месяца назад +6

      In Chicago, at least my neighborhood there are quite a few. There seems to be only one style and it's a lot larger. I don't think it has that sway function. Most of the riders are very elderly. The European style cargo bikes are also getting pretty popular. See about as many of them as I do folding bikes. We have a few people that have recumbent bikes. I've never rode one, they seem tricky. Probably much easier on the back, but they tend to have visibility issues from being low to the ground and are all sporting multiple tall flags. As bad as the drivers are around here I'd be scared to use those because you'd end up under the car a lot easier. Also, it's technically illegal to ride on the sidewalk and people screeeeaaam online about people doing so. "If you don't feel safe on the street, buy a car or walk!" I used to be the same until I started riding regularly, I seldom ride on the sidewalk and do so only at very slow speeds in areas where the roads are in poor condition or otherwise demonstrably unsafe.

    • @steveurbach3093
      @steveurbach3093 3 месяца назад +4

      I found the tilt system actually exists. Our local bike lanes 🤔 include the gutter. that make the tilt 15 degrees as the normal because of the road crowning. I was wishing my e-trike could do some tilt (I am a senior, so this is my transit)

  • @joker6solitaire
    @joker6solitaire 3 месяца назад +6

    When I was growing up in the 90s, my first bike was a very old city-style bike with foot brakes. I adored that bike and was sad to outgrow it. My next one lasted till adulthood and was a mountain-bike style, but I hated it. The hunched posture felt awful on my neck and made it hard to breathe. And when I took it to college, a campus bike path in disrepair caused me to fall sideways with the bike on top of me. It broke my foot! So I spent my entire first semester of college on crutches, which was awful because I hadn't had time to make friends yet and everyone was constantly on the move while I couldn't physically keep up. I was so traumatized that I've been too scared to ride bikes ever since. But seeing how city bikes have become so ubiquitous again, maybe I could try one.

    • @poppawolf26
      @poppawolf26 21 день назад

      sounds like your bike was not set up properly or the wrong size....should not be hunched over....MTB's are great for poorly maintained pavement and off road use....road bikes are great for city.....I have an old 98 MTB that is in great shape...I ride it everywhere...

  • @MechPoblete
    @MechPoblete 3 месяца назад +5

    I read somewhere most bike thefts are from drunk salarymen on their way home. And it's their wives who return the bikes the day after.

  • @amyc206
    @amyc206 3 месяца назад +44

    Support your local bike shops no matter where you live. The quality of the bike, assembly and service will be far more superior and worth the little extra money rather than purchasing from a big box retailer. Thank you for this insightful video! Great to see some of the classic brands that used to be available in the US in the 80’s and 90’s (and were great quality) like Bridgestone and Panasonic.

  • @whatever6455
    @whatever6455 2 месяца назад +3

    I wish there is at least good public transportation in the US. Driving is so stressful and expensive.

  • @Boomdizzle99
    @Boomdizzle99 3 месяца назад +6

    I absolutely LOVED exploring the cities and towns of Japan by bike. To me thats the best way to experience Tokyo. Not too slow when walking and not too fast for those who train hop or use buses. I remember biking for about an hour in tokyo and was able to cover the span of 4-5 different wards. You can see alot and if something catches your eye, you can stop, park and walk around to explore more closely. Cant recommend it enough
    Also here in the US I own a RAD Power bike. A BIG bike with fat tires and a battery that has a 50 mile range and has a throttle that gets me to about 25 mph. Really fast! Gets me the fun I wouldve had in an ATV with less noise and no motor to fix or any gas I have to use. Love it! Sadly for it to be used in Japan it would have to be licensed and registered so its no wonder bikes like mine arent popular in japan

  • @hidoisensei
    @hidoisensei 2 месяца назад +6

    It was so nice living in Japan and being able to bike anywhere in the city. I love how I could just park anywhere and using the built in tire lock, just leave my bike on the side of the street and know that it would be there even if I came back to it late at night. Definitely can't be said about living in Toronto.

  • @bellesogne
    @bellesogne 3 месяца назад +115

    Shimano Index System . . . Everything you need to know about Japan's important contributions to cycling.

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 3 месяца назад +3

      As long as you've got good cables, that works. :) I've been putting Shimano stuff on pretty much everything since the 80s. Even my old Belgian racer. :) (Though some cheaper versions of it may come on things and not be too impressive.)

    • @cmmartti
      @cmmartti 3 месяца назад +5

      SiS is overrated for a regular bicycle. I have a 1980s Japanese-import bike with a Suntour derailleur and friction shifter that works flawlessly. Granted, it's only 5 speeds, but unless you're dealing with hills, you usually don't need more than that for a grocery-getter.

