HOW TO: Align Bicycle Handlebars Perfectly // The BEST Method!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 6. 02. 2021
  • The easiest way to get perfectly aligned handlebars on your road, gravel, or mountain bike. Works with drop bars or straight bars. No special tools required. Come for the how-to, stay for the mathematical proof!
    Help support nerdy bike content!
    www.thebikesauce.com/
    Now, to get those levers perfectly symmetrical:
    • HOW TO: Symmetrical Ro...
    Thanks for watching and subscribing if you haven't already!
    #bikenerd #bikewrench #smilespermile

Komentáře • 210

  • @rc51bigdaddy
    @rc51bigdaddy Před 3 lety +17

    Thanks! No more stopping in the street for another handlebar adjustment!

  • @prof_writer
    @prof_writer Před 3 lety +22

    Every video your production standards are going up...loved the equations showing me how many degrees off center my handlebars are...and to think I've been eyeballing and tightening up for 30 years. Great work and it's clear you are an effective educator.

  • @nesutoneko
    @nesutoneko Před 3 lety +1

    Dude! FINALLY some content that satisfies my bike-nerdery OCD! This is fantastic work, well produced and clearly delivered - without cutting any corners or glossing over important details. Please keep up the excellent work and please continue the deep-diving nerdery! 💪✌️

  • @artad6420
    @artad6420 Před 3 lety +9

    i've been using a wooden 1 foot ruler that i tape to the fork. works all the time. great content video and use of animation to reinforce the point. thanks for the algebra lesson.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      Nice! Everyone can benefit from a little math once in a while.

  • @lawrenceperez4922
    @lawrenceperez4922 Před 3 lety

    Thank you! i was installing my new drop bar right now and saw your video, big help for me

  • @remegiobalane6121
    @remegiobalane6121 Před rokem

    Very clear tip. Perfection is with it!

  • @derekt3923
    @derekt3923 Před 2 lety

    Very helpful, this and the Future Shock 2 video have helped a lot. Keep up the great work!

  • @meibing4912
    @meibing4912 Před rokem +2

    Highly recommended. Works like a charm. Used a clothes hanger with a broad base. Made it very easy to be sure it was aligned with the fork/wheel and perpendicular to the handlebars horizontally. Also, the clothes hanger top and head negates the need for any tape!

  • @kristiandawe85
    @kristiandawe85 Před 3 lety +3

    this is brilliant, i'll use this method all the time now.

  • @geokite
    @geokite Před 2 lety +1

    Perfect, exactly what I was looking for.

  • @richiel5557
    @richiel5557 Před rokem

    Great video. This fixed my handlebars in about 5 minutes and it feels just like it did when I bought it

  • @CheepSteal
    @CheepSteal Před 3 lety

    I'm loving the technical side of cycling that doesn't focus solely on Watts. Thank you! Keep up the great content!!

  • @gianpaologliori3604
    @gianpaologliori3604 Před 3 lety

    Clever but simple idea - thanks! 👍

  • @IPAColosseum
    @IPAColosseum Před 2 lety

    Thx for this... will help with years and years of riding with slightly off kilter bars!

  • @h.p.734
    @h.p.734 Před rokem +5

    This is great advice! What I do is I press the handlebars (shifter heads) against the wall, whilst putting a rod against the front fork (with the wheels removed). I make sure to align the bar to exactly the middle of the fork and measure the distance between the wall and the edges of the rod. Basically the same concept, but I feel it's more accurate as I don't trust my eyes to align them perfectly.

    • @SortaYeah
      @SortaYeah Před rokem

      I watched the video, then read your reply (which was super helpful) and made a little variation. This one requires equal spaced planks, as in a deck surface or something similar, or even just a 2 X 4 could work. Remove the front wheel, and rest the fork in the space between two planks (or up against the 2 x 4). In the next gap, place a piece of plywood or something similar (I used a large picture frame), and align that with the shifter hoods. Finally I can stop looking at my front wheel and wondering if I'm losing my mind.

