Now I'm expecting, in the near future, seeing "Ask Leah Anything About Your 
Bike Problems" thread in this forum.

Takashi


2023年2月20日月曜日 7:49:57 UTC+9 [email protected]:
Good for you, Leah! Enjoy the wrenches :) 

On Sunday, February 19, 2023 at 1:06:29 PM UTC-5 J J wrote:
Great story, thank you Leah. Bike repair and maintenance is a forever 
learning process, but I don’t want to mess with spoke tension, truing 
wheels, or building wheels up from scratch. These are skills I deeply 
admire in other folks.
On Sunday, February 19, 2023 at 12:30:47 PM UTC-5 Jim Whorton wrote:
Wonderful, and yes I can relate.

On Sunday, February 19, 2023 at 9:30:45 AM UTC-5 Roberta wrote:
Sounds like a wonderful class. I wonder if you’ll start riding towards the 
potholes or if you hear a noise just think “I might be able to fix that!” 
 I’m going to look for a local class like that. 

On Saturday, February 18, 2023 at 9:31:40 PM UTC-5 Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! 
wrote:
It’s winter here in Michigan and business at the local bike shop is slow. 
The shop had a brilliant idea to host a class for a small number of 
students to teach basic bicycle maintenance/mechanics. Students were to 
bring their own bikes, which was wonderful because we would learn to work 
on what we actually have. Our teacher was quietly brilliant, extremely 
patient, and, well, dreamy. (I would love to set him up with my friend from 
my women’s club ride and then be in their wedding. Unable to ascertain his 
marital status without committing harassment, I am still in the throes of 
scheming.)

I digress! 

He taught us how the shop gives each bike a once-over. It’s an M shape, 
starting at the front wheel, going up to the bars, down to the pedal/chain 
ring, up to the saddle and down to that rear wheel. From there we moved on 
to wheel truing, derailleurs and shifters, and finally, brakes. 

There were three of us in the class; one aluminum Trek with flat bars, a 
steel Jamis that had been ridden hard on the trainer in covid, and my 
raspberry Platypus. We all had V brakes. They had indexed shifting and I 
had friction. When examining our bikes, we/he found several problems 
(though not on the Platypus because I drag that bike in for every little 
thing) that we then observed our teacher fix. I now know what a loose 
headset sounds like (the Trek). Though, ironically, if you hit my front 
wheel to elicit the sound, the German mirror will respond with an identical 
sound. There are some skills that I still see best left to the experts - 
wheel truing, for instance. I audibly gasped when he took after the spokes 
of a wheel to mess them up for demonstration. I am leaving my new spoke 
wrench in the packaging because no good can come from that thing.

I am still not brave enough to do a lot with tools to my bike, but I’m 
working on it. I like that some of the mystery was taken out of it all and 
I can see how parts work. Do I dare disclose here some of what I thought 
beforehand? Oh, fine. I thought a wheel out of true meant they had to bend 
a rim back into place. I had NO idea spokes were the culprit, nor did I 
know you could adjust them. 😬 And so on and so forth.

Our mechanic was so encouraging and told us we should experiment at home - 
don’t worry, he assured us, you won’t break anything. But I wonder if he 
will feel the same when I show up with my collection of redundant 
Rivendells; pieces and parts left over and collected after rolling around 
on my garage floor. “I have been fixing my bike and now it won’t work.” 

Anyway, it’s a small step of self-betterment and I’ll keep walking that 
direction. I’m sure some of you out there can relate.
Leah

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