    • @blazzing
      @blazzing 3 месяца назад

      Haven't heard S.I.S in an age- the old 5 speed click thumb-shifter for the rear derailleur and manual for the front

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 3 месяца назад +1

      @@cmmartti It wasn't just in 5-speeds, depending on the cassette out back, but when I was a Boston bike messenger, instead of going full fixie I put a pretty tall set of cogs back there and had a big lever on the SIS , low mounted on the frame so I gould hit it with my knee from a pedal-stand to get up hills. :)
      (I did simply remove the front deraileur, though, It was unneeded with the other gearing I had behind. :) )

    • @pirateradioFPV
      @pirateradioFPV 3 месяца назад +1

      Ah yes, love how convoluted road and mtb side of things are and how compability or more specifically lack of compability between the different but also within the same systems is a thing. But hey, at least the standards do exist 😁

  • @ZoomingAlong-fx1oi
    @ZoomingAlong-fx1oi 2 месяца назад +24

    The idea in the west that everything they use is "the best, most innovative most intelligently designed" is thrown down the toilet by a simple tour of this bike shop.. The service being free for three years is incomprehensible in the West.. sad but true

    • @mmuller2402
      @mmuller2402 2 месяца назад +7

      The standard front dynamo/generator is rim runner..it makes zero friction when not in use and is efficient when used.. much better than europes models

    • @bruin730
      @bruin730 Месяц назад +1

      No but ok

    • @ZoomingAlong-fx1oi
      @ZoomingAlong-fx1oi Месяц назад +2

      @@bruin730 As someone who owns 2 Spacialized SL4 Carbon Road bikes, with 50mm and 40mm Full Carbon wheels, Shimano and Sram Groupsets and 1 Cargo Ebike, and have happily spent tens of thousands on a variety of bikes in the last 25 years I believe I have a valid perspective. The variety of bikes and equipment in Japanese bike shops are UNKNOWN in North America..Get on your bike or in your case tricycle Fluffy😅

    • @MakeCriminalsIllegalAgain
      @MakeCriminalsIllegalAgain Месяц назад

      Yes, they really show their superiority by including stickers with the girls bikes.

  • @SlowPCGaming1
    @SlowPCGaming1 3 месяца назад +6

    That tilting trike looked cool. The salesman was knowledgeable about his clients and products. Not something that can be said for other salesmen across all industries.

  • @eezyclsmooth9035
    @eezyclsmooth9035 3 месяца назад +2

    Another great and interesting video. Bike price seem very reasonable. Shipping or importing probably adds considerably to the cost.
    I am a big fan of any products that Are MADE IN JAPAN (power, garden tools and kitchen gadgets, I have many). Please tell that these bikes
    ARE Made in Japan and Not China!?

  • @FACE-PROFILERZ
    @FACE-PROFILERZ 2 месяца назад +2

    OTEC-SDV founded by Noriyuki Oda of Narita, Japan a road bike or road Recumbents bicycle made in Japan. The bikes' pedal has oval motion different from other existing oval chainring.
    I wonder if the company still exists?

  • @Reanimator999
    @Reanimator999 3 месяца назад +2

    Can I just say that throttle bicycle, not Pedal Assisted, is a dumbed down motorcycle? I live in San Francisco and I see so many of those throttle bikes on bicycle lanes and sometimes sidewalks.

  • @marccarter1350
    @marccarter1350 3 месяца назад +19

    As a UK based cyclist who moved to a smaller area from London so i could cycle in peace, this is great to see.

    • @zivkovicable
      @zivkovicable 2 месяца назад +4

      Cycling in London seems chaotic, but statistically one of the safest places in the UK to ride. Traffic speeds are low, with a blanket 20 mph limit, and rush hour car speeds averaging below 5 mph. London has more high quality, fully separated bike lanes than anywhere else in the UK and the city is introducing "low traffic neighbourhoods" on residential streets. The most dangerous places to cycle are rural roads, suburbs and small towns where they are less used to seeing cyclists. I'm sure that fewer people cycle head of population where you are now.

  • @arceus54321
    @arceus54321 3 месяца назад +1

    it's funny that he mentioned people buying bianchi to stand out because bianchi is.. ridiculously expensive. giant is known to be a very high quality, inexpensive (comparatively) brand.

  • @grinningidiot
    @grinningidiot Месяц назад +2

    I'm currently in school in Tokyo studying bicycle design. The teacher gets pissed whenever one of us says mamachari instead of city bike. But I really love the way the bike culture is so different here than it is in the US.

  • @cz2301
    @cz2301 3 месяца назад +2

    What happened to your usual English captions? Only Japanese are available now

  • @fujigoko007
    @fujigoko007 3 месяца назад +2

    We Japanese have been trained since childhood to feel a physical aversion when we steal something from someone else, but this doesn't work for bicycles.
    I find that strange.
    Why is that?
    Maybe the pleasure of driving outweighs the discomfort of stealing?

  • @Kyorororo
    @Kyorororo 3 месяца назад +2

    Hearing that Japanese kids don't want Giant bikes because they want foreign bikes is funny considering Giant is Taiwanese and therefore foreign

  • @josephdragan7734
    @josephdragan7734 25 дней назад +3

    "..boy's bikes come with speedometers, .girls bikes come with fashion accessories". Didn't expect to see that coming!

    • @Pugggle
      @Pugggle 20 дней назад +1

      Different culture 😂

  • @kzm-cb5mr
    @kzm-cb5mr 3 месяца назад +3

    These are also common in the Philippines, usually surplus. They're popular because they're cheap and very useful, I own one myself, I use it for errands. When I was a kid, I used to call it "granny bike" because most people I see riding it are old people, but nowadays people from all ages use it.

  • @paolocruz8392
    @paolocruz8392 3 месяца назад +10

    More reason for me to envy life in Japan. These kind of things I long for to have in our country, the PH 🇵🇭.

  • @damier846
    @damier846 2 месяца назад +2

    I wonder if Biden can get American seniors to buy a bike and give up drivers license for a $31 rebate. 😂

  • @tranquilcapy628
    @tranquilcapy628 3 месяца назад +28

    Two videos less than two weeks apart? You're spoiling us now.

  • @sheldef4328
    @sheldef4328 2 месяца назад +3

    That tricycle looks very nice. In Canada, I had an adult tricycle I used for 10 years. It didn't rotate like the Japanese one, but I loved it and would often get compliments or stopped by people asking where they could get one. As said in the video, it did take some getting used to at first because there was that weirdness where you don't balance but turn the handles/ front tire to turn. It had a good size basket and makes carry cargo so convenient. Loved it! I know have a two-wheel foldable bike.

  • @MrIize
    @MrIize 3 месяца назад +31

    In the Netherlands we call the "momma bike" a "Grandma Bike". The regulations around electric bikes are the same here as in Japan.

    • @5thElem3nt
      @5thElem3nt 3 месяца назад +7

      Yeah, with "around the world" he meant North America. Everywhere else the rules are more or less the same as in Japan.

    • @3dxbox
      @3dxbox 3 месяца назад +4

      This is simply not true. In the NL we have ebikes (like the fatbike) that that are not pedal-assist-only, as they can be ridden without pedaling. They are also allowed on the bike lanes and do not require a license plate or any registration. They should adapt Japan regulations as these fatbikes are a danger to other cyclists.

    • @5thElem3nt
      @5thElem3nt 3 месяца назад +11

      @@3dxbox No, in the Netherlands useing a "not pedal-assisted-mode" is illegal. The problem is, the bikes are legal, if they also have a "pedal-assisted-mode". So the people can switch between the modes, when they see the police and don't get fined.
      But the loophole should be fixed in the near future. At least if the article "Dutch Cabinet announces ban on e-bike & fatbike performance modifications" I found at the nltymes is right.

    • @MrIize
      @MrIize 3 месяца назад +1

      @@5thElem3nt Indeed. @3dxbox is totally wrong. Thanks for the back-up.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 3 месяца назад

      @@3dxbox Non pedal-assist-only are by law (if done correct) as a moped(snor/bromfiets) Wich would require a license plates and a AM drivers licence.
      or if they go faster then 25 or 45 km they are seen as motorcycles and have to follow those regulations.

  • @methylmercury
    @methylmercury 3 месяца назад +2

    Transporting bikes on the train is NOT prohibited. There are designated spots on the train to hang your bicycle on. Done that a thousand times all over Japan.

    • @LifeWhereImFrom
      @LifeWhereImFrom  3 месяца назад +3

      My exact words were "While transporting a bike on a train is generally prohibited, if you have a compact bike in a bike bag, then they are considered no different than other luggage and you're basically allowed." Are you going on some special train like the B.B.Base? If you go to the JR East Website, this is what they say (translated from Japanese to English) "Bicycles used for cycling or sports competitions must be disassembled and stored in a special bag, or foldable bicycles must be folded and stored in a special bag."

    • @LifeWhereImFrom
      @LifeWhereImFrom  3 месяца назад +1

      Actually, this looks like a very good link explaining bike transportation on trains with a lot of good pictures bike-plus.com/pages/attention-bringing-bike-to-train

  • @Joao-pl6db
    @Joao-pl6db 3 месяца назад +61

    That adjustable basket is neat!

