what's with the bike upside down?

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screenman

Squire
I've always laid the bike on its side, less chance of scraping the saddle/bars. Not flipped a bike over since I was about 12:laugh:
I would have thought there was more chance of damage using this method, certainly moves about more when it is on it's side.
 

MikeW-71

Veteran
Location
Carlisle
On a sportive when I realised I'd completely messed up my gears, I flipped the bike, re-indexed and then got on with it. Was a funny old day that one, the same family passed me 3 times and I would re-pass them 10 mins later when Dad was stopped fixing yet another puncture.....
 

snorri

Legendary Member
Back in the day, turning the bike upside down was frowned upon,
I'd be interested to know how they did it 'back in the day'.
I would have thought the advantage of "flipping" and fixing puncture with the wheel on avoids the need to fiddle with the brakes, a less important issue nowadays.
 
OP
OP
e-rider

e-rider

Banned member
Location
South West
e-rider, perhaps you can let us know some more examples of unfashionable bicycle operations so that we can be sure to use them - I'd hate to be accidentally fashionable.
no problem, laying the bike rear mech/chainset side down on the floor. Posting photos on the web of the LH side of the bike. Having long un-crimped inner wires. Pie plates. Reflectors. Silver pedals on an all-black component bike........the list is long. Valve nuts. No alignment of tyre logo and valve. Size sticker still on frame. Warning stickers on LH crank. Shimano 'LG' stickers on every component. Handlebars tilted excessively up or down. Saddle pointing to the floor and shoved right forward .....more?
 

Peteaud

Veteran
Location
South Somerset
no problem, laying the bike rear mech/chainset side down on the floor. Posting photos on the web of the LH side of the bike. Having long un-crimped inner wires. Pie plates. Reflectors. Silver pedals on an all-black component bike........the list is long. Valve nuts. No alignment of tyre logo and valve. Size sticker still on frame. Warning stickers on LH crank. Shimano 'LG' stickers on every component. Handlebars tilted excessively up or down. Saddle pointing to the floor and shoved right forward .....more?
Where can I buy these warning stickers as that's all I need for the entire checklist. :laugh:
 

jazzkat

Fixed wheel fanatic.
I would have thought there was more chance of damage using this method, certainly moves about more when it is on it's side.
Undo skewer, hold seat post, remove rear wheel. Place wheel on the floor. Now with two hands free gently place bike on its side on the floor. Where would any damage be caused?
Alternatively -bike flipped over, no matter how gently you try to remove or replace the wheel you will scrape the saddle/shifters and you stand a much greater chance of the bike falling over causing lots more damage.
 
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