Frame made out of bamboo, pictured here is a My Boo that touts a partnership with a fair trade social program in Ghana to make the frames.

It's supposed to be more ecological, for obvious reasons. Weight on one is about 15kg, which is pretty good for a kitted out city bike.

I can't speak to longevity of this and whether it actually pans out vs. say, a steel bike that you keep welding back together, on account of these haven't really been around too long. It's held together via a composite glue made out of hemp and resin, so at least they're following through here I suppose.

Reviews I've read is that the ride quality is really nice, being stiff yet compliant in the ride cases as to not make it a boneshaker.

Price of these is, obviously, fairly high, these'd run you around 3000€ euros, I'd argue a comparable bike made out of traditional materials would run you maybe 800€ new. But I'd argue it's more a proof of concept.

  • DesertComrade [he/him]
    ·
    10 days ago

    I live in a third world country we basically fix everything like this Actually near my work is a guy who fixes bikes exactly how you described We can't afford new things so we fix whatever we have


    There is another guy that literally solders gpus and one that still fixes iPhone 5 and older models

    • 7bicycles [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      10 days ago

      I got mine fixed by a welding shop that was happy to do under the table deals, too, but looking at this country sociologically that's not the kind of skillset I'd argue most people posess tbh.

      • DesertComrade [he/him]
        ·
        10 days ago

        It's a side effect of living in a "richer" country Things are cheaper to replace than fix a lot of the time