Another +1 for doing it yourself.
Checkout the Park Tools youtube channel. All of those items will be covered
there.
https://www.youtube.com/parktool

--ben in KC

On Wed, Oct 23, 2024 at 1:28 PM Edwin W <dweenda...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> Dan,
>
> You should DEFINITELY do it yourself... but not to save money! You will
> learn a great deal, but of course "tuition comes in many forms." You will
> pay dearly with long hours, buying new tools, taking forever to do simple
> steps, etc... and at the end you will have your very own bike that you put
> together and all of the fame and fortune that will be showered on to you by
> admiring fans. OK, no fame or fortune, but you will learn a lot for ongoing
> maintenance and if you are all like me, you will walk taller and be proud
> of what you have accomplished!
>
> Good luck and let us know how it turns out,
>
> Edwin
>
> On Wednesday, October 23, 2024 at 1:00:45 PM UTC-5 michaelj...@gmail.com
> wrote:
>
>>
>> I’ve been doing all my bike building for 40+ years. I taught myself a
>> fair bit from books, but learned more hanging out in a friend’s bike shop.
>> There’s a lot that’s not intuitive, but we have the advantage of YouTube
>> videos now. A few tips:
>>
>> Rule 1: Grease all close fitting or threaded metal-to-metal contact,
>> especially steel to aluminum contact. Pedal threads, seat posts, and
>> handlebar stems are particularly critical points. If you don’t grease
>> these, at some point electrolytic corrosion will make them seize up
>> permanently. Get a tube of bicycle grease or waterproof marine grease.
>>
>> A bike stand makes this a LOT easier. I did my first bikes by standing
>> them upside down. I’ve got two bike stands today.
>>
>> Pedals are easy- you need a 15mm wrench, and you should know that the
>> left side pedal has a left-hand thread.
>>
>> Handlebar stems: You need a 6mm Allen wrench, aka hex key.
>> Brakes and shifters: Generally a 5mm allen wrench
>>
>> You’ll need a proper cable cutter and some crimp-on cable ends for the
>> brake and derailleur cables. Don’t try to cut them with ordinary side
>> cutters.
>>
>> On Wednesday, October 23, 2024 at 1:37:54 PM UTC-4 Dan wrote:
>>
>>> So my beautiful Appaloosa has arrived. I am practically foaming at the
>>> mouth as I type. As I am sure most of you are aware, Rivendell sends
>>> complete bikes mostly built with the exception of the stem, seat tube
>>> saddle and pedals. I originally planned on bring my bike to a shop to have
>>> them complete the build for me but after some shopping around, the shops
>>> will charge a full build fee which averages around $150. That is far too
>>> much for such little work in my opinion.
>>>
>>> I am no bike mechanic. I have always enjoyed tinkering though so I have
>>> half a mind to attempt to put the rest together myself and then bring it to
>>> a shop to be tuned, which would cost much less than a "full build".
>>>
>>> Should I go ahead and give it a shot? I have access to the proper tools,
>>> I just do not know where to start and obviously do not want to damage
>>> anything in the process.
>>>
>> --
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