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#1 |
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My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently
carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. I haven't had a flat wheel for several thousand klicks now, since I switched to hardcase tyres (Schwalbe Marathon Plus and Botnbrager Satellite Elite Hardcase) but I still carry a tube to offer to those less fortunate who cycle with me or that I meet on the road. I carry a small Park combination headset/ pedal spanner bolted up behind my water bottle. It also fits the axle cap nuts of Shimano's Nexus hub gearboxes, so the rear wheel can be taken off to change the tube. All the rest of my tools fit in a hardshell spectacles case and consist of round multisize spoke wrench (never touched the spokes on my current Bontrager Satellite Elite wheels in over a year, unlike some accursed Rigida wheels I had once that had to be tightened weekly); an 8x10mm open spanner for adjusting the brakes; Topeak's Tool Bar (a tiny multitool with two slide-out aluminium tyre levers as its sides, and a holder for the 3-4-5-6mm hex keys and Philips driver bit inside plus a bigger Philips bit in the socket); a stampsized box of Park's glueless patches; a presta to auto valve adaptor for blowing up tyres at garages; spare batteries for my rear flasher light, my Shimano Flight Deck and my Sigma HRM; a couple of sheets of paper towel, one soaked in Vaseline petroleum jelly for relubing threads before refitting; a couple of pairs of surgicaal gloves to keep my hands clean (usually on refitting some lady's chain...). There is also a minipump on each of my bikes, all of them OEM-sourced from SKS and all of them pretty useless for the 37mm high pressure tyres I like (the only pumps I have that works are an ancient Zefal frame pump and a six-buck Beta pump I bought at a supermarket because it also takes compressed air cartidges -- I shall replace the lot of them with an HPX frame pump as soon as I work out how to fix it to my bikes). I don't imagine the toolkit weighs as a much as pound. It includes only what I need, even the superfluous bits for the Topeak Tool Bar are left at home. I have several other multitools and all of them have more superfluous tools than useful ones, so I leave their weight at home. The one thing I cannot fix on the road is a loose crank bolt on my favourite bike, the Trek with the Cyber Nexus groupset. These are flathead bolts in a recess, so none of my on-bike tools can get at them and even a titanium socket and lever I bought are just too stupidly heavy to carry; I plan to replace the flathead bolts with hex socket bolts and carrying a long 8mm hex key as soon as I find one in titanium. (I have an 8mm hex bit that will fit the Tool Bar but I imagine applying 45Nm to it will rip the little thing apart, though in fact it doesn't complain about working on the front axle where I replaced a quick-release with a hex-socket skewer from BBB.) Best bike tool I ever bought, that Topeak Tool Bar -- and I blew the money fully reconciled to the suspicion that when it arrived it would be a toy, but it wasn't, it is really very useful on your modern city or mountain bike (one of the supplied bits I leave at home is the T25 torx key for MB disc brakes). The only thing that could make it better, indeed perfect, is a slide-out open spanner 8x10mm on the blank side (one side opens the compartment for the bits, two sides have tyre levers, one side is still blank), to use with roller brakes. (The best but bigger and heavier alternative to the Topeak Tool Bar, if you have a modern city or mountain bike, is the SKS CTWORX if you need a chainsplitter or SKS T-WORX if you use quick-release links on your chain. These two SKS multitools have the correct open spanners together with the correct hex keys and screwdrivers, and thereby leaves the Aliens and other expensive multi-multitools for dead.) What do you carry, and why? Andre Jute http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/...%20CYCLING.html |
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#2 |
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On May 30, 4:53*pm, Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > What do you carry, and why? Park glueless patch kit and a pump. I figure anything that breaks can wait til I get home to be fixed, or would be something I wouldn't be able to fix anyway. Plus I don't like things rattling around. Like my car-key is just my car key. That way no other keys to rattle around while I'm driving. This is the only manifestation of neat-freakedness I have. Everything else is a mess! A catalog of the latest mechanical failures further assures me of my choice: Broken seatpost binder bolt (seat slipped down, I stood home). Broken chain (I used a leaf to hold the chain while I broke off enough to reconnect with my quick-link). Broken free-hub (no free, so just keep pedalling home after completing ride). Broken free-hub (free both ways, kick-coasted home). Other than those things (which tools would not have helped), I cannot remember the last time something broke. Joseph |
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#3 |
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In article
