Sad but true. I can remember in Brooklyn if I was within 10 blocks of my
place and someone asked me about the Bombadil I would just say it was some
old steel bike I got from the shop that they had laying around. Didn't want
to advertise I had a bike work a few grand sitting in my most of the day
unoccupied apartment hallway.

On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 9:55 AM, Jim Bronson <jim.bron...@gmail.com> wrote:

> This is slightly off topic, but
>
> I wish I could say that bike thieves in my area were mainly drug-needy.
> Unfortunately we have have had several rashes of high end bike thefts that
> generally occur in more upscale close-in neighbohoods.  The thieves tend to
> hit several garages in the same neighborhoods until they either are stopped
> or decide to hit a different neighborhood.
>
> There was one series of thefts where the guy was actually a road biker and
> would befriend people on group rides with the most expensive bikes and
> later steal those same bikes!  The police finally caught him though red
> handed and IIRC he was nabbed with several hundred thousand dollars worth
> of bikes in his possession.
>
> I'm not sure if many people who are focused on high end racing bikes would
> know what to think of a Rivendell, but an astute thief certainly would.
>
> It makes me sad that we even have to post about this stuff.
>
> Until we can send all the bike thieves to Jabba the Hut's "Great *Pit* of
> Carkoon" where they will be slowly digested over a thousand years, be
> careful of who's peeking in your garage.
>
> -Jim
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 4:42 AM, ascpgh <asc....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I have no idea how the food chain of locks plays in the typical
>> drug-needy bike thief, they are looking for items to sell fast, at a known
>> price. Here the police responding to a friend's break-in said there are
>> dealer of hot goods that frequent certain convenience store parking lots
>>  and have sort of a fixed price wholesale trade; CDs $3, DVDs $5, laptops
>> $50, and bikes usually trade from junkie thieves for $20. I don't think the
>> aforethought of a cordless angle grinder and ability to spot a
>> secluded-enough bike to chop free occurs in this criminal subset. The good
>> news about this tier of thief is that they are not discriminating, any bike
>> will score them the same price.
>>
>> Someone willing to fight better security of location and locking is a
>> bike-specific thief and those rings do move around regions to hit the
>> value, fill their till and move on before their pattern is clear to
>> enforcement. Info on the guy with Rusty Clicks Sam will be interesting to
>> hear. one of those rings and individuals making contacts locally,
>> establishing a background that built  plausibility for higher volume of
>> parts and frames for sale. They disappear when someone starts asking
>> questions.
>>
>> Andy Cheatham
>> Pittsburgh
>> On Thursday, September 11, 2014 12:00:15 PM UTC-4, Jim M. wrote:
>>
>>> On Thursday, September 11, 2014 7:46:54 AM UTC-7, Andrew
>>> Marchant-Shapiro wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Which raises an interesting question, since many of us use
>>>> U-locks-and-cable approaches.  Are there ways of locking up with a U-lock
>>>> (preferrably a smallish one) that defeat most methods of defeating the
>>>> things?
>>>>
>>>> Simple answer: No.
>>>
>>> An angle grinder will cut through any u-lock pretty quickly. You can see
>>> videos on youtube of how fast it is. I've seen a titanium lock -- Tigr IIRC
>>> -- that will delay an angle grinder longer, but still isn't uncuttable. It
>>> sounds like the recovered Sam had it's lock picked or else not latched
>>> completely.
>>>
>>>
>>> jim m
>>> wc ca
>>>
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>
>
>
> --
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>
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