One of the resources I would check into from time to time was Electronic Bike Review and their review for the Easy Motion Neo Prox was very favorable.
The recurring theme of smaller bikes in general is that they're usually full of compromises. Either they're underpowered or their quality isn't as good, but the Prox looked like it was a solid bike that could get the job done. Considering it was about $700 less than the Path+ also helped.
Figuring I needed a pretty good economic case in hand to convince the Wee Lass (and, frankly, myself) that I wasn't dropping $1,700 on a fancy toy I whipped up a quick analysis of what I spend on commuting to and from work.
Assuming that I commute 5 days a week for 48 weeks a year my metro costs, assuming that I took it to and from work, come out to $1,824 annually. But, this hasn't been the norm in the last 6 months, so I looked at best and worse case scenarios metroing in the morning and rental biking it home. Best case scenario assumed I could do the entire trip with both legs under half an hour, so no incurring any additional fees. This knocked my commuting expenses down to $987 annually ($912 metro + $75 annual rental bike fee). Worst case scenario assumed that I went over the half-an-hour grace period on one leg every trip ($1.50 per trip). This brought my annual commuting expense to $1,347. So the payback on the price of the bike was anywhere between 1 to 2 years, depending on how you looked at it.
Luck would have it earlier this month Hybrid Pedals ended up having a sale on the Prox, knocking $200 off of the price which basically sealed the deal.
So that's the story of how I ended up with the bike. My posts going forward will be about using over the next year or so.
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