<5c86a47f-53d5-420c-a2f0-6764b6b528be@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>, Andre Jute <fiultra1@yahoo.com> wrote: > What do you carry, and why? More or less nothing, but I don't feel great about it, and probably should change a little. I have a nice little topeak kit (most similar current product is the survival gear box, but that is larger and has more stuff) that's presently up the shop with the latest abandoned bike I'm restoring to use (perhaps only 10 years old, while the current rider is 15 ish, at a guess), since it's got the only chainbreaker I own. There's a minipump that should be with that kit that I can't find anywhere at the moment. Neither stay on my actual use bike because it lives out in the world with a lock on on it, and I see no point in having small bits pilfered. I use a floor pump for most things, but that's been at the shop to see if it's "lifetime warrantee" is actually worth anything for over a month - time to go remind them again, I guess. With modern tubes and sturdy, not light, tires I'm generally fine if I make sure the tires are good when I leave the house. Could be the added tire weight is less than the pump weight and it works out better in the end, but if you must have a pump to settle your mind, you'll end up carrying one regardless. I run wideish tires inflated somewhat more than Sheldon might have considered optimal, but then, I've never had a pinch flat. Since I don't do "cycle garb" there is usually a Leatherman attached to me, but it's got precious little that's bike-specific, and probably weighs more than the topeak kit - but my gut outweighs them both by a large margin, so I'm not going to worry about them for a long time, yet, if ever. I'm rarely anywhere I could not walk home from (tediously) in the event of some major trouble, and I use "boring sturdy" parts rather than "superlight racy" parts, so things tend not to break, despite my larditude. One thing I have never been able to understand is the "perceived need" many folks have for tire levers - a stock item in many toolkits. They will probably be leaving mine, as I can't remember how it was all fit in there before, and they are superfluous, IME. While I have not experienced every tire/rim in the world by a long shot, I have never, ever, needed levers to get a bicycle tire on or off, from whatever was on my 5 speed (20 or 24?) though 27 inch street and 26 inch MTB tires. I've thought levers might be handy with lawn tractor tires (small rim diameter, large/hefty tire cross section), but managed fine without - bike tires (large rim diameter, small tire cross section) are as easy as pie by hand, by comparison. -- Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by |
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#4 |
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joseph.santaniello@gmail.com wrote:
> On May 30, 4:53 pm, Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote: >> What do you carry, and why? > > Park glueless patch kit and a pump. I figure anything that breaks can > wait til I get home to be fixed, or would be something I wouldn't be > able to fix anyway. Plus I don't like things rattling around. Like my > car-key is just my car key. That way no other keys to rattle around > while I'm driving. This is the only manifestation of neat-freakedness > I have. Everything else is a mess! > > A catalog of the latest mechanical failures further assures me of my > choice: > > Broken seatpost binder bolt (seat slipped down, I stood home). > Broken chain (I used a leaf to hold the chain while I broke off enough > to reconnect with my quick-link). > Broken free-hub (no free, so just keep pedalling home after completing > ride). > Broken free-hub (free both ways, kick-coasted home). > > Other than those things (which tools would not have helped), I cannot > remember the last time something broke. > > Joseph Similar. Puncture repair kit (with glue), inner tube, chain tool and a spare connex link. A bit more when I'm off road but not much. Pete |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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In article
<5c86a47f-53d5-420c-a2f0-6764b6b528be@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>, Andre Jute <fiultra1@yahoo.com> wrote: > My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently > carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's > sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart > attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. You mean there is no person on the planet whose calls you are not gratified to answer and are sad to have missed? [...] Two tubes, pump, patch kit, multitool, cellular telephone. -- Michael Press |
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#7 |
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> Andre Jute <fiultra1@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently >> carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's >> sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart >> attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. Michael Press wrote: > You mean there is no person on the planet whose calls you > are not gratified to answer and are sad to have missed? > [...] > Two tubes, pump, patch kit, multitool, cellular telephone. As a guy who stands in line next to vacuous cell conversations on a regular basis and has so far avoided cell-impaired drivers meandering across lanes, I just don't want one. I'd rather walk. -- Andrew Muzi <www.yellowjersey.org/> Open every day since 1 April, 1971 ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
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#8 |
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Michael Press wrote:
