Pedro's Spoke Key



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why doesnt everyone have one? A dollar or two more than the park tool. same price as the spokey.

all metal, instead of plastic like the spokey. rubber grips, instead of metal like the DT. *both*
the park-type nipple slot, and the DT/spokey-type three-corner hold. two options on one key, so
the first half of the wheel goes quickly, but you can use the three corner grip when the tension
is higher.

ive never seen them in stores, or even in most mail order places. i ordered one, just built a wheel
with it, and coudlnt be happier.
 
Easy answer. the practical ideas (or the ones that make it nicer for us average guys) rarely do very
well in the bicycle industry.

Unless, of course, the racing crowd likes them too.

May you have the wind at your back. And a really low gear for the hills! Chris

Chris'Z Corner "The Website for the Common Bicyclist": http://www.geocities.com/czcorner
 
ant-<< why doesnt everyone have one? A dollar or two more than the park tool. same price as
the spokey.

Just got all three and they are 'okay'. Bit of a pain to determine if the slots are square or the
thother way and I kinda liked the convex-ness of the park ones...

Okay but not amazingly better than Park..

I prefer tha Park one for most wheels, or the DT one...

Peter Chisholm Vecchio's Bicicletteria 1833 Pearl St. Boulder, CO, 80302
(303)440-3535 http://www.vecchios.com "Ruote convenzionali costruite eccezionalmente bene"
 
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
>why doesnt everyone have one? A dollar or two more than the park tool. same price as the spokey.
>all metal, instead of plastic like the spokey. rubber grips, instead of metal like the DT. *both*
>the park-type nipple slot, and the DT/spokey-type three-corner hold. two options on one key, so the
>first half of the wheel goes quickly, but you can use the three corner grip when the tension is
>higher. ive never seen them in stores, or even in most mail order places. i ordered one, just built
>a wheel with it, and coudlnt be happier.

I already own a spokey. Also, one of the very first pedro products I bought, milk levers, broke the
first time I used them. So I am not going to stop using a tool that has proven itself for a tool
that is new from a company that has made crappy tools in the past.
-----------
Alex
 
"I already own a spokey. Also, one of the very first pedro products I bought, milk levers, broke the
first time I used them. So I am not going to stop using a tool that has proven itself for a tool
that is new from a company that has made crappy tools in the past.
-----------
Alex"

What's a milk lever? I have milk _cages_ on my road bike, Great inventions, even ignoring their
"green"er points! They are light (28 gr.) don't crack like regular plastic ones or get bent out of
shape like aluminum.

May you have the wind at your back. And a really low gear for the hills! Chris

Chris'Z Corner "The Website for the Common Bicyclist": http://www.geocities.com/czcorner
 
> "Alex": "I already own a spokey. Also, one of the very first pedro products I bought, milk levers,
> broke the first time I used them. So I am not going to stop using a tool that has proven itself
> for a tool that is new from a company that has made crappy tools in the past.

"Chris Zacho "The Wheelman"" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> What's a milk lever? I have milk _cages_ on my road bike, Great inventions, even ignoring their
> "green"er points! They are light (28 gr.) don't crack like regular plastic ones or get bent out of
> shape like aluminum.

Pedro's also supplied a tire lever from the same material at one time

--
Andrew Muzi http://www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April 1971
 
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