Very inspiring post. I've been day dreaming for a couple of years about riding coast to coast. Lately, I've been thinking about buying a used steel bike and rebuilding it and getting it ready for my big ride. This way I could take care of some maintenance and repairs on my big ride. I know very little about working on my bike. So far, I've changed tubes/tires, cleaned chain and rear cassette. I'd love to learn more. My husband recently bought me a Park Tool bike stand. I take care of our 3 bikes (what little I know).
Gidiup
"Isn't it a lovely ride. Sliding down and gliding down. Try not to try to hard. It's just a lovely ride." "Secret 'O Life" James Taylor
I have to say that "fear of wrenching" has to be one of the funniest titles for a post that I've seen.
Bravo with learning to tinker with your bike. It's commendable to say the least.
For the moment I'm taking a different approach.
I learned to strip a car down to a pile of nuts and bolts and put it back together again. Once I learned this, I decided to let someone else do it. I could afford it and wanted to spend my time elsewhere.
Now that I have a bike, I am totally not interested in working on it. I take this into account about when and where I bike so that I'm always within reach of a bus or a bike shop. The trade-off is worth it to me. There is too much else I want to be doing and there are only so many hours in the day. Bike mechanics doesn't make the list.
For those who work on their bikes...much applause.
For those who don't....much applause.
"The important thing is this: To be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we might become." Charles Dubois
I started by helping my son rebuild an old steel bike. I rebuilt my tourer. But I'm like Pardes, and now when there is something I really want changed that may take more of my time than I'm willing to give, I take it to the shop.
That's why my tourer has barcons and new brake levers interruptors and Koolstop brake pads. It would have taken me too long! Only took a week at the shop.
Karen
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insidious ungovernable cardboard
it's all in what floats your boat, ya know? I like it, it makes me happy. I like not paying someone to do it. But I refuse to do any car stuff. Whatever.
My whole thing is that it's nothing to be afraid of, why not give it a try? You might like it, and then again you might not.
and are not afraid to cut that cable, what's next??? I like getting dirty and turning wrenches, but would feel better if I had a guide.
what books or websites would you suggest for those who want to try it out and see if it is for them?
Hope is a thing with feathers
Hey Boise Birder -
I have found these to be great starting points!
http://www.parktool.com/repair/byregion.asp
www.sheldonbrown.com
So, ladies I need a little help to get me past the point where these great sites left off....I am intrepidly attempting a tiny adjustment on my front derailleur and am stuck on a small point. After a recent cleaning I noticed that a little nasty sound on downhills was caused by my chain rubbing in the big ring while in the the outermost gears....
So I know I just need to allow the cage to move slightly farther out from the bike frame when its in the big chainring. (I am using a 3 chainring Shimano 105 on a new Bianchi road bike). From the Park Tool website and the SheldonBrown website I know I need to tighten my H screw like 1/8th of a turn. Tiny. However, the screws aren't marked L and H and I'm way way too scared to test it like the site suggests... And google isn't finding me a handy diagram...
Can someone just tell me which screw is the H? Is there anything else I need to do after I tighten the screw that tiny bit? Am I stupid to try this?
Thanks guys for any suggestions you have!
Last edited by fidlfreek; 09-24-2008 at 08:33 PM. Reason: responding to question
You'll be fine. Take a deep breath. Get a bright shop light and, if you need it, reading glasses or magnifying lenses. Shift onto the big ring (and if your shifters have a trim click, do that too). Now you're up against the H screw. If you can see the end of the screw contacting the stop, you're done (except for adjusting it to where you want it).
If the ends of the screws aren't where you can see them, observe the position of the slot or the Phillips star on one of them. Turn it out exactly one-half turn and see whether your derailleur moves. If the derailleur doesn't move, that's your L screw, so turn it back to where it was and try the other one.
It's a good practice when making adjustments that you're not sure of the effect, and/or when making adjustments that have to be the same in more than one place (motorcycle chain adjustments is what immediately springs to mind) to move by increments of 1/4 or 1/2 turn (or 1/3 turn, if you're turning hex nuts). Then you can go back exactly where you were before, if the adjustment doesn't work, and also you know you're doing the same thing on both sides.
PS my derailleur went back on fine... and it shifts fine on the stand... taking it out for a shakedown ride this afternoon, my first ride in TEXAS!
ETA: I read your post too quickly and didn't notice it was a late model Shimano derailleur. Shimano's website has technical data for most of their parts. The EV documents are parts fiches, the SI documents deal with installation and adjustment. According to that, the top adjustment screw is the one farther from the frame; with the chain on the big ring and small freewheel cog, there should be 0-0.5mm clearance between the chain and the outer plate of the cage.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 09-25-2008 at 12:09 PM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler