well yeah, what use is a bike with no pedals?
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Turbo Kid has a lot of bikes
I came here just to mention turbo kid. Fuckin awesome flick.
I loved Turbo Kid. Its such a great post-apocalypse film. But I couldn't help but wonder how they kept the bicycle chains lubricated.
I'm not sure I understand. They aren't running Tour de France races, they are using them to transport resources and themselves. I feel like nearly any greasy substance will do? It might not last as long or work as well, but it will work. I'm not an expert in chain lubrication, but I think tires might be a bigger concern.
This comment reminded me I needed to re-lubricate my bike chain, which I hadn't done for something like 7 years, so I did that and took it for a spin. Got rid of the squeaking, noticeably smoother and easier pedaling, but a relatively minor difference.
But yeah, if you can't get replacement tubes, that's a different story, I have to replace those once or twice a year or the bike is not going anywhere.
Bike chains can retain up to 82% efficiency completely unlubricated, though they slowly take damage.
Weird factoid about chains
I've also successfully lubricated one using vegetable oil in an emergency, it worked shockingly well
I love the soundtrack in this movie, especially during the bike chase scene!
Good point. Now I gotta add tubes and tires to my prepper stockpiles. Chain oil, too.
Zombie stories always have cars. You think maintaining cars is easier? At least most bikes have pretty standard parts.
Those degrade over time, though. After ten years, you'd have trouble keeping your bike running.
The maintenance is easier than on a car though.
But a car's 10 year old tires would be perfectly fine though?
3rd Voice is a webcomic in a sort of post-apocalypse setting and the main character Spondule rides a bike. There's a lot of action and the bike works well in the story--faster than running, but still able to take pretty tight turns.

Oh man I haven't caught up on that in months, thanks for reminding me about it!!
Too easy a target while riding one of those bad boys.
Couldn't possibly be as dumb as after the flash-forward in The Walking Dead where the world had run out of usable gasoline, so the survivors' solution was to CUT THE ROOFS OFF OF THE CARS and draw them by horses. Like, you geniuses are going to get rid of the part that's useful for defense, but not the weight of the engine? Why not just build a fucking actual wagon?
I mean, compared to what? Being on foot? Pretty sure the bike is going to be harder to hit than a walker or runner. Also more efficient per mile, so less stopping. I'm assuming that we don't have petroleum products that are necessary to use the automobiles that still exist, oil refineries don't really run themselves.
That's why the pioneers never used them.
If you think about it bikes are perfect for a post apocalyptic scenario, specifically mountain bikes.
- They use standard parts that you can find in an any abandoned bike store or department store
- Great for rough terrain that hasn't been maintained
- Significantly less moving parts and easier to maintain than a car
- You wont get trapped inside a bike
- You won't run out of fuel
- If the apocalypse started recently and infrastructure is still usable you might be able to use ebikes that can go absurdly high speeds
Now lets imagine how it effects the story:
- You can dramatically show someone tired desperately trying to bike faster than a zombie crowd
- You can show cool scenes with people on bikes swerving through a crowd of zombies
specifically mountain bikes.
- They use standard parts that you can find in an any abandoned bike store or department store
"Standard" in that there are multiple incompatible "standards" for wheels, hubs, chains, cranks, chainrings, shifters, derailleurs, derailleur hangers, brake mounts, brake fluid, handlebars, seat posts and probably 50 other things I've forgotten.
And department store bikes ignore most of those standards and do whatever is cheap.
No worries with blocked roads either. Can just squeeze through most gaps. In the worst case scenario just lift the bike over any cars.
The issue is tires. Rubber wears out, old rubber oxidizes and breaks down, etc. they'd last for a while, but within 10-20 years they'd be pretty much useless for transportation, unless someone figured out a substitute.
They are precision machines though, and could be repurposed for water wheels, windmills, and other geared machines.
If you've ever been to Mexico, one of the most common things you'll see is a shop with Vulcanizadora in big letters by the side of the highway. They're tire repair places that use the vulcanization process to cheaply repair tires.

You can also use the process in reverse to generate useful rubber from a used tire. In the modern world with global supply chains etc. most tire "recycling" is just burning the tires for energy. But, if it were important to get the rubber out because the post-apocalyptic world is short of rubber, that's entirely possible. It wouldn't be cheap or easy, and you wouldn't get anywhere near 100% of the rubber back. But, in a post-apocalyptic world there are bound to be mountains of used tires that you could feed into the process to get some new, fresh rubber.
I suppose you could probably create wooden wheels with hide leather treads.
Ow! My Balls!
The indy movie 'Turbo Kid' had bikes. Would recommend a watch.
Fuck it, you're the third person in here to do so. So I guess I'm watching it this weekend.
Just finished reading Nemesis Games by James S. A. Corey which has a post-apocalyptic theme and in which bicycles are prominently featured in one subplot. The characters even remark on how useful bicycles are when society breaks down.
I've been watching through all of the walking dead, because I gave up early on at the prison and all of the coral yelling
I think it was like past halfway through the series where they finally show them using bikes. and then it was only for like one season and they moved on to animal husbandry in a time skip, and I guess just didn't bother with the bikes anymore?
Dutch city bikes will be the most suited for the post-apocalyptic world: nothing to repair, protected chain, robust luggage racks... they're unbreakable.
They where used as quiet fast movement in World War Z
It's a high risk, high reward travel in a zombie apocalypse.
You're body is exposed to grabby biteys, it's quite easy to take a tumble (roads won't be well maintained, zombies won't move out of the way), you are limited by your health (injury and exhaustion), and your carry capacity/content is limited (can't carry a long or heavy thing easily)
However, as you said, quieter than most other modes of transport, much faster and more energy efficient than foot, don't have to worry about fuel (other than your bodies).
I think I'd use them, but I've assed off enough times downhill mountain biking and a few times in town (bus cutting blind corner, people being careless getting out of cars) that I'd be very wary
Well... if there's one thing you don't have to worry about in the apocalypse is getting doored.
"mad bmx" could be an amazing movie.
Car product placements pay more than bike ones I guess lmao.
In post-apocalyptic films? I'd rather say the writers are too carbrained.
"every post apocalyptic scenario ever" apparently doesn't include The Stand
And "The Road" tho i only remember one. Not watching that shit again...too sad