PedalUma

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Petaluma, CA
My first Summer job was at an ice cream parlor. I admit, we would turn the wiped cream upside down. Many of the rice rockets with subwoofers use N20 to burn up their engines faster while shaking loose the raddling interior at the same time. It loosened this guy's license plate while on speed bump patrol. Having a hot dog lunch counter on the back of your car kind of makes practical sense.
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PedalUma

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Petaluma, CA
Here are some tools. At the top is a needle nose vice grip. I use it everyday. Oh, it is so good for setting cables. The cheapest chain break at the bottom is the best. The most expensive at the top is the worst. The pedal wrench is nice and works to subdue attacking dogs without looking like a weapon. It is fifteen inches long. The pointy bits look round.
 

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Rome

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
Magnifying glass my eyes are fine but sometimes it's easy to miss a step during installation if you don't have a clear view of everything that could easily fock it up.
When I worked for the State we had bore scopes to have a clear view before disassembly and reassembly of a sensitive part.
My new motor arrived from Biktrix Canada. It's plug and play motor but I have to make certain everythang is original like the old one with 3000 miles.
I got a 52v motor Biktrix tech rep assured me it will work on my Monte Capro.
Old motor is 48v.
 

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Rich W.

Active Member
Region
USA
City
The Farm, Grass Valley, Ca
This little goodie came with my Eagle AXS upgrade kit. Didn’t expect it and it’s really a fairly high quality piece - not just a cheap give-away. Also compact and has all the stuff you need (of course) to keep your AXS running perfectly. So here it is:

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Mr. Coffee

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
A Demented Corner of the North Cascades
This little goodie came with my Eagle AXS upgrade kit. Didn’t expect it and it’s really a fairly high quality piece - not just a cheap give-away. Also compact and has all the stuff you need (of course) to keep your AXS running perfectly. So here it is:

View attachment 148185View attachment 148186
Sometimes those tools that come with other stuff are the very best ones. I have a CRKT (Columbia River Knife Technology) locking blade pocket knife that I got as part of a tool kit about twenty years ago. The tool kit is long gone but I still have the knife and use it all the time.
 

rtp

Active Member
Region
USA
I've got a Irwin needle nose vice grip, and it's crap.
The jaws are all wobbly, and if you crank on it they twist and fall off.

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Irwin isn't what it used to be.
That's sad to hear.
It's been a long, slow slide but it's nearly impossible to keep track of which long-time tool manufacturers are still actually any good. Sadly this applies in power tools, garden/outdoor equipment and hand tools.
Hell, there's basically even TWO 'Craftsman' at this point, at least one of which (I think Sears could still use the brand name) is utter trash - I now just steer away from both. Troy-Bilt, Huquarvana, most Stanley power tool divisions, let alone the whole 'MTD' conglomerate - makes it miserable to be able to avoid the 'used to be a good brand but is now garbage' problem.

Irwin for me was always more electrician focused while most of my tools ranged in the general contracting and mechanic range, but most of my non-mechanic screwdrivers and maybe a few others...

My mechanic tools are (mostly bought used over time) Matco, SK, Snap-On, Mac, with some Park Tool added for bikes, some older Craftsman (I still have a ~30 year old or more Craftsman electric sawzall) and Thorsen, with some 'random from somewhere China), air tools a mix of older Campbell Hausfield, 1-2 heavily used Snap-On, 'plus some crap.' Other than a now-ancient HF mitre saw and polisher (bought the mitre saw for a specific job, was fine to be 'disposable' if it melted down at the time, still going 20 years later somehow), I gave up on 'random brand' cordless tools and went all in on Makita.. I had a monster 'mid-priced' Black and Decker 'Firestorm' cordless hammer drill have had for some time, but didn't trust investing in a full lineup considering quality changes with so many brands, which pretty much left Makita, Milwaukee, DeWalt then a few others with smaller lines (e.g. Metabo, Bosch).