> In article > <5c86a47f-53d5-420c-a2f0-6764b6b528be@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>, > Andre Jute <fiultra1@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently >> carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's >> sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart >> attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. > > You mean there is no person on the planet whose calls you > are not gratified to answer and are sad to have missed? > > [...] > > Two tubes, pump, patch kit, multitool, cellular telephone. > Much better to use a cellular telephone than a landline when cycling, certainly. Pete |
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#9 |
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On May 30, 9:03*pm, A Muzi <a...@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
> > *Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently > >> carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's > >> sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart > >> attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. > Michael Press wrote: > > You mean there is no person on the planet whose calls you > > are not gratified to answer and are sad to have missed? > > [...] > > Two tubes, pump, patch kit, multitool, cellular telephone. > > As a guy who stands in line next to vacuous cell conversations on a > regular basis and has so far avoided cell-impaired drivers meandering > across lanes, I just don't want one. I'd rather walk. Me too. I only take one if I know that some unplanned for delay will cause problems like not being able to pick up the kids from school or something. Otherwise I'd rather hoof it occasionlly than have virtually every ride disturbed by telemarketers, bill collectors and all manner of other people I don't want to talk to or think about. Joseph |
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#10 |
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On May 30, 9:53*am, Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently > carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's > sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart > attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. Short ride, usually down to the wetlands for a couple loops or intervals: Topeak micro pump, 2 levers, patch kit, phone. Epic ride: Pump, 2 levers, patch kit, 23mm tube, adjustable wrench or PB wrench for rear axle, folding hex keys, chain tool, and phone. |
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#11 |
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On May 30, 8:53 am, Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently > carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's > sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart > attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. > > I haven't had a flat wheel for several thousand klicks now, since I > switched to hardcase tyres (Schwalbe Marathon Plus and Botnbrager > Satellite Elite Hardcase) but I still carry a tube to offer to those > less fortunate who cycle with me or that I meet on the road. > > I carry a small Park combination headset/ pedal spanner bolted up > behind my water bottle. It also fits the axle cap nuts of Shimano's > Nexus hub gearboxes, so the rear wheel can be taken off to change the > tube. > > All the rest of my tools fit in a hardshell spectacles case and > consist of round multisize spoke wrench (never touched the spokes on > my current Bontrager Satellite Elite wheels in over a year, unlike > some accursed Rigida wheels I had once that had to be tightened > weekly); an 8x10mm open spanner for adjusting the brakes; Topeak's > Tool Bar (a tiny multitool with two slide-out aluminium tyre levers as > its sides, and a holder for the 3-4-5-6mm hex keys and Philips driver > bit inside plus a bigger Philips bit in the socket); a stampsized box > of Park's glueless patches; a presta to auto valve adaptor for blowing > up tyres at garages; spare batteries for my rear flasher light, my > Shimano Flight Deck and my Sigma HRM; a couple of sheets of paper > towel, one soaked in Vaseline petroleum jelly for relubing threads > before refitting; a couple of pairs of surgicaal gloves to keep my > hands clean (usually on refitting some lady's chain...). There is also > a minipump on each of my bikes, all of them OEM-sourced from SKS and > all of them pretty useless for the 37mm high pressure tyres I like > (the only pumps I have that works are an ancient Zefal frame pump and > a six-buck Beta pump I bought at a supermarket because it also takes > compressed air cartidges -- I shall replace the lot of them with an > HPX frame pump as soon as I work out how to fix it to my bikes). > > I don't imagine the toolkit weighs as a much as pound. It includes > only what I need, even the superfluous bits for the Topeak Tool Bar > are left at home. I have several other multitools and all of them have > more superfluous tools than useful ones, so I leave their weight at > home. > > The one thing I cannot fix on the road is a loose crank bolt on my > favourite bike, the Trek with the Cyber Nexus groupset. These are > flathead bolts in a recess, so none of my on-bike tools can get at > them and even a titanium socket and lever I bought are just too > stupidly heavy to carry; I plan to replace the flathead bolts with hex > socket bolts and carrying a long 8mm hex key as soon as I find one in > titanium. (I have an 8mm hex bit that will fit the Tool Bar but I > imagine applying 45Nm to it will rip the little thing apart, though in > fact it doesn't complain about working on the front axle where I > replaced a quick-release with a hex-socket skewer from BBB.) > > Best bike tool I ever bought, that Topeak Tool Bar -- and I blew the > money fully reconciled to the suspicion that when it arrived it would > be a toy, but it wasn't, it is really very useful on your modern city > or mountain bike (one of the supplied bits I