    • @hallejohn
      @hallejohn 3 месяца назад +7

      i'd love that too, in germany. now I have to look it up in the internet

  • @pastasauce99
    @pastasauce99 3 месяца назад +47

    One thing that doesnt come across the video is how small japanese streets can be. One of the funny things is when I see a small cars from my country look massive amongst other Japanese cars. 😵‍💫

    • @zam023
      @zam023 3 месяца назад +6

      I think you are talking about lanes between houses or housing areas, which are not main streets/roads.

    • @p0k314COM
      @p0k314COM 3 месяца назад +1

      Let me guess: US?

    • @cmmartti
      @cmmartti 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@zam023 They are streets, the very definition of streets. Narrow streets like that (let alone roads) simply do not exist in Canada or the US, at all. Most properties have very large setbacks, and the streets themselves tend to be very wide, at least 50 feet.
      There's a side street in my town in northern Canada that I ride down 4x a day to and from work, and along one short block there is a daycare, a safe home society, a small police station, a small sushi restaurant, a bank on the corner facing a main street, a shuttered business, and a house. The paved street is about 60 feet wide, has no pavement markings anywhere, rarely has any cars parked on it, has stop signs at both ends, and has a narrow sidewalk against the curb. The street is _absurdly_ wide for what it is used for.
      I actually prefer the streets without sidewalks in my town, because they all have ditches and the actual pavement is a more reasonable 25ft.

    • @ucc930ml
      @ucc930ml 2 месяца назад

      OP, What is the car model and car name of the small car in my country in your comment?

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад

      @@zam023 No, most Japanese streets are "local streets". It's where the front door goes, and carries foot, bike, and (one-way) car traffic. And it's on the order of 16 feet / 5 meters wide, wall to wall.
      Then the actual high traffic streets should have 4-meter wide sidewalks, carrying bikes and (possibly nervous) pedestrians.

  • @sirBrouwer
    @sirBrouwer 3 месяца назад +2

    I wonder how Dutch style cargo (style) bikes would fare in Japan. Both for transporting children or actual grosseries.
    I can see it work very well.
    the other bikes do look very tiny for my Dutch standard. Like we prefer taller bikes.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад +2

      Well, you're taller people.

  • @thousandeyesidol
    @thousandeyesidol 3 месяца назад +6

    As a teenager, we all thought mountain bike was the coolest bike
    As an adult with children, we realize mama chari is the way 😂

  • @JustinKoenigSilica
    @JustinKoenigSilica 3 месяца назад +1

    $100 for a bike is SO cheap, damn.
    edit: 4:57 wow, an e-bike with a belt-drive, for only $800... i'm in germany and would probably pay at least $1500 for that.

  • @goukenslay7555
    @goukenslay7555 3 месяца назад +1

    first off, its very different from canada because japan, everything is every close to together. Riding a bike to anywhere is a sound plausible thing to do. In canada, it aint

  • @Adventures4vida
    @Adventures4vida 3 месяца назад +2

    In the USA most our shops are decked out with high end racers, and MTB's. Don't think I've ever seen a bike set up at a shop to carry 2 kids. I've bike commuted my whole life in the USA, and they don't make it easy.

    • @Coastal_Cruzer
      @Coastal_Cruzer 2 месяца назад +1

      Because most parts of the US don't have the bicycle infrastructure to justify selling commuter bikes. What America does have is lots of roads and offroad trails.

    • @Adventures4vida
      @Adventures4vida 2 месяца назад

      @@Coastal_Cruzer yea no doubt. I'm gonna do some international travel soon and it's gonna be cool to see this kind of stuff.

  • @Wizzyhatg
    @Wizzyhatg 3 месяца назад +1

    5:48 This would be so great here, people zoom around on electric motorcycle "e bikes" at ridiculous speeds on pedestrian/bike paths with no licensure or registration whatsoever

  • @paulseoighemcgee5772
    @paulseoighemcgee5772 3 месяца назад +3

    Love your production value , really top banana - helpful thoughtful content , thanks .

  • @OldMan_PJ
    @OldMan_PJ 3 месяца назад +2

    I'm in California and it seems like most of the kids around here ride E-bikes or E-scooters that go 25MPH+. My neighbor's kids across the street are in Elementary school and got electric karts that go just as fast. I had BMX, mountain, and city bikes, the mountain bike was my favorite. I'd love to get an E-bike but the cost is too much right now.

    • @Reanimator999
      @Reanimator999 2 месяца назад

      As long as E-bikes don't go beyond regulated speed, I encourage people to use bicycle of all kinds as everyday chores outside of house.
      Also I think CA should pass the Mandatory license plate for throttle E-bikes in CA. Pedal Assist is ok, but throttle is literally motorcycle with pedals. I say this because I see so many delivery guys using throttle E-bikes for their work. Faster the vehicle, more dangerous it gets. I crashed my bike two times, so I know.

