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View Full Version : What I learned at UBI



DebW
04-26-2008, 05:37 PM
Here are some little tips and tricks I learned at UBI:

Cow magnets can be used to remove loose bearings from hubs.

A Park pin spanner tool can be used to hold bar tape tight before the job is finished.

When breaking and replacing a pin on a Shimano chain, the new pin should go in from the same side the old pin was pushed out from. Mark that side of the chain with a Sharpie.

To toe in brake shoes (necessary on linear pull brakes), put a folded business card under the rear 1/3 of brake shoe and tighten flat against rim.

Rubbing alcohol should be the go-to solvent for general cleaning of parts and bearings. Stronger solvents can be used if needed. Never soak a chain, as that removes the internal grease which can't be easily replaced.

If removing bars to work on headset, strap the bars to the bike with a toe strap.

Little things that don't really matter but indicate professionalism: hub labels readable while sitting on bike (and through the valve hole), tire label at valve stem and on drive side, bar wraps are mirror image R/L, bar plugs with upright graphics, headset cup logos lined up.

snapdragen
04-26-2008, 07:05 PM
Cow magnet?

VeloVT
04-26-2008, 07:39 PM
I was thinking something more along these lines:

5833

Regarding toeing in, an emery board works well too...

Zen
04-26-2008, 08:32 PM
To toe in brake shoes (necessary on linear pull brakes), put a folded business card under the rear 1/3 of brake shoe and tighten flat against rim.

That's clever


Never soak a chain, as that removes the internal grease which can't be easily replaced.
I knew soaking wasn't right!
Glad you're my camping bud;)

smilingcat
04-26-2008, 10:41 PM
And don't forget about about front/back of the chain link to remove the pins. The instruction sheet on ultegra/DA chains will tell you. SRAM doesn't have the pin just a master link.

Smilingcat

DebW
04-27-2008, 04:43 AM
I was thinking something more along these lines:

5833


Apparently they are magnets that cows are supposed to swallow. They collect metal that the cow has been ingesting and then all the metal ends up in a cow pie. Which apparently the farmer then collects and uses again. :rolleyes:

snapdragen
04-27-2008, 07:39 AM
Oh my, who knew. http://www.mysmiley.net/imgs/smile/animals/animal.gif (http://www.ranksurge.com)

http://www.magnetsource.com/Solutions_Pages/cowmags.html

madscot13
04-27-2008, 09:25 AM
Oh I thought cow magnets were used so that the cow wouldn't have nails floating along their intestines. I never thought the farmer would get the metal/magnet back!

madscot13
04-27-2008, 09:26 AM
which course did you take? they all seem so interesting!

OakLeaf
04-27-2008, 10:17 AM
"Hardware Disease" :eek: sounds like something men get from going into Home Depot, not cattle!

Deb, sounds like you had a worthwhile time! And fun!

lph
04-27-2008, 10:50 AM
Oh, I loved this info! Who knew cow magnets existed :confused:



To toe in brake shoes (necessary on linear pull brakes), put a folded business card under the rear 1/3 of brake shoe and tighten flat against rim.
.

I was once told to use a match. It works ok, but something flat is better.



If removing bars to work on headset, strap the bars to the bike with a toe strap.
.

NIce - I was just wondering where the heck to do with the bars and all their attending cables when changing my stem recently!



Little things that don't really matter but indicate professionalism: hub labels readable while sitting on bike (and through the valve hole), tire label at valve stem and on drive side, bar wraps are mirror image R/L, bar plugs with upright graphics, headset cup logos lined up.

I mostly lurk on a Norwegian mtb forum, and it's had a hilarious style police thread full of stuff like this, which way to have your decals etc, what colour socks and how long they should be, etc. :D Lots of bike builders and bike shop people there.

SouthernBelle
04-27-2008, 11:47 AM
How long should your socks be?

:D

lph
04-27-2008, 12:15 PM
Er, I forget. :rolleyes: i think after somebody posted a pic of Lance wearing longish white socks they agreed that if you ride fast enough you can wear as long socks as you like. As long as they're not black :D

maillotpois
04-27-2008, 12:20 PM
Oh, I loved this info! Who knew cow magnets existed.

Seriously! I have learned a LOT from this thread - not the least of which being the whole cow magnet thing!!




One magnet works for the life of the cow!

VeloVT
04-27-2008, 01:16 PM
ok... can someone please tell me what a "toe strap" is :o???

OakLeaf
04-27-2008, 01:29 PM
Ah, how soon they forget.

It's what you used to use to clamp your foot down into a toe clip.

Fewer still (apparently) remember what kind of cleats we used to have to put on our cycling shoes to use toe clips.

I have to admit though Deb... I was wondering whether anyone still has toe straps lying around... and if so whether the leather isn't all dry rotted and unable to take even a the weight of a pair of handlebars!

KnottedYet
04-27-2008, 03:32 PM
ok... can someone please tell me what a "toe strap" is :o???

Oh mi gawd, I feel old....

DebW
04-27-2008, 03:35 PM
Ah, how soon they forget.

It's what you used to use to clamp your foot down into a toe clip.

Fewer still (apparently) remember what kind of cleats we used to have to put on our cycling shoes to use toe clips.

And how we had to nail them to the bottom of our shoes.



I have to admit though Deb... I was wondering whether anyone still has toe straps lying around... and if so whether the leather isn't all dry rotted and unable to take even a the weight of a pair of handlebars!

Actually, they had the newer nylon variety, and they kept two attached to each workstand.

I took the two week professional mechanics course. More info in the Northwest thread.

Zen
04-27-2008, 04:53 PM
Spin bikes have toes straps and cages.

VeloVT
04-27-2008, 05:27 PM
oh, I have seen and ridden bikes with clips & straps (both the vintage steel & leather kind and the plastic & nylon kind). The phrase "toe strap" partially out of context just didn't conjure up any mental image at all... The old brain searched and searched and ... nothing... I guess I've never thought of them as separate things :).

I have never seen the kind of toe-clips that require cleats, though. That sounds scary.

tulip
04-29-2008, 02:13 PM
Thanks, Deb. I really appreciate your knowledgeable, not to mention fun and interesting, posts.

mudmucker
04-29-2008, 05:58 PM
Thanks, Deb. I really appreciate your knowledgeable ....posts.

I second that all around.

I'm also still back at post #6, totally amazed that cows ingest that much metal or nails - to warrant a market that offers a selection of magnets for retrieval. And that there's enough for the farmer to reuse.

lph
04-29-2008, 10:49 PM
Hehe - I got to re-use this information, standing in a queue for a plane yesterday. Said to my boss (whom I adore btw) "did you know there's something called a cow magnet?" I even got into how I found out, via this forum, Deb, and ball bearings.

See - this forum is even improving my smalltalk :D

OakLeaf
04-30-2008, 03:10 AM
LOL! I got to accuse DH of having Hardware Disease when he was deeply ensconced with a (very helpful) salesperson at Home Depot yesterday :D


And yes, +1 Deb, thanks for being here - working to increase your expertise - and helping us all out!

mudmucker
04-30-2008, 07:09 AM
Oh, by the way, I use one of those telescoping magnets (http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_00999098000P?keyword=telescoping+magnet) to remove bearings. And then just extend and swoop it under the bench if they fall on the floor. Might be good for those of us with bad backs or knees. But I like the "idea" of the cow magnets much better.