Huffy Princess Girls 12-Inch Bike
From Huffy Bicycle Company
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
3 new or used available from $59.99
Average customer review:
Product Description
Roll around for another adventure with your favorite Disney Princesses. This magical ride is the perfect first bike for your little princess.
Features:
- Steel Curved Frame
- Steel Unicrown Fork
- Rear Coaster Brakes
- Padded Saddle with Graphics
- Steel Rims with 12" x 2.125" Tires
- Steel One-Piece Crank
- Double-guard Chainguard
- Padded Handlebar
- Training Wheels
- Spoke Decorations
- Handlebar Bag
- Crystal Cascade Streamers
- Measures 33" x 19" x 28"
Great bike for my 4 year old
We got this bike for my 4-year old daughter for Christmas and it is great. The perfect size and ease of maneurverability for her. She can easily pedal, stop and coast.
Get this bike!
This is an excellent bike! It was easy to assemble and the quality seems to be just fine. I was considering buying each of my daughters an (expensive) Trek bike from one of our local bike stores. After thinking about it, though, I decided to buy this one instead since I thought she would grow out of this size bike after just a year or so. I try to buy high-quality products, which is why I was considering the ($150+) Trek. But I'm really glad we decided on this one. For a little girl's bike, this one is just perfect. For the money, it was a great buy. My girls love to put things in the pouches that are attached to the front of the bike. I think the bikes are prettier in person than online, too. If you're considering a bike for your little girl, I highly recommend this one!
Great Bike but Instructions Could be Better
The Princess bike is just what my granddaughter wanted and is well built and very colorful. Any little girl would be very happy with it. The only problem is a very minor one. The assembly instructions appear to be written as a "one size fits all" instruction for all Huffy bikes rather than specific instructions for this one, so some degree of interpretation is necessary. Anyone who has assembled children's toys or bikes in the past won't have a problem. Also, at one point, the instructions seem to imply the need for a torque wrench, which most people wouldn't have. Nonetheless, assembly is pretty easy, and the lack of a torque wrench shouldn't be a problem if judgment is used in place of an actual measurement of torque.
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