  • @tedguan108
    @tedguan108 Před 2 lety

    Thanks. It works very well.

  • @Gregamz
    @Gregamz Před 3 lety

    What an ingenious simple approach. Good stuff.

  • @MTB-Josh
    @MTB-Josh Před 3 lety +7

    Good stuff. A "tool" that most people have at home that I've used for a long time is a ruler. I set the ruler on the stanchions of my fork and align my bars that way.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +2

      Right on! ..but what about ‘geometric amplification?’ 😆

  • @MrGoodaches
    @MrGoodaches Před rokem

    Excellent vid. Useful topic. Fast, practical solution. Good reference to the relevant math

  • @nazardemchuk9122
    @nazardemchuk9122 Před rokem +1

    Thanks! Nice method !

  • @nosiestaguiding
    @nosiestaguiding Před 3 lety

    this dude = good stuff ! plus humour at no additional cost
    thank you

  • @AlternativeBike
    @AlternativeBike Před rokem

    Perfect! Thank you.

  • @bugeyesprite119
    @bugeyesprite119 Před 3 lety

    Great video, keep up the good work! Really enjoy them.

  • @markp353
    @markp353 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, great tip.

  • @fotosaccion
    @fotosaccion Před 3 lety

    AWESOME!!! I LOVE it!!

  • @skulluxe1541
    @skulluxe1541 Před 3 lety +2

    I also use this method to set my brake/shift levers on road bikes. You can tuck the stick against a common point on the hoods (usually where the lever and hood meet) and check that both levers are even vertically and horizontally with the bars. No more uneven fore/aft or up/down levers

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Nice! You foreshadowed this week’s video

  • @victorjoseph2260
    @victorjoseph2260 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much.

  • @Oddity26
    @Oddity26 Před 3 lety +1

    Great tip thanks!

  • @steveretiredandcycling

    Excellent video. Thank you for the tip! All the best, Steve

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Thx Steve! Retried and cycling - living the dream!

  • @Robwhat
    @Robwhat Před 3 měsíci

    Wow, thank you for this! I have been “eyeballing it” for 20 years now and this is so much faster and more accurate.

  • @yellchai
    @yellchai Před 3 lety

    Solid theory and anyone can do it.
    This is why I am subscribed to the channel.
    Thanks.

  • @bunnyadrian
    @bunnyadrian Před 3 lety +2

    Oh, I feel this so much!

  • @chrisrap52
    @chrisrap52 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent. Like the nerdity.

  • @Ranger42
    @Ranger42 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant!

  • @raimokumpulainen1389
    @raimokumpulainen1389 Před rokem

    Thanks. After watching this, I realize I'm not insane after all. Or maybe, I'm not the only insane one out there. Good stuff.

  • @TheBikerCuteChannel
    @TheBikerCuteChannel Před 3 lety

    Nice. Thanks man.

  • @seanhayes6035
    @seanhayes6035 Před 2 lety

    Great tip! I'm trying to find a way to align the handlebar sweep with the tires contact patch on my mtb. I have Renthal bars with a 40mm rise and I'm finding it a bit perplexing.

  • @rumenripe
    @rumenripe Před 3 lety

    how easy this could make things easily easy.. thanks for this in depth.

  • @michaelrheiner2415
    @michaelrheiner2415 Před 3 lety +1

    Yeah....you certainly never hide the fact that you are nerding out....and yeah, I watched the whole thing so...it says something about me. Thanks for another nice tip!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Ha! 😂 perhaps it means you are a fellow bike nerd!

    • @michaelrheiner2415
      @michaelrheiner2415 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheBikeSauce I definitely have learned to enjoy learning from Nerds! My first job post graduate school was at VIrginia Tech (counselor), and the nerds would come do stuff to the computer...and rather than leave, I’d ask questions to learn. I will never design computer boards to test friction on a brake rotor, but yeah, learning from a nerd is wisdom :-). I may not be smart enough to be a nerd, but I’m wise enough to learn from one. Thanks for what you do and what you teach me!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Too kind!

