Fixed Gear Bikes

I don't ride one, but I have a road bike that I might wind up converting next season. I don't know why I'd do it though... it doesn't really suit my cycling style.
 
I'm getting one after the thaw. I bike a looot in a big flat city, so it makes sense. I just got a really smooth freewheel for my current Bianchi road bike that's a joy to ride, but I want a super quick fixie for next year.
 
Here's the overall right when I got her, but it's more purple than blue:

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I put in green handybars a couple days after:

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She's great now though, it needed a big cleanup when I got it. Since then has gotten new tires all around, new freewheel (butter smooth now) and rebuilt the rear end pretty good. I still haven't taken off the rack. I never use it, but I love biking in the rain and I don't want to buy a fender.
 
They tend to be more expensive because fixedgears are mostly ridden by people who are into biking, so they'd mostly be using decent bikes and parts, which are expensive as Prosthetic said. In bigger cities (more bike messengers on the scene=more fixedgears) bikes are super expensive anyway. I drove around the countryside and saw people selling bikes for 10$ on their lawn that could easily fetch 200$ in the city.
 
They good for dirt-jumping and street stuff. If you need to bail you can throw them away without worrying about having as much stuff to damage. :D
 
$300?
Thats not a lot of money for a bike... My Trek 6 Series set me back $1k, and thats only a slightly above average mountain bike.

Haha um well my bad. The average bike at good old Target is $100-150.
 
I wanted to convert my Gary Fisher Tassajara into a fixed gear road/trail bike. But when I took it into the bike shop to get it checked out they said it was too small, and needed to many parts to get working again. And back in the day when I got my first mountain bike it was 500$ for top of the line. Things have changed now...
 
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