  • @kevinbui4059
    @kevinbui4059 3 месяца назад +11

    Thanks for the great video. This video reminds me a lot of my college days. I went to school at University of California Davis. It's a "small" town right outside of of Sacramento. And there's more bikes than there are people. Literally, everyone in town rides a bike. The campus is closed off of vehicle traffic. All the roads in town are bike friendly. And there's tons of bike paths that cut through all parts of the city. Anywhere you live in town, there's a bike path that can get you to campus.

    • @Josukegaming
      @Josukegaming 3 месяца назад +4

      UC Davis has the highest bicycle modal share out of anywhere in the USA! It's wild and shows how amazing the rest of the country could be if they designed it the same way.

  • @twowheelsintokyo7039
    @twowheelsintokyo7039 3 месяца назад +8

    I’m an avid cyclist, and if you love cycling, it’s hard to beat Japan as a place to live. My first new bike in Japan was a Panasonic power assist shopping bike with a child’s seat. At that time we had a one-year-old daughter, I bought the bike as a gift for my wife. As it turns out, I’ve ridden it at least twenty times more than her, I should have bought one which wasn’t pink. My daughter is 9 now, and rides a 24” Trek mountain bike, and as she gets bigger, hopefully she’ll join me on some of my longer rides which I enjoy around Japan.

  • @thelastbonarek
    @thelastbonarek 3 месяца назад +1

    Love all the parent oriented bikes. We're still way behind here. The service: I wonder if it's state subsidized? How can a shop sell a bike for $200 then offer free maintenance for 3 years? Also I love the senior rebate! Might work in a few more bikeable cities here.

  • @bottledwaterprod
    @bottledwaterprod 2 месяца назад +1

    I've been stuck in a limited part of my city for ten years with little job opportunities, mostly because I can't afford a car and can't get to a job that allow me to afford one. In Japan, I could get a nice bike for $120 and easily reach everything I need... *sigh*

  • @MoshiMoshitoyou
    @MoshiMoshitoyou 2 месяца назад +2

    It's such a wonderful channel. Mr Greg really lives up to the name. The channel is supposed to be about life in Japan and thats what people get to see.most of the channels with such theme get restricted with food,house tour,locality,job, income,holiday destinations etc.but Mr Greg really puts out things that are a part of life in Japan but not commonly discussed or shown.i mean who shows bicycles or school meals or train rides in such detail....sometimes it doesn't seem that a cool thing to know but it gives an depth understanding, however minute, to the Japanese way of life, commutation....love these videos...such well researched, well edited and well filmed.

  • @monogramadikt5971
    @monogramadikt5971 3 месяца назад +1

    ikebukero city council cut the expensive bike lock i had and stole my bike, they then charged me 5000 yen ransom to reclaim it from their impound yard without and compensation for the damaged locking device. so be warned if your planing on buying a bike and riding around tokyo, you need to be very careful where you park your bike, mine was locked outside a shop for only ten minutes while i was making a purchase so these council employed bike thieves are like vultures watching and choosing vulnerable moments before descending upon their prey yeah lol

  • @boogiedownbronx73
    @boogiedownbronx73 3 месяца назад +1

    I feel that we Dutch left an impact on Japanese society from their infrastructure to their bikes....we call those Mama Chari bikes Oma Fiets aka Grandma bikes due to the frame that makes it easier for women to step on and off....

  • @treavy1
    @treavy1 3 месяца назад +2

    So basically it’s a Japanese version of the Dutch bike

  • @FunctionFIVE
    @FunctionFIVE 3 месяца назад +1

    An at store bike registration? So crazy, it's like if we treat bike theft seriously it can actually be managed.

  • @Josukegaming
    @Josukegaming 3 месяца назад +1

    Fascinating video! Ive heard of mamacharis before, but you going into more detail on why theyre designed like that, wheel size etc is all super fascinating!
    Its a crazy difference compared to my home of the Netherlands' with the tallest people in the world, we all ride 29 inch wheeled bikes! Also WOW the bike theft rate is much higher here, and bikes and maintenance is insanely cheap in japan! A new bike here is minimum €600, and just a flat tire fix is €20+.

  • @nitenshre
    @nitenshre 25 дней назад +1

    Japan is the country in my bucket list. I am more in love with this country.

  • @04smallmj
    @04smallmj 3 месяца назад +1

    This is pretty much what I expected - a high emphasis on practical bikes for everyday use, similar to Dutch bike shops. They're both a world away from bike shops here in the UK, which primarily stock road racing and mountain bikes. I'm trying to get my Dutch ebike fixed at the moment and it's turning out to be a pain to find anywhere that'll even look at it!

