T
Tom Keats
Guest
In article <[email protected]>,
Ed <[email protected]> writes:
> I would like to buy a "good" bike repair stand for home use. I've looked on the web for a
> comparitive review of the various stands but can't find any.
>
> Does anyone know of such a review? If so, where (in the world) is it?
>
> By "good", I mean one that holds the bike in the normal service positions, and doesn't fall over
> while tweeking the bike.
I wanna find me a "6-day" stand.
I recently saw what I think was one on TV, about triathlon stuff.
All it does is raise the rear wheel. That's all I want. I can do the rest with an adjustable stool &
a trouble-light.
For doing BB's I just flip the bike and put the handlebar over piled 2x4 cut-offs. That does the
trick real good. The cost/benefit thing works out nicely.
cheers, Tom
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Ed <[email protected]> writes:
> I would like to buy a "good" bike repair stand for home use. I've looked on the web for a
> comparitive review of the various stands but can't find any.
>
> Does anyone know of such a review? If so, where (in the world) is it?
>
> By "good", I mean one that holds the bike in the normal service positions, and doesn't fall over
> while tweeking the bike.
I wanna find me a "6-day" stand.
I recently saw what I think was one on TV, about triathlon stuff.
All it does is raise the rear wheel. That's all I want. I can do the rest with an adjustable stool &
a trouble-light.
For doing BB's I just flip the bike and put the handlebar over piled 2x4 cut-offs. That does the
trick real good. The cost/benefit thing works out nicely.
cheers, Tom
--
-- Powered by FreeBSD Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats [curlicue] vcn
[point] bc [point] ca