Have added a few Knipex, Klein and Gearwrench misc tools over time, and Wilde for misc prybars, but tool prices, especially for the 'good' brands, has gotten even more insane in past years, and other than for single-use type tools, it's just not worth rolling the dice IMO on the quality or longevity in many/most cases..

Don't get me wrong - I buy 'cheaper' tools when they're lower use, but I expect when you're paying the $ premium for a 'good' or 'pro' brand - to get that quality, so both good and sad to know RE: Irwin...
 

tomjasz

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Minnesnowta
I bought the strongest reading glasses I could find.
The ones at the dollar store only go up to 3.25
I found this 6.0 strength on Amazon.
weird. I tried to order a pair…
wont ship to USA address WTF?
Amazon.com High Magnification Power Readers Reading Glasses 4.00-6.00 Tortoise6.00  Health & H...png
 

PCeBiker

Well-Known Member
Region
Canada
weird. I tried to order a pair…
wont ship to USA address WTF?
View attachment 148209
Lol,..

Try this link to a different pair.


Or search Amazon for "6.0 reading glasses"

I like large lenses, I don't like seeing the frame when I'm wearing glasses.
 

PedalUma

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Petaluma, CA
Eagle AXS upgrade kit
Is it an electric bike or an all human powered road bike? The cassette's range seems limited in the photos. How many teeth on first gear, 32? I am doing an 11-50 over the weekend with a 90nm cargo motor. It is a chromo Jones. Robust.
 

Rich W.

Active Member
Region
USA
City
The Farm, Grass Valley, Ca
Is it an electric bike or an all human powered road bike? The cassette's range seems limited in the photos. How many teeth on first gear, 32? I am doing an 11-50 over the weekend with a 90nm cargo motor. It is a chromo Jones. Robust.
Spesh Turbo Tero 5.0 (90nm motor) with an 11-50 12sp cassette (PG1230) and 44T chainring (Praxis). Orig was 11-42 x 36. Fine for climbing (for me - not really MB range) but way to slow on the road. So with the above gearing changes and the class 3 upgrade, it now has very nearly the same low gear ratio and a lot more top end.

In gear inches I went from 25.10 to 25.69 on the low end and 95.45 to 116.75 on the top end. So big improvement for my riding which is some moderate to easy single track, and a lot more gravel (dirt) and paved roads. And some day paved MUPs. Just aren’t any near me so this involves some travel, but I have a few picked out and I’ll always watch for more when on the road.

What photos?
 
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PedalUma

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Petaluma, CA
It sounds very nice. Good job! Sure, we want photos in its natural habitat. I did some single track today on my 85nm three-speed. This bike is so much fun and so simple. I cleaned and lubed the drivetrain, had a tuna salad for breakfast then went for the hills. I even saw some snow in the mountains 60 miles to the North. It is nice to look at from a distance. When I came back I had a coffee with my toes in the sand. Here is the 3500km chain I used and the type of lube.
 

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Rich W.

Active Member
Region
USA
City
The Farm, Grass Valley, Ca
That is a classy looking bike. I’m still looking for the right early ‘70s Peugeot PX10 for nostalgia reasons - not sure what Im going to do with it but it looks like you have the technology to make it a semi-stealth e-bike, which is better than making it a wall-hanger.

Super-Tero in its natural habitat:
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PedalUma

Well-Known Member
Region
USA
City
Petaluma, CA
‘70s Peugeot PX10
One potential pit fall is that the chain stays on '70's road bikes can flex causing automatic shifting and the quick release is hard to keep in the dropouts, making the rear wheel fall off every ten-minutes. We are talking about more power than they can often handle. Maybe if you weld in a 120mm long brace between the chain stay and seat stay, it could work. Here is a new bike that could handle it. And its brother with a drop bar, but rim brakes. Oh, the second chainring is just decorative for that classic style on these two.
 

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