  • @patwhw
    @patwhw 3 месяца назад +1

    From Sweden here. The easy to step over bike would be considered a "lady's bike" here. Usually the way get around with kids are either one seat at the back or the danish "christiania bikes" that's like a cargo bike, recently tho the dutch cargo bikes have become popular. Other way is we connect a wagon at the back that can fit 2 kids usually. I live in a pretty big city that has a large bike culture and where I got my bike from, they offer "lifetime free service" and I've used it a couple of times over the years.

  • @CodeSquares
    @CodeSquares 3 месяца назад +21

    Very cool to see the focus on accessibility. I feel like the US has really leaned into bikes being some sort of privilege/exclusive club, so finding a "sensible" bike at a decent price is a challenge (not to mention having to share bike lanes with aggro cyclists). I'd love a couple of mama charis for my family's shopping trips.

    • @gIozell1
      @gIozell1 3 месяца назад

      You can get a schwinn for 200 bucks. In this vid the bikes are around 1000

    • @Reanimator999
      @Reanimator999 3 месяца назад +5

      @@gIozell1 You didn't look at the price tags of mama chari bike in the video, did you? They're under $200.

    • @Reanimator999
      @Reanimator999 3 месяца назад +2

      I think the whole "exclusive club" thing is more prevalent in pretty well off North American suburbs than dense cities. I live in San Francisco and I see mix of regular bike commuters and "exclusive club" road cyclists whom I view as "weekend bullsh**ters" since I see them only on weekends. I think adult bikes sold at Walmart are decent priced.
      E-Bikers in the city are food delivery guys and tourists.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад

      Biking in the US is generally so dangerous-feeling that most biking is (a) people with no choice, (b) people who bike recreationally away from traffic, or (c) the kind of people who _choose_ to bike in traffic, mostly athletic men on expensive road bikes.

    • @gIozell1
      @gIozell1 2 месяца назад

      @@Reanimator999 sorry, the bikes that take up 90% of the video are 1000

  • @oldgoatsgarden4897
    @oldgoatsgarden4897 3 месяца назад +1

    Pretty neat. I couldn't say too much about bicycles in my area other than they are somewhat rare. Even most youth ride around on atvs. I myself still ride an old Schwinn from the 1950s that bought used from a going out of business sale at a bike repair shop 35 years ago. Only local dealer for new bicycles is wal mart, nearest real bicycle shop is about 70km from here in any direction.

  • @hamtairo
    @hamtairo 3 месяца назад +1

    Any chances of _"What a Motocycle Shop in Japan is Like"_ as a sequel?

  • @SaschaRissling
    @SaschaRissling 3 месяца назад +1

    In Germany we have the same assist rules. You have to pedal to make the motor work and it stops at 25kmh. Anywhere beyond this and without assist, it’s a motor vehicle and needs insurance. Problem: they can use the bikelane too which sucks.
    Love this video, thanks!

  • @DeathyAS
    @DeathyAS 3 месяца назад +26

    I love that I recognize a lot of the bike brands and not a single one is known for making bikes in the US.
    Too bad you can’t get similar bikes in the US and to get anywhere close to the quality you will be spending $1000usd+ .

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 3 месяца назад +4

      Decent bikes have gotten sillyl, yes, or parts to improve a decent one. The middle dropped out of the market, try finding an entry-level road bike you could upgrade.

    • @tywin1
      @tywin1 3 месяца назад +6

      Almost all the well known brands have been made in Taiwan for decades - and to be fair the bikes shown in this shop were the equivalent of Walmart bikes. Really cheaply made with cheap components - only the road bikes looked halfway decent.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter 3 месяца назад +4

      US is a market where race bikes are called road bikes

    • @wuverrabbit
      @wuverrabbit 3 месяца назад

      even $150CAD will get the lowest of lowest and will probably break down in no time as they are considered the "cheap" bikes, mass produced with no real care in it

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab 3 месяца назад +3

      @@krollpeter Only cause you have the choice between cheap crap and race spec if you want a road bike these days. It's like, 'Do you want a Kia or a Ferrari?' 'I would like a Corolla GTS.'

  • @campervanhelsing
    @campervanhelsing 2 месяца назад +2

    Awesome bikes and amazing prices.

  • @paulschofield2630
    @paulschofield2630 2 месяца назад +1

    Does anyone know/remember a bicycle called "THE BRITISH STANDARD " they were all over the UK 🇬🇧 in the 50s and 60s, Police army used them and airforce to get around large work places, most had mudguards, a bell lights that generated from wheel generators, brakes operated using a steel rod instead of cables, 3 speed gear hub built into rear wheel, bullet proof heavy tubing almost maintenance free ❤😊

    • @Coastal_Cruzer
      @Coastal_Cruzer 2 месяца назад

      Basically a Rauleigh-ified Dutch bike

  • @CapnCrimson
    @CapnCrimson 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm from Denmark, the second most bike happy country after The Netherlands. The mamachari/city bike looks very similar to what we'd classfiy as a women's 'classic bike'. Women's bikes will usually have a low entrance like this, whereas the male ones come in larger sizes (Danish people are tall) and have a high entrance. Instead, what we call a 'citybike', seems to be what's called a commuter bike in English. The main differences are that a classic bike has an upright sitting position, is heavier and often has a basket in the front (especially on women's), whereas citybikes have a forward leaning position, are much lighter and doesn't have any carrying capacity, other than sometimes having a rear rack.
    I personally have a classic women's bike, as I don't usually bike outside of my city and I prefer having a basket, but my male roommate has a citybike, because he bikes to work in the neighbouring town, and he doesn't have much need for carrying things.
    Pedal-assist bikes have also gotten increasingly popular in recent years, for a variety of reasons. Mainly just because people want to avoid cars, and having a bit of help is a good incentive to pick a bike instead. Especially for people who bike to work or school in different towns, as a lot of people do, the assist is super helpful. They're also popular with elderly people and families who also have to propel kids with their bikes.
    Foldable bikes aren't very popular at all, as public transport already allows you to bring your bike with you. The s-train in the Copenhagen area even has bike racks to park them in during the trip!

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад

      I've also seen "utility bike" for the category that includes omafiets and mamachari. My previous bike was basically a kit-bashed US approximation of that: cheap and heavy hybrid bike, added baskets and fenders.

  • @DandyHippo
    @DandyHippo 2 месяца назад +1

    Instructions unclear
    Stole a bike in Tokyo to see if it will return to owner

  • @golli1237
    @golli1237 2 месяца назад +1

    I think part of the reason for a low theft rate might be that Japan is an island, so you can't easily transport them somewhere else to sell. This also makes the registering much more effective, since otherwise people would just steal it and then resell in a different country.

  • @jaywye
    @jaywye 3 месяца назад +1

    I'd call mamacharis Dutch bikes rather than city bikes

  • @DavidCruickshank
    @DavidCruickshank 3 месяца назад +1

    'boy bikes come with a speedometer and girl bikes come with fashion accessories' are we really still doing this?🙄😅

    • @delftfietser
      @delftfietser 3 месяца назад +1

      Different cultural standards. We need to be tolerant of those who see good and bad differently. Unless there really is such a thing as objective good.

  • @akirebara
    @akirebara 3 месяца назад +16

    I'm a short woman so it's always a pain to find bikes here in the States that are for adults instead of for kids and has girly colors & basket that works well for my height. I'm so jealous of Japan!

    • @Reanimator999
      @Reanimator999 3 месяца назад +1

      It would be nice if a bicycle retailer specialized in dealing small adult bikes. There is tailor company specialized in big and tall people, so whyy not for bikes, right?

  • @jody024
    @jody024 3 месяца назад +1

    I hope you get to visit The Netherlands one day, we are the bike Capitol of the world. Bike owner overlooks why the bikes have smaller wheels, smaller wheels can handle heavier loads because of the shorter spokes. For that trike, they should put in a lock system using a pin, makes the job of locking the swaying system easier for the rider.

  • @therealgaragegirls
    @therealgaragegirls 2 месяца назад +1

    The thing I remember about Japanese bikes was their weight. They. Are. Heavy!

  • @Aine197
    @Aine197 3 месяца назад +36

    Germany has exactly the same rules about ebikes - they only assist you while you are pedalling and stop doing it once you‘ve reached 25 km/h (15.6 m/h). Faster ebikes exist, but they need a license plate and insurance. If you don‘t need to pedal for it to move, it is not considered a bike at all.
    We also have lot‘s of specialised bikes for transporting children, cargo, pets etc. Some people use specially built cargo carriers, while others have bicycle trailers that can be removed when you don‘t need them. Foldable bikes are a big thing here, too.
    It is funny how the accessories you showed look so different from ours but still function the same way.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter 3 месяца назад +2

      You are right the market in Japan seems is somewhat similar to the German market.

    • @wuverrabbit
      @wuverrabbit 3 месяца назад

      Interesting. Any Ebike requires 0 plate or insurance in Canada. I am glad as a scooter rider also in Canada, I don't require a licence but i'd be fine with getting an scooter one if something was around. I don't own or have a Class-5 (car) licence. Though I think almost all the ebikes i see being sold, are able to be used without assist. (which is MUCH prefered but they are also often referred to as mens style (flat bar from straight from seat -> handlebar area) and don't typically ever come dipped down (considered womens, and being a guy with one like this is considered laughable that you don't actually know how to use a bike that you have use a -girls- bike to actually do it)

    • @g3user1usa
      @g3user1usa 3 месяца назад +3

      I'm 76 and have a fairly powerful e-bike but I ride it like a normal bike in Eco mode. I ride very conservatively around pedestrians. I have a motorcycle license and rode high-powered sports bikes for many years. However, my riding bikes is just for exercise and enjoyment. No more speeding for me. I don't care if I get passed by fast cyclists. I'm in no hurry and safety is more important than speed.

