How To Build A Shopping Cart Bike
Instructables user Zieak has built the ultimate shopping bike. Trouble is, it doesn't really corner that well. Maybe you can help him improve it?
Either way, this thing is awesome and we want one. Imagine the faces of the children as we shop in the fast lane.
This is a test contextual ad for the SHOPPING category. It should appear on all SHOPPING entries, unless the subcategory has its own ad.
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Check out [www.xtracycle.com]
Their stuff is stylish, useful, and safe. I'd go with them before attempting to build one on my own.
I'm a big advocate of cycling for utility and practical reasons. I have a couple "grocery panniers" that work just fine and hold a sufficient amount - and I usually have my Timbuk2 messenger bag for quick trips, which actually holds quite a bit as well.
james...
I agree with the naysayers. The last thing that you want to sacrifice in an urban environment is maneuverability; I would imagine that if the gent in the picture above rode for very long, the next picture would be of him lying in the road with his brains on the asphalt because he hit a tiny pothole that a regular bike would have just sailed over.
Any decent bike store has trailers that will carry nearly as much as a grocery basket; some of them will also carry kids. Get rear panniers or baskets. Get a front basket if the rear ones aren't big enough, but don't put too much in it, because you don't want to have to move heavy groceries along with your front wheel if you have to swerve suddenly. (Touring cyclists have front panniers, but they're usually riding on long stretches of open road at low speeds.)
@jmschn: agreed, I just had a good laugh and felt inspired to continue my own search for a bicycle with cargo capacity :)
@jamesdenver: The cart thingy on the bike at the bottom looks cool.
What ever happened to just lashing a milk-crate to the handlebars?
@Troy F.: That'd be kinda small for groceries, wouldn't it?
Where are you going to get one? Steal it?
@Maulleigh: I bought a cart for under $30. Granted, it wasn't literally a grocery cart (wrong shape) but it holds plenty of food and even fits on the bus. Useful and worth it considering the alternative of trying to carry a bunch of plastic bags home.
@Maulleigh: I live next to a Savemart so I see them everywhere. Sometimes I'm tempted to bring home one myself. But that's just ghetto.
It's a nice try, but considering safety and convenience, I'd rather get an oversized messenger bag or get an old Kozmo.com bag from eBay.
A proper messenger bag (i.e. not the more fashionable glorified brief cases with shoulder straps) is going to be way more stable than a shopping cart since it's centered and attached to your body, and a regular bike is hell of a lot easier to lock than a modified one.
@jmschn: Hmmm... not really, no. Unless this guy is only going to ride this thing in a parade that goes 3 mph in a straight line, it's a really, really bad idea.
Converting the front fork into a cart has to be pure suicide; I'd imagine that one pebble could cause that thing to flip. Ever push a tool chest and get something stuck in the front wheel? First thing it wants to do it tip the direction you're rolling. I fail to see why a bike doing 30mph would be any different.
Instead, he should have made a trailer hitch for the back, can't be much harder to make than his chopping cart front fork. Then make a single axle trailer, or cruise around local yard sales for an old toy wagon.
@King of the Wild Frontier: he's an adult, let him do as he sees fit..i think this article is hilarious! If he gets hurt, it's his fault...he can't help it if others are easily impressionable and try to imitiate him.
FYI - the fellow in the pic is my friend Tim. We were not really planning on making a bike/cart but the raw materials were available and the inspiration (beer) struck me.
And the next day i was salvaging at the landfill (just their metal and wood - the household trash is baled and shipped to Seattle) and scored another shopping cart - i'll see about making that one into a trailer.
About all the negativity - not really surprised. Lighten up! It is healthier!
I think I could fix it, but as mentioned, it would still be a bitch to park or take into stores. This would only really be useful for some reality show where people had to speed through stores and fill up their baskets. Or maybe making puppy deliveries (newspapers are delivered by truck in my neighborhood).
I can think of a logical way of improving maneuverability, but it would require rebuilding from scratch.
Basically instead the cart would have to be on the back end, and in addition to steering with the front wheel, you would need to rig the petals to use the front wheel, almost in the manner that one would pedal a unicycle - no gears and chains, just straight pedals.
Best of luck!




















You need to check out the Netherlands. They have the most awesome bikes there with things like wheelbarrows in the front where they pile their children, 2 or 3 of them, while they tear down the narrow alleys and busy streets.