Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I agree.
Unless you have a lot of spare time to drive out to more remote locations to ride, you will be deal with a lot of stopping and starting.
Also if you plan to do a lot of group rides, some of them will not allow tri bikes, so you will need a road bike.
Have you already registered for your first tri?
Wait, what? I don't do fast group rides (I ride a hybrid, and I am not terribly fast on that) but I've never heard of this.

Anonymous wrote:
I agree.
Unless you have a lot of spare time to drive out to more remote locations to ride, you will be deal with a lot of stopping and starting.
Also if you plan to do a lot of group rides, some of them will not allow tri bikes, so you will need a road bike.
Have you already registered for your first tri?
Anonymous wrote:I have both. If I could only have one bike, I would get a road bike - you are not going to save much time in the triathlon with aerodynamics from the tri-bike. Also, I find it hard to ride in an aero position (hands on shifters and off brakes) in this area because the roads/paths are too crowded, so I use my road bike 95% of the time.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on how long you plan to stick with triathlons and how many you plan to compete in. Unless you will devote a lot of time to races, you should seriously consider buying a road bike. Assuming you are a person who likes riding, you will likely get a lot more enjoyment out of it because road bikes are configured for much broader usage -- i.e., group rides, long rides with hills, really any ride where you don't want/need to use aerobars. Also, generally speaking, you can get much more bang for your buck buying a road bike. At the very least, I would wait some time and do a few triathlons before you make the expensive commitment to buy a tri bike.
+1. This is good advice.
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on how long you plan to stick with triathlons and how many you plan to compete in. Unless you will devote a lot of time to races, you should seriously consider buying a road bike. Assuming you are a person who likes riding, you will likely get a lot more enjoyment out of it because road bikes are configured for much broader usage -- i.e., group rides, long rides with hills, really any ride where you don't want/need to use aerobars. Also, generally speaking, you can get much more bang for your buck buying a road bike. At the very least, I would wait some time and do a few triathlons before you make the expensive commitment to buy a tri bike.