So here's something I have not seen many guides on on the internet in general: how to get a rough idea about the size of a used bicycle from pictures.

It's not perfect and if someone can just tell you, good! But honestly, most people can't or won't tell you the actual size of a bicycle (that is, framesize) in any useful way if you're buying online.

Especially during times of covid, but just in general, you probably want to avoid making a trip out to some promising bicycle only to get there and realize that to you, it's either a monstertruck or a clown car.

General Sizing

I'm not going to get into the nitty-gritty of it all, it's sort of an art of itself. What you want to do if you're not well versed in the subject is look up a brands recommendation for the type of bicycle you want to buy.

Say you want to get a roadbike, look up what size roadbike different manufacturers recommend for your height to get an idea on what size frame can theoretically fit you. It'll always come down to like personal measurements but it gives you a starting point.

Oftentimes, people will list the wheel size (most probably 26" or 28"). Unless you're really small or really tall, this matters less for sizing and more for how the ride is. You want to look for frame size.

You can also often get people to give you a wheel size. It's a lot easier to measure than frame size. If you have no clue, for an adult bicycle assume 28" Wheels, 26" have largely fallen out of favor in the western world.

This guide is no bueno for actual mountain bikes. That is, the type you can huck yourself off a cliff with and somehow come out fine with enough skill. Those are expensive as hell though and if you're a beginner, you probably do not want to spend large amounts of money on a used bicycle in general and especially not if you want to huck it off cliffs and make sure to come out with all your teeth in place.

"Mountain Bikes" (i.e. in the style of) this will fit fine. They can be good bikes still, I'm not trying to drag them, but most mountain bikes you see you do not want to huck yourself off cliffs with. They're town or light offroad bikes and people buy them because they're cool, which is fine.

How to figure out sizing on step-over frames

These are also called mens bikes but obviously that's a stupid name. They're the ones where to get on them, you have to swing your leg over the saddle and have a top tube running from the seat to where your bars are.

These ones are easy: you want to look at how much space there is between the top tube (between seat and bars) and the bottom tube (between pedals and bars)

The larger this space is, the bigger size the bike is. Compare some fotos on different sized bicycles for the type you want to get and you'll get a feel how much space there should be for you. Again, not perfect, but if you're 6"2 and see a bike where the down tube touches the top tube with no space, it ain't for you and vice versa.

How to figure out sizing on step-through frames

Or womens bikes, again, stupid name. They lack the "meeting point" as described above, so this gets a bit harder.

You generally want to look at how big the part between the wheels is compared to the wheels themselves. Unless you're looking at a rather funky bicycle, there just isn't a way to make the fitting for the rear or front wheels larger because...well the wheel size don't change. Make the seat- and chainstays larger (the one going from your saddle to the rear wheel and pedals to the rear wheel, respectively) and you just have an oddly long bike. Cargobikes sometimes to this, but unless it's a cargo bike, that distance is pretty much fixed.

So you know, look at the tubes between the wheels. Are they about as tall as a wheel? Smaller? Bigger? This is obviously a lot harder to estimate, break out a digital ruler or something if you must. Beats getting out there getting disappointed.

Another good indication is how high does either the part where the frame meets the fork goes or how high the bars goes. Step through frames have an upright sitting position by design (unless you do some odd things to them) and the higher that goes, the higher the current owner is or the frame can support without making it a nuisance to ride.

For both of those: compare to wheel size. Is it like 0,8 the wheel size or more 1,2 the wheel size and so on. Then compare to brands selling you them as to how it shoud look.

  • culdrought [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Do you mean 29" for an adult bike wheel size? Or maybe 27.5"? I don't think I've ever seen a 28"

    • 4bicycles [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      4 years ago

      Maybe I'm being a eurocentric shit here but both 29" and 27.5" are reserved for actual mountain bikes where I live, nobody usese those on their bike that isn't mean for hucking off cliffs.

      Can I ask where you live or ride? Because I genuinely thought this'd hold true even in the Americas from what I've picked up online

      • dallasw
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        deleted by creator

      • culdrought [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I'm in New Zealand, and yeah 29 and 27.5 are both for actual mountain bikes over here too. Road bikes are usually 700c, which are basically 29" but skinny.

      • ChapoBapo [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Bike wheel sizing standards are crazy. ISO 622 is the actual standard - this is called 700c usually for road bikes, 29" or 29er on Mountain bikes, 28" in some parts of Europe. They're all the same size rim (622mm), the difference is what the wheel/tire COMBO is expected to measure out to, so it depends what size tire you use. 700c, 29" and 28" are all the same.

        650b and 27.5" are likewise the same size. This is ISO 584.

        Old 90s MTBs and some (but fewer and fewer) modern mtbs use 26". This is ISO 559.

        Older road bikes might use 27" wheels, this is ISO 630.

      • culdrought [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Nice, I had no idea. Man it's crazy to think that tyre size standards used to be even more of a mess than they are now

  • Grownbravy [they/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I suppose this is more specific to the kinds of bike's I've been riding, but isn't the bike's size based on the measurement of the seat tube (from the seat to the pedals)? The general way of sizing a bike I learned was to pick a bike with enough space between the top tube and your inseam, and involved a bit of math to estimate it based on the top tube if you couldnt standover it?

    I just remember sizing bikes to buy online was a headache

    • 4bicycles [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      4 years ago

      I suppose this is more specific to the kinds of bike’s I’ve been riding, but isn’t the bike’s size based on the measurement of the seat tube (from the seat to the pedals)?

      Yes

      The general way of sizing a bike I learned was to pick a bike with enough space between the top tube and your inseam, and involved a bit of math to estimate it based on the top tube if you couldnt standover it?

      I'm not contesting this, but trying to get any of this information out of some rando selling you a bike online is impossible

      • Grownbravy [they/them]
        ·
        4 years ago

        oh, if it's a rando selling you some french bike from the 70's, yeah that would probably be the best we could hope for.

  • ami [they/them,he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Possibly related but what was the bicycle that Mao used and where can I find one similar?