Expensive. Really, really expensive.
I have dealt with these guys since they opened and generally I’ve got on well with them.
Lately though, and I am quite certain market pressures are the reason for this, their prices have risen, which is annoying enough but standards have fallen at the same time.
The last straw? I wanted some new suspension forks installed on my mountain bike. £60 an hour labour ( can’t have less than the hour ) IF the forks were bought from them. £90, if not. And they weren’t. Now this is going to take a halfway decent bike mechanic 15-20minutes. Maybe less. And frankly £60 an hour strikes me as a bit steep.
On an earlier occasion a road bike with a new stem came back with the wheel comically misaligned and the oaf at the desk aggressively asked me what I wanted him to do about it. Fix it, I suggested. He then admitted that he didn’t know how and there was no one present who could.
And a new rear mech, chain and cassette were installed on my road bike; The gears were never quite right - they SHOULD have been perfect, but at the time I sensed profound annoyance on their part for bringing my own components, bought from Chain Reaction. They had a second attempt at putting it right. Slight improvement, but still not perfect; I had the feeling I was being punished. I still think that.
Now I understand actual bike shops with premises are suffering at the hands of online retailers - how they must HATE Chain Reaction cycles! But I remember only a decade ago a really serious hardtail MTB sold for well under £1000. Now, that same bike will cost £1600 and probably not be as well specified. Christ, there is some rubbish out there! And the prices of bikes, components and servicing has skyrocketed. I used to work in the old Yellow Jersey (strictly part time) and the doing a deal or a favour, knocking a bit off the final reckoning for a regular customer? Forget it, those days are long gone. As are the days when a boy could aspire to own something truly decent. Look at the prices. No wonder children don’t cycle anymore!
I’ve walked around the shop looking wistfully at the new, shiny, bang-up-too-date mountain bikes and road bikes, but really cannot justify spending a few thousand, and we are talking about £2-3000 for something nowhere near the top-of-the-range, when the bikes I already own are more than fine. And again, there is this sense that in NOT making such a purchase I have in some way offended them. This industry does not want you to be content with what you have and will penalise you if you don’t buy a new bike every 2-3 years. What do you think the fantastic cynicism of changing around all the standards is about? 29rs and 27.5rs and the like? Not better bikes. Selling more bikes to a saturated or bored market. Any attempt to revitalise an older model is strongly discouraged - £90 an hour labour costs! And pot luck as to who you get working on your bike - the 2 or 3 who plainly know what they are about. Or that other fellow. Buy components from them, though, and it would cost far more.
I loaned my wife’s mtb to a friend for a week’s holiday. They put it in to be serviced afterwards with Giant, as a courtesy. And were astonished at how much it cost; In fact, it caused a falling-out that took months to resolve, because I, err, recommended them.
We abandoned winter riding because the servicing costs were ruinous. Both bikes needed £60-90 of work done after every second or third ride; Slithering around in all that mud takes it’s toll. Like so many things these days buying the bike is the easy part. The affordable part, even. Keeping the damned thing on the road (or worse, off it!) costs a fortune.
I don’t know about you, but I’m off to look at uTube to see if I can do it myself, even though, like headsets and bottom brackets, I’d much prefer to steer clear. Failing that, I’m looking for another bike shop. I’ve heard there are some Poles working out of a lock-up who are charging a fair price for expert repairs and servicing. Any body got their number? Giant are plainly aiming upmarket and don’t want my sort around there. I have been told!
But I’ll just bet that owner, manager and staff, in their personal dealings for goods and services, every last one of them will search good and hard for the best deal. Would they shop at the Giant store on that basis? I wonder. I really do.
And if the awful trading conditions weren’t enough, Cycle Surgery around the corner is about to close it’s doors forever.
July 26, 2018
Unprompted review