leave at home is the T25 > torx key for MB disc brakes). The only thing that could make it > better, indeed perfect, is a slide-out open spanner 8x10mm on the > blank side (one side opens the compartment for the bits, two sides > have tyre levers, one side is still blank), to use with roller brakes. > (The best but bigger and heavier alternative to the Topeak Tool Bar, > if you have a modern city or mountain bike, is the SKS CTWORX if you > need a chainsplitter or SKS T-WORX if you use quick-release links on > your chain. These two SKS multitools have the correct open spanners > together with the correct hex keys and screwdrivers, and thereby > leaves the Aliens and other expensive multi-multitools for dead.) > > What do you carry, and why? > > Andre Jutehttp://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/BICYCLE%20%26%20CYCLING.html Two tubes, three air cartriges, and a tiny Ritchey tool that has several functions and a chain remover. I also carry a cellphone, wallet and granola bars or gummy fruit slices but not in my tool bag. On rare occasions I've had more than two flats and I've tied knots on the tubes where the holes were. I am too lazy to patch tubes in the middle of the road. I usually take flat tubes home and patch them there. An easy way to carry tubes is to fold them into an eight. Put one arm through one hole, put the tube behind your back and put the other arm through the other whole. You can easily carry three or four tubes that way. If you remove a tube once you get a flat, it is faster to carry it this way, than to fold it neatly into the bag. Andres |
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#12 |
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Most of my tool kit fits into an Altoids can and was inspired by Jobst's
tool kit(s): http://pardo.net/bike/pic/fail-003/...ample-tool-kits Mine has a Ritchey CPR 9, 8 mm allen wrench, small folding pliers ("Swiss Army"), Park spoke wrench, Rema patches and glue, Park tire boot, a couple spare spoke nipples, and a bit of rag, mainly to prevent rattling. In addition to that there is a spare tube and a Crank Bros. tire lever in my saddle pack. |
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#13 |
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On May 30, 5:53*pm, Ecnerwal <LawrenceSM...@SOuthernVERmont.NyET>
wrote: > In article > <5c86a47f-53d5-420c-a2f0-6764b6b52...@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>, > *Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > What do you carry, and why? [snip] > One thing I have never been able to understand is the "perceived need" > many folks have for tire levers - a stock item in many toolkits. They > will probably be leaving mine, as I can't remember how it was all fit in > there before, and they are superfluous, IME. While I have not > experienced every tire/rim in the world by a long shot, I have never, > ever, needed levers to get a bicycle tire on or off, from whatever was > on my 5 speed (20 or 24?) though 27 inch street and 26 inch MTB tires. > I've thought levers might be handy with lawn tractor tires (small rim > diameter, large/hefty tire cross section), but managed fine without - > bike tires (large rim diameter, small tire cross section) are as easy as > pie by hand, by comparison. Oley Maloney, I wouldn't even try getting beaded tyres on and off with my hands. A writer is a manual labourer who earns his living with his hands on his keyboard. I can't afford as much as a fingernail torn into the quick. Anyway, those belted Marathon Plus and Satellite Elite Hardcase are a killer to get on even with tyre levers working at waist height on a table, never mind scrabbling around on your knees in the scrub beside a road. I wish someone would bring back the VAR 425 which would be brilliant for getting these toughies on and off the rim even under adverse circumstances. Of course, on the other hand, you pay through the nose for these belted tyres precisely so that you never have to take them off again... Andre Jute http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/...E%20HUMOUR.html |
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#14 |
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On May 30, 7:53*pm, Michael Press <rub...@pacbell.net> wrote:
> In article > <5c86a47f-53d5-420c-a2f0-6764b6b52...@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com>, > *Andre Jute <fiult...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > My number one tool is a mobile phone, the only one I own, permanently > > carried on my bike, switched off so that no one can reach me; it's > > sole purpose is to call the ambulance if I fall over from a heart > > attack, or a taxi if I get a flat tyre. > > You mean there is no person on the planet whose calls you > are not gratified to answer and are sad to have missed? Nah, what makes me sad is that a grown man -- you are a grown man, aren't you, Michael? -- is so insecure as to believe that people will not call him back if he doesn't answer his phone immediately. > [...] > > Two tubes, pump, patch kit, multitool, cellular telephone. Switched on all the time, right? Why bother cycling then? On the Great Escape, MIchael Press would leave his itenerary for the Gestapo! > -- > Michael Press Yeah, right. Andre Jute Charisma is the certain knowledge that they will call again if you don't answer the first time, the second, third, the nth. |
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#15 |
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consider a v small hemostat/tweezers to get that tiny sliver of glass
out of the tire. Chuck |
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