Bicycle: 6 Phnee: 1
Jul. 11th, 2008 04:56 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Okay, my bicycle is mocking me.
1- The bracket for my old u-lock doesn't fit my new u-lock. *grr* I had to put it in my pannier in order to take it with me this time. I will have to take apart the old bracket (which is rusted and thus going to be a bitch to do) and install the new one.
2- The little flashy-light thingies are fiddly and impossible to install properly, at least for a layperson such as myself. The front light hangs loose (thus pointing downward, which is unuseful in the extreme) and no amount of coaxing on my part could tighten it further. It's also composed of fiddly detachable bits, one of which flew out of my hands and onto the sidewalk two floors below me while I was trying to install it. The only mercy is that it didn't fall into the greenery that inhabits our front yard.
3- The rear light thingy fell off mid-transit (see: fiddly and impossible to install properly, above).
4- For the first time in my bike-riding career, the cuff of my favourite jeans got caught in the chain of my bicycle and tore spectacularly.
5- I swallowed two bugs. The first one got caught in my throat, so I ended up making very attractive choking/cat-puking noises. Charming.
Otherwise, I managed to make the round-trip to work and back in exactly one hour. Thirty-five minutes to get to work, twenty-five to get back.
6- I got back unscathed in spite of the asshole in the black Ford F250 who deliberately tried to run me off the road on Rose de Lima, but then my body rebelled right after I wrestled my bike up the stairs. I abandoned the bike outside on my balcony, and downed a litre of water and Gatorade in the space of about two minutes. I've been sitting in front of my fan, recuperating. I feel better now.
On the whole, I am counting this as a win, though mitigated. Now I am off to see a movie. :)
1- The bracket for my old u-lock doesn't fit my new u-lock. *grr* I had to put it in my pannier in order to take it with me this time. I will have to take apart the old bracket (which is rusted and thus going to be a bitch to do) and install the new one.
2- The little flashy-light thingies are fiddly and impossible to install properly, at least for a layperson such as myself. The front light hangs loose (thus pointing downward, which is unuseful in the extreme) and no amount of coaxing on my part could tighten it further. It's also composed of fiddly detachable bits, one of which flew out of my hands and onto the sidewalk two floors below me while I was trying to install it. The only mercy is that it didn't fall into the greenery that inhabits our front yard.
3- The rear light thingy fell off mid-transit (see: fiddly and impossible to install properly, above).
4- For the first time in my bike-riding career, the cuff of my favourite jeans got caught in the chain of my bicycle and tore spectacularly.
5- I swallowed two bugs. The first one got caught in my throat, so I ended up making very attractive choking/cat-puking noises. Charming.
Otherwise, I managed to make the round-trip to work and back in exactly one hour. Thirty-five minutes to get to work, twenty-five to get back.
6- I got back unscathed in spite of the asshole in the black Ford F250 who deliberately tried to run me off the road on Rose de Lima, but then my body rebelled right after I wrestled my bike up the stairs. I abandoned the bike outside on my balcony, and downed a litre of water and Gatorade in the space of about two minutes. I've been sitting in front of my fan, recuperating. I feel better now.
On the whole, I am counting this as a win, though mitigated. Now I am off to see a movie. :)
no subject
Date: 2008-07-12 06:15 pm (UTC)My personal checklist for a bike I'd feel confident riding, however, is:
* Brakes in good working order, i.e. strong enough to make your rear wheel skid without exerting undue force on the lever (you don't want to skid your rear wheel, it's less effective, but you want to be able to).
* No rust on the chain.
* Lights, if you're riding at night.
* Plugs for the ends of the handle bars - if they're open, they can act rather like an apple corer on you in an accident.
* Gears that change sanely.
* No mysterious wobbles or ominous creaks coming from the drivetrain.
This alone seems to give me higher standards than about 60% of the bikes I see. Sigh.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-12 06:44 pm (UTC)Heh. So far I seem to meet the criteria. So I don't need a license or anything like that, right?
Also: ouch for the handlebar thing. I had no idea. >_<
What constitutes "gears that change sanely?" Mine change when I tell them to change (although they make a weird clicky noise for a while after that).
no subject
Date: 2008-07-12 07:08 pm (UTC)As for "sanely", I just mean that they change when you tell them to, and not when you don't. And further that there's no combinations that don't work or make the chain fall off or stupid things like that. You just want to be sure that you have power when you need it. Note that you're supposed to avoid certain combinations that make the chain deflect too much (e.g. big chain ring up front to big cog in back), but that's just to avoid wearing out the chain prematurely, they should still work.
Your gears are fine, though that clicking noise tends to drive me bananas. It's super easy to fix though, there should be a little barrel adjuster where the cable meets the derailleur, and you probably only need to give it a quarter or half turn one way or the other. Then just (get someone to) hold up the back wheel while you run through the gears to make sure you didn't make it worse.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-12 08:30 pm (UTC)You may as well have written that in Swahili for all I understood it. Maybe I will take a closer look at my bike during the week to see what happens when I change gears. I don't learn well by reading. I have to be shown things in order to understand, which is a pain in the ass for someone as curious as I am. ;)
Thanks for the other tips! This is proving to be most educational.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 01:34 am (UTC)If you're on the biggest (outside) front gear you should to avoid the biggest 2 or 3 (inside) gears on the back, because it puts your chain at too great an angle, which is bad because it shortens the chain's lifetime.
Similarly, if you're on the smallest (inside) front gear, you should avoid the 2 or 3 smallest (outside) gears on the back, again to avoid putting the chain at too great an angle.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 01:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 01:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 01:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 03:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-13 10:47 am (UTC)