Just picked up my new winter bike pleased with it so far after a quick ride on it after I picked it up.
Lovely looking bike, looks very practical and not too 'racey'! Can I be cheeky and ask how much it was? Great service from the LBS, I'm going that route 'to be looked after' more when expensive purchases.
I did think about tightening the trainer, which I've tried. However, more of the tyre burns off if I do that. Should I get loads of tyre on the roller? It's a magnetic one i think. It didn't seem to happen on the standard tyre last week.
When I started on my trainer (Road Machine II) using my road tyres (pro 4 endurance) I had some rubber/dirt marks on the trainer but nothing substantial, certainly no 'shedding'. I could notice a darker 'colouring' of the tyre rubber as it wore but I was also using them on the road so it soon disappeared after each session.
After fitting my trainer tyre (Continental Hometrainer II) I've had some shedding, most of it is the middle 'ridge' the tyre came with. There is rubber on my trainer from the 'whiskers' that also came along the edges of the tyre, but nothing along the tyres 'path' like there was with the road tyre (which could have mostly been road dirt?). The trainer tyre has a silvering along the area contacting the trainer.
The only time I've noticed 'slipping' of the tyre on the trainer wheel is when it isn't tight enough - I tighten enough so the 'bulge' is similar to the road bulge and tight enough to do some standing sprints, if it slips I give it half a turn more.
How do people keep their drivetrain clean ? I've just bought one of those chain cleaning things with some degreaser.
As my old winter bike is a disgrace and I obviously don't want the same to happen to this one
I recently got a juicy lubes 'dirty little scrubber' and it certainly takes the pain out of removing the chain to clean it. I'm a bad one for lubing my chain (every weekend) without cleaning the crud off it, trying to get into the habit of using the scrubber every week or two too. Prior to this I used a spray on degreaser, I would spray it on the bike, spin it on every gear, remove chain and wipe down with paper cloths, leave to dry/evaporate, remove crud from cassette with a thin brush, refit chain and lube each join on the chain on the bike then spin it in every gear.
Other than that I take the chain off once a month, soak it in white spirit and clean everything whilst its off with a toothbrush and hot water, and for particularly stubborn dirt I use hot water with lemon juice in it.
Diluted Lemon juice a suitable replacement for
this? Which seems overpriced for how diluted it seems to come... I can see me getting through a bottle every 2 months easily! Need a cheaper alternative!
@Roady
OK, not trying to sound harsh, but here goes...
He's not being dodgy about anything, he's going through his insurance and they'll have told him not to deal with you, because it's their job to deal with you, and because they don't want him to admit to anything that gives you leeway to claim for more. It would be exactly the same if you'd been in a car accident.<snip>
And...yeah...now I think about it I'm back to my original thoughts - agreed with Von.
I get what you're saying guys and agree to some extent - but with the only conversation with the guy (after the accident) he refused to give me his full address, refused to confirm his registration and says that I have to speak to his insurers as he has damage to his vehicle and doesn't want to deal with me. Then I feel he's not exactly been fair about the whole thing, so why should I 'do him a favour' and get my bike repaired the cheapest way possible? If he's not 'playing game', why should I?
I've had a revised quote from my LBS after I spoke to them and explained the guy wanted to put it through his insurance so I wanted the damage fully repaired, including paintwork, with no questions left unanswered about the frame/wheels. The revised quote (£430) is higher value than the retail value of the bike so I've passed that onto the insurance company. I've taken them pictures of the damage, copies of wiggle receipts for my 'upgraded' parts (tyres, pedals, brakes), broken helmet and damaged clothing. I've asked for compensation for me now having to drive to work until my bike is replaced/repaired which is approx 50 miles per week.
A rough tally of everything comes just shy of £800 (if they calculate it from the invoices, more if done from retail prices). I'm not expecting that much, £400 would probably be the lowest figure I'd be happy with so anything around £500 for me would be a positive outcome. Any value below £200 and I'll be seeking legal advice and would also push through prosecuting him due to lack of due care and attention (which the police have suggested).
I may come across as being slightly 'mean' (materialistic?) but if I don't feel my repairs and injuries have been paid for then I'm injured and out of pocket due to some guys negligence and refusal to admit to being in the wrong.
I've been through a full accident report at the local police station and forwarded the incident number also onto the insurers. I'll hear back from the police once they have 'processed it' and can then seek to prosecute him after that. I don't intend to as I'm fairly sure he didn't do it intentionally - he just didn't look enough when crossing a roundabout.
Be aware that I went through them on my previous claim and I got jack shoot. It's in their interest not to pay you.
You need to have someone representing you or you'll end up with nothing.
You were wrong to let it slip mate - the police are very much on my side as (1) I was on a bike, (2) he hit me, (3) it was my right of way and (4) he didn't report it. Even if his insurers do a U turn and I get nothing, I can prosecute him for damages.
I feel that without me reporting it, taking his details and pushing for this to be resolved I won't have got anything. The police accident report is the only thing on my side (as he hasn't reported it to them) and hadn't even given his story to the insurers by last night (even after speaking to them to get his car repaired)! Other than that I don't feel I'm being too 'unfair' - I'll let them decide on the value of my items and bike from the information I've given. Their response will decide what I do regarding repair/replacement.
I've been told (3rd party insurance broker) as the value is below £1000 and doesn't involve personal injury that the insurers will just 'pay me off to get rid of me'. They really don't worry unless someone is injured as that can obviously easily escalate the whole thing with huge costs to them involved.
Sorry for the essay, just explaining things (someone may find my story useful in future?).
My bruising is starting to come out - gratuitous bum pic (I'll remove it if anyone takes offence! Please don't right click and save

):