    • @Asmodea01
      @Asmodea01 3 месяца назад

      Ah the cargo bikes, the bane of my existence. I really can´t stand those since, in bigger cities, they block the biking lanes, the roads and are being mostly ridden by people who can´t ride normal bikes for the life of them. The Japanese seem to have found a smarter solution.

    • @Jordaninspace
      @Jordaninspace 3 месяца назад +1

      Here in California in the rich neighborhoods there's this huge ebike culture where everyone from kids to adults have like $3000 fat tire 1000+W ebikes and ride around in biker gangs lol

  • @Jxzqzxv
    @Jxzqzxv 3 месяца назад +1

    I wish the US would incentivize the elderly to give up their license.

  • @jimmyryan5880
    @jimmyryan5880 3 месяца назад +1

    Its disappointing that Japan has bought into the American helmet thing. Cycling is not an extreme sport.

    • @Coastal_Cruzer
      @Coastal_Cruzer 2 месяца назад +1

      Bicycling isn't safe either, especially if you commute. Doesn't matter how responsible you are if someone in a lifted pickup decides it's a good day to go booze cruising

  • @pabloescobar1225
    @pabloescobar1225 День назад +1

    No bmx bikes,wackkkk

  • @joyaclub
    @joyaclub 3 месяца назад +2

    Looks like a fantastic bike store with great service.

  • @alkebulansan
    @alkebulansan 2 месяца назад +1

    When you speak of your family members never having had a bike stolen or you yourself never having locked your bike for 10 years I imagine your are referring to mama charis which are as you stated ubiquitous. I lived in Japan and always locked my bike. I had 1 locked mama chari stolen, 1 cheap mountain bike stolen, 1 expensive mountain bike stolen from the entrance of my apt. building no less! and another expensive mountain bike stolen piece by piece, first the seat post then the back wheel which cost a lot to replace. I am always curious as to why gaijin like to make out Japan is so squeaky safe and lovely when in actuality it is not. There is theft and crime and bad behaviour just like the rest of the world. And I wasn't living in Tokyo. Oh, and the police were useless and offered no help at all. Nice vid dude!

  • @AKIO-1668
    @AKIO-1668 Месяц назад

    WHEN OUR MINDSET CHANGES,ALMOST EVERYTHING AROUND US CAN BE READY TO COMBINE TOGETHER THEN IT CAN BECOME POWERFUL.
    当我们的心态改变时,我们周围的几乎所有事物都可以准备好结合在一起,然后变得强大。
    RULES ARE ACTUALLY GIVING US A TEST TO IMPROVE OURSELVES HOW BEST WE CAN BE IN LIFE.
    规则实际上是在考验我们,让我们在生活中如何做到最好。

  • @AushlinART
    @AushlinART 3 месяца назад +7

    As a person who is a bicycle enthusiast I appreciate this video. Thank you.

  • @saisamsuri
    @saisamsuri 2 дня назад

    I've 2 bikes, a "cheap" Japanese mamachari for errands and my beloved NJS-stamped track bike. I spent a fortune getting them shipped to Singapore.

  • @HenningGu
    @HenningGu 3 месяца назад +1

    The mama chari looks very much like a Dutch bicycle.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk 2 месяца назад +1

      Mamachari and omafiets are pretty similar, yes. I'm not sure if there was direct inspiration or just convergent evolution. I suspect the latter: similar problems, similar solutions.

  • @jimbo7484
    @jimbo7484 19 дней назад +1

    Jeep bicycle,steer clear!

  • @kelalamusic9258
    @kelalamusic9258 3 месяца назад +1

    I saw some videos of bike shops in Nagoya. Huge is an understatement. Our bike shops in the US would fit in their toilets.

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 Месяц назад

    even Japan introduces new silly laws on April 1st..... my god... is this some kind of worldwide running gag? -_-

  • @jetthepanda
    @jetthepanda 2 месяца назад

    Those child carrying bikes are pretty awesome! I think they'd be much less popular in the west due to drivers being much more anti bicycle here.

  • @smokedinasin9216
    @smokedinasin9216 6 дней назад

    I'm moving to Osaka soon. I am an MTB biker here in PH. What bike would you recommend me? XC or RB? How much do bikes with shimano deore parts typically cost in Japan?