Cycle roadside recovery

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

sgl5gjr

Senior Member
Location
Huntingdon
I was called out yesterday to rescue a customer..... and as I offer workshop and mobile calls..... It'd be rude not to collect him and his steed.... take him home and fit a new chain when we got there....he couldn't face the 10 mile ride home after the chain had broke...
 
OP
OP
Surreycyclist329
Location
Guildford
I was called out yesterday to rescue a customer..... and as I offer workshop and mobile calls..... It'd be rude not to collect him and his steed.... take him home and fit a new chain when we got there....he couldn't face the 10 mile ride home after the chain had broke...
Can I ask how quickly you got to him and what you charged him for the pick up please, is this a service you are happy to supply?
 

ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
'kin 'ell @ColinJ - ease off the spinach!
Ha ha.

The seatpost problem was a snapped bolt, which probably was due to me overtightening it.

Similarly, the stem problem was due to overtightening the faceplate bolts. It was a light alloy stem and one bolt pulled the thread out. (I had a near miss when the bars suddenly rotated through 90 degrees, fortunately just after a fast descent!)

The broken spokes were because I hadn't spotted that they were damaged. A mate sold me the wheels at a bargain price, having replaced two which were broken in a rear-mech-in-spokes incident.

The rear mech problem was due to UNDERtightening the jockey wheel bolts which then fell out on a ride. I spent 20 minutes searching for them but eventually gave up.

The crank breaking was clearly due to the enormous power that my legs were generating, rather than the strain of putting up with the 5-stone-overweight version of me bearing down on it! :blush::whistle:
 
Top Bottom