  • @yamdrew
    @yamdrew Před 3 lety +1

    I’ve always done a straight wooden dowel in the fork dropouts, works quite well and costs just a few bucks.

  • @flacche
    @flacche Před rokem +1

    This is a great tip - Thank you! The most difficult part is securing the stick on the fork parallel to the handlebar. I guarantee bike companies like Canyon, Trek, Cannondale, etc. have clip-on jigs (sticks) to do this quickly/easily. I also recommend taping your fork to protect the paint from whatever you rest against it.

    • @meibing4912
      @meibing4912 Před rokem

      I used a quality clothes hanger with a broad base and placed it towards the fork bars. Does not get easier than that. Even makes it very easy to check that you are horizontal with the handlebars.

  • @stevecroney63
    @stevecroney63 Před 2 lety

    Thanks mate crooked handlebars been annoying me for years. Kept forgetting to do something about it until next time I was riding then it would annoy me again.Your method worked a treat love looking at the wheel in-line with the handlebars.Cheers

  • @nedt
    @nedt Před 3 lety

    Thanks mate

  • @zdravo4
    @zdravo4 Před 8 měsíci

    Hello and thank you for this very useful video. I am strugling with this setting just as you said and when I got on the bike, I have impression that it is not 100% algined. Your method is genius, I also found a video of famous bike mechanic RJ the bike guy which has similar method with ruler put against the edges of the forks, same principle as yours but a bit different.

  • @asian432
    @asian432 Před 2 lety

    Geometrically speaking... straight on! Thanks for the info...

  • @zulfikarbiruni
    @zulfikarbiruni Před 2 lety

    This method works well for me. I thought, however, the most crucial part was how to make sure that the stick is true level on horizontal alignment since it will change the perception of our sight. Very useful and simple trick! Thanks mate!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 2 lety

      Thx! Yea it’s not perfect, but the idea is that even if the stock isn’t perfectly horizontal, it won’t matter as much due geometric amplification

  • @billvallette5607
    @billvallette5607 Před 3 lety

    OMG nothing makes me crazy like out of whack bars. i can eyeball level within very close tolerances but you have just changed the game for me. thank you.

  • @kahakelii
    @kahakelii Před rokem

    Hawaiian....Its about time someone talks about this equation conundrum....I still use a 10 inch magnetic level to achieve what your talking about.....Mahalo!! Great Video !!

  • @rickmancini772
    @rickmancini772 Před 3 lety

    Brilliant

  • @davidmatthew5246
    @davidmatthew5246 Před rokem

    Thank you so much!!!! I am like you. But I have to ride the bike to notice then stop reset, ride again, etc. (UGH!). I will try your method as soon as I obtain a stick. I will mark the stick center and an equal distance out, to also line the bars up left/right on the stem center line. Thanks again.

  • @KabirBindra
    @KabirBindra Před 3 lety

    Great video

  • @paddyredbeard
    @paddyredbeard Před 3 lety

    I obsess over getting my handlebars straight every time I set them up and have never come up with a satisfactory method. This is awesome!

  • @nelsonsilva6842
    @nelsonsilva6842 Před 2 lety

    Just use a big spirit level, it's straight and can secure it get the spokes.
    Yes it's the method!

  • @dannyr333
    @dannyr333 Před 2 lety

    Friggin awesome

  • @paulbarham7083
    @paulbarham7083 Před 5 měsíci

    For extra nerdiness, maybe tape a second stick across the bar ends of the drops?

  • @theforeigner6988
    @theforeigner6988 Před 5 měsíci

    Genius

  • @mrpunchy100
    @mrpunchy100 Před 3 lety +2

    Man! Finally something that work.s Thanks! Do you have a solution to align the shifters too?

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +4

      Haha it’s a bit trickier, but I’m working on a video for shifters

    • @mrpunchy100
      @mrpunchy100 Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce Appreciate it!

