I do think its important to have *something* - if I had to get to my sister's under my own power, a bike might mean the difference between managing it and not managing it.
This is a bit more long term than I realised!
Not helped IMHO by the "oval" front sprockets that were popular a while back (don't know if they are still used) and if the bottom bracket bearing is a bit loose as well you've had it getting them right.Yorkshire Andy wrote:To be fair modern basic bikes don't need much tweeking get a bike with Shimano gears and shifters and providing it's looked after they don't need much TLC
You will find mountain bikers spend more time stripping and servicing their iron horses as the mud and grit gets into everything ... Get it in the gear cables they stick and the gears don't shift very well
Tootling round town its much less an issue .
New bikes do "settle in" as the gear cables stretch also the rider weight can influence the gears.. you can set them up spot on in the workshop stand but then ride it and they rattle and grind. due to the frame flexing due to rider weight (more an issue on road aka racer bikes ) .. Most time providing the H and L stop screws are set up it's a half turn of the cable adjuster to get them back in order. Aka indexed .
Same with V brakes they occasionally go off kilter again 30 seconds with a screwdriver and you adjust the tension to square them up
Biggest utter total complete and utter swines are in my eyes front derailleurs as they are very finniky to set up bang on
https://www.parktool.com/blog/repair-he ... a%5B%5D=52
The tweaking and messing,I mitigated with the Brompton as it is a hub gear and simple caliper brakes.When I was commuting hard,I rode fixed wheel,with just a front brake.But that is a bit hardcore! Now if I cycle,I love the folder.Arzosah wrote:Thanks jansman - good to hear folding bikes feel useful to you. By next year, I'd hope to be using it twice a week or so, to go to a few different places in my town - but having read a bit of bikeradar, and comments on other purchase sites (Halfords![]()
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) its obvious that nowadays cycling isn't just buy it and ride it ... I cycled from when I was 7 years old, until my early 20s, plus cycling holidays in France, and I don't remember doing any adjustments at all ... if bikes need tweaking the way all the sites are suggesting, I need to know *much* more about bikes, what I want, what I can do, everything. Maybe I even need to juggle what I fit into my front porch - see whether I even *need* to fold a bike to get it in there.
I do think its important to have *something* - if I had to get to my sister's under my own power, a bike might mean the difference between managing it and not managing it.
This is a bit more long term than I realised!
Bio pace. Yes those were the ones, I wouldn't have remembered the name though.Yorkshire Andy wrote:Sniper "bio pace" were Shimanios name for the egg shaped rings allong with knackered knees
The modern external bottom brackets are much easier to set up as long as the BB shell is faced
And featerstick you can't beat xtr with super shiny titanium bling