The effects of cycling 10000km
This post should have come out in September 2011 because that’s when the odometer on my bike wrapped from 9999km to 0km.
The stats
- New price: 450€ (city bike, aluminium frame, solid carrier, hub dynamo, …)
- At the 10000km my bike was about 4 years old (but one year in storage)
- I cycled an average of 3300km per year that I used it
- Never cycled outside of Munich city
- No recreational cycling – all commuting
- Average speed with winter tyres: 15km/h
- Average speed with summer tyres: 18km/h
How much wear and tear on the bike?
- Replaced break blocks 3 times
- Replaced 3 tyres
- Replaced 2 tubes
- Replaced break and gear cables
- One broken crank shaft bearing
- One new saddle
- Replaced rear sprocket
- Replaced crank set and pedals
- Purchased studded winter tyres
- Replaced front halogen lamp with powerful LED lamp
- Lots of oil…
Total cost of ownership
Assuming a linear depreciation to 100€ over 5 years, the cost of the bicycle, plus maintenance (my work time not included): 127€/year
Given that at least 2/3 of the distance travelled was work related I can write off 5ct/km (flat-rate in German taxes): 110€ per year, so it only costs me ~17€ per year to cycle.
Had I driven that distance by car (assuming a car which I would own: a 7 year old compact) it would have cost me about 200€ taxes, 500€ insurance, 400€ maintenance, and 700€ depreciation, plus 188€ for petrol: 2000€, minus the tax deduction of 660€ leaves 1340€ for a small car. Granted I wouldn’t have only driven the car in the city, so it’s not exactly comparable…
Had I got a year round ticked for the local municipal transport system (MVV), it would have cost me 438€ for public transport. This could be written off 100% by using the flat rate.
Other effects
- Depending on the distance between home and work over the years, I had anything up to 1.5 hours of fresh air and light exercise per day. At my last general medical check-up the doctor did a stress ECG on me and found all parameters well above “healthy”. I’m sure that has something to do with cycling.
- I haven’t had a single sick day in the last 10 years of work. That’s not to say I was never sick, but nothing bad enough to keep me home. Maybe not sitting in public transport (confined metal tubes full of coughing and sneezing people) helped too…
- I hate sitting in traffic… I hardly ever sit in traffic… 🙂
- Taking into account the time for walking to a car, driving through traffic, finding a parking spot, and walking from there to the destination, I’m always faster by bike than you will be by car in the city.
- I’m always faster than public transport over short distances, and in the spring/summer/autumn faster over all distances (without breaking a sweat!).
Enough already?
Get on your bike! 🙂
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January 31st, 2012 at 03:23
“Taking into account the time for walking to a car, driving through traffic, finding a parking spot, and walking from there to the destination, I’m always faster by bike than you will be by car in the city.”
we should totally check this out 🙂
January 31st, 2012 at 04:11
Gladly! 🙂
January 31st, 2012 at 04:33
well you could also use a longboard. but I got no odometer on it, maybe I should fix some gps equipment to it? at least hardware’s quite durable compared to some parts on your bike 😉
July 20th, 2012 at 10:11
according to wolframalpha, you also had an oxygen consumption of 55.000 liters (“effects of cycling 10000km” + adjusting values properly, since wolframalpha sees 10000km of cycling as an “invalid value” 🙂 )
July 24th, 2012 at 10:00
One more; if you pedal at 90 rpm, 60*90*500=2,700,000 revolution of the crank. (20 km for an hour assumed)
July 25th, 2012 at 10:00
Nice one! How did you come to 90rpm? It sounds like a reasonable average.
July 25th, 2012 at 10:59
Well, just an average 🙂