  • @dannyloo9688
    @dannyloo9688 Před 2 lety

    I don't think it's made anymore unfortunately but the Tune Spurtreu is a pretty cool laser device to align bars. Doesn't work on all stems unfortunately but when it does work, it's pretty slick and convenient.

  • @arieljohnmaduro9788
    @arieljohnmaduro9788 Před 3 lety +2

    Looking forward for a collab with Locked in and Path Less Pedaled 😊

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Haha, I’ve been slowly bugging them; don’t want to be a pest 😆

  • @PhilCrombieMTB
    @PhilCrombieMTB Před 3 lety

    Awesome! Subbed!

  • @youme77324
    @youme77324 Před rokem

    I enjoy the theoretical explanation but I would liked to see a hands on approach to it as well where you show step by step and apply what you spoke about

  • @galer.7220
    @galer.7220 Před rokem

    Does anyone know what to use as a point of reference? I really liked that the video explained everything since it makes it so intuitive, but I’m still struggling with how and from where I should look at the point of reference.

  • @JosephDowski
    @JosephDowski Před 2 lety

    Just discovered your channel and subscribed! Please do one on aligning your saddle next!! My OCD constantly has me fiddling with saddle height and the worst part is not adjusting the height, but aligning the saddle.. #bikenerd #whenyoufindyourpeople #ocd #adhd

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 2 lety

      Yes! Right on. That’s a good video topic

  • @dansotelo228
    @dansotelo228 Před 3 lety +1

    A quick and easy method is to turn your handlebars at a 30 or 45-degree angle so you can see the entire front and the rear of the tire making it very easy to line up the handlebar & stem. Been doing this method for over 40 years and works great.

    • @rainypath96
      @rainypath96 Před 9 měsíci

      Dude thank you. I just tried this and it’s perfect

  • @huetish
    @huetish Před rokem

    Do training wheels fit on this bike?

  • @mikepaysan
    @mikepaysan Před 3 lety

    Very informative, thanks a bunch. Glad I subscribed to your channel. Incidentally, what is the stem length on your Diverge bike?

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      70mm on size 52 frame. Larger frames get 80 and 90mm, I believe.

    • @mikepaysan
      @mikepaysan Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce thank u. Let’s ride at Fully loop and carbon canyon loop when u have time. I live in the local area and new to gravel riding.

  • @happinessisinternal
    @happinessisinternal Před 3 lety +1

    Great idea. Another perhaps easier way that I know is to take your front wheel off and rest your forks on the ground. Then use a long, straight ‘stick’ like a spirit level on the ground touching your forks. Same principle as yours but perhaps less possibility of human error in taping stick to frame. Thanks tho. I look forward to watching more of your videos

  • @speedikat6822
    @speedikat6822 Před 3 lety

    Terrific! Now I just need a way to line up drop bar brake levers.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Ha, yea. Working on it for next Sunday's video.

    • @speedikat6822
      @speedikat6822 Před 3 lety

      Ha ha yeah. I'm looking forward to it. Things were simpler in the days Chinelli 66 bars and the like. Drop bars are all over the place!

  • @joelungaidon
    @joelungaidon Před 3 lety

    Oh god thank you!

  • @bet609
    @bet609 Před 3 lety

    nice vid. can you please make a video on how to align shifters and brake levers for both road and mtb :)

  • @BennoSattler
    @BennoSattler Před rokem

    Nice one!
    Lefty-owners (and all of us, too) could use a rod fitted through the front hub, like an overly long axle....

  • @jakubkowalik4791
    @jakubkowalik4791 Před 3 lety

    Recently I've used laser (small office laser pointer) to adjust saddle. Probably you have some good method for saddle adjustment ?

