Bike shelters ?

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MartDude
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Bike shelters ?

#1 Post by MartDude » Sat Jan 02, 2010 3:36 pm

Anyone used/using anything like these? Any comments please?

My dear old neighbour, who's been letting me use his garage, suffered a stroke a while back, and sadly has had to move to a care home; so no garage.

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joecrx
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#2 Post by joecrx » Sat Jan 02, 2010 3:50 pm

looks good , but my oxford bike cover, only lasted a year then the plastc started to rip when i un coverd the bike in cold morning , so i do know how long that would last
this looks better
http://www.secure-a-bike.com/

sh"t just saw the price :smt013

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#3 Post by Kwackerz » Sat Jan 02, 2010 4:12 pm

id be more inclined to buy a metal shed from argos. possibly cheaper yet with a few mods, equally secure.
Shed alarms are under 20 quid. bike anchors arent too expensive either, couple that with the shed for wind and rain protection, on to a winner
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Aladinsaneuk
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#4 Post by Aladinsaneuk » Sat Jan 02, 2010 4:12 pm

do you have any land where you can put a shed?

best solution i think

(And if you have enough land buy a small container..... far more secure!}


Let's face it, you wouldn't go to a nurse to get good advice on a problem with a Falco - you'd choose an Engineer or a mechanic...


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#5 Post by MartDude » Sat Jan 02, 2010 4:20 pm

Aladinsaneuk wrote:do you have any land where you can put a shed?

best solution i think

(And if you have enough land buy a small container..... far more secure!}
Unfortunately not. I don't think my district council would allow me to have an erection in the front garden (and Gill wouldn't like it either), and my back passage is too small to get the bike through.
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#6 Post by Kwackerz » Sat Jan 02, 2010 4:30 pm

*sniggers*
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#7 Post by mangocrazy » Sat Jan 02, 2010 4:44 pm

Good grief, does that bike in the top picture have a chrome fire-guard strapped to it, or what?

And I'm curiously relieved to learn that Mart can't get a bike up his back passage...

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#8 Post by Aladinsaneuk » Sat Jan 02, 2010 5:27 pm

giggles madly

so martdude has a wife who objects to his erection and the back passage......


Let's face it, you wouldn't go to a nurse to get good advice on a problem with a Falco - you'd choose an Engineer or a mechanic...


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#9 Post by Aladinsaneuk » Sat Jan 02, 2010 5:41 pm

in all seriousness, look around for a local garage to rent....

either privately or council -mcurrently i am having to rent one off my local housing trust while my workshop is being sorted - is being expensive but is secure....


Let's face it, you wouldn't go to a nurse to get good advice on a problem with a Falco - you'd choose an Engineer or a mechanic...


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#10 Post by MartDude » Sat Jan 02, 2010 6:26 pm

mangocrazy wrote:Good grief, does that bike in the top picture have a chrome fire-guard strapped to it, or what?

quote]

Yeah, I wondered about that. Perhaps it's to stop back passage activities?
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#11 Post by MartDude » Sat Jan 02, 2010 6:36 pm

No neighbouring garages available, no council garages (small rural town). So currently the Fut's shivering under a cover, & is secured to the house with an Oxford Docking Station ( http://www.oxprod.com/index.php?pg=3&ac ... &pid=36&p=), with disc locks front & rear for goood measure.

Does anyone here know anything about planning regulations, with reference to"erections" on the front of one's property?
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#12 Post by snapdragon » Sat Jan 02, 2010 6:50 pm

MartDude wrote:No neighbouring garages available, no council garages (small rural town). So currently the Fut's shivering under a cover, & is secured to the house with an Oxford Docking Station with disc locks front & rear for goood measure.

Does anyone here know anything about planning regulations, with reference to"erections" on the front of one's property?

planning regs are local so you'd need to contact your council. I guess a hard standing with a 'non permanent' structure on top would, in theory, be ok. We have a similar problem, no bike access to the back yard, no sheds in the front, but 50 metres up the road where the back gardens butt onto the roadway they can have sheds and access.
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