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +2

      Lasers. Nice. I usually just use string passed through 3 critical points: rear of saddle, front of saddle, center of stem top cap. Three co-linear points guarantee a straight line. BUT, this method has its caveats. String tension/ friction on nose of saddle, etc.. Perhaps another video is in order.. haha

  • @Freddy3792
    @Freddy3792 Před 3 lety

    I usually stand over the top tube as far back as possible and line up the front plate of the stem with the middle of the tire that is the furthest away from me. So basically looking forward on an angle as shallow as possible. Which results in a big distance between both reference points. So if the example you gave is looking at it on a 0° angle. I much rather use a 45° angle to line everything up which is not perfect but works a whole lot better.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +2

      Right, sounds like you’ve also leveraged ‘geometric amplification’ 🤘
      The issue might be that, while the front of the tire is a good distance away, the end of the stem isn’t super far from the axis of rotation (fork steerer in this case), but certainly better than looking straight down

  • @klr10410
    @klr10410 Před 3 měsíci

    Do you use a tape measure?

  • @rgefryer
    @rgefryer Před 3 lety +2

    It never occurred to me to line up the bars with reference points; I've always just looked at the direction the wheel is pointing! With the stick idea, can you clamp it to the forks using the spokes, avoiding the need to tape it in place?

  • @buster.keaton
    @buster.keaton Před 2 lety

    I love this video! Aligning the handlebars has annoyed me for decades. I don't understand why bicycle manufacturers don't simply put a mark on the top or side of the fork tube and the back of the stem clamps that we could line-up to ensure straight bars with no effort.

  • @n0ch91c3s
    @n0ch91c3s Před 3 lety +2

    A couple issues:
    As you mention, the stick must be parallel to the handlebar. Depending on the shape of the fork, it could make a big difference. Also you're assuming the crown and leg area are symmetric. More and more often with road and gravel disc they are not. All "fancy" bar alignment gauges make assumptions regarding symmetry and alignment of other parts, for instance the Tune gauge that drops a laser onto the tire is assuming the wheel is in dish and the hub is perfectly square in the dropouts, etc. And just like you said, small variances can make for great stem angle offsets.
    I currently just install the thru axle without the wheel and reference that to the bar. Ideally, an extra long thru axle could be used, just like you use a long stick. The hub must be concentric with the axle. Then anything can be misaligned, but if the axle and bar are parallel to each other, the bar is perfectly straight.

  • @RAP4EVERMRC96
    @RAP4EVERMRC96 Před rokem

    What are those Ritchey bars?

  • @alextang9745
    @alextang9745 Před 2 lety

    what bar is that and size?

  • @shannonparker7404
    @shannonparker7404 Před 3 lety

    Oh Man!! Thankyou! It bothers me how much not having straight bars bothers me!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      haha, that's very 'meta,' but I totally understand

  • @mudbone59
    @mudbone59 Před 3 lety

    i clip my necklace around the stem and hang it over the front between the bolts. The pendant works as a pendulum that i center over the tire. Works perfectly every time and anywhere.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      How do you ensure the bike is perfectly vertical?

    • @mudbone59
      @mudbone59 Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce A bubble level.

  • @shawnsangha
    @shawnsangha Před 8 měsíci

    Trying it now...

  • @cosinus_square
    @cosinus_square Před 3 lety +1

    This issue has mostly been solved on modern design bikes, as most new fork steerers are not round anymore.
    I always used a ruler, long enough to fit snug between the brifters and simply align the centre of the ruler with the centre of the wheel. Done

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      Curious. All my steer tubes are still round.

    • @cosinus_square
      @cosinus_square Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce the new Emonda had a square'ish steerer, new Aeroad etc, the downside is proprietary fit.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      Right - fork and stem combo. Proprietary, but solves the issue for some.

  • @DoomOfConviction
    @DoomOfConviction Před 10 dny

    I’m totally that kind of guy, sattle and handlebars have to be perfectly straight xD

  • @dirtwolfmtb
    @dirtwolfmtb Před 2 měsíci

    There is it uses a laser, mounts to the bars and laser is a line on front tire. ~$75 usd

  • @velosurseine
    @velosurseine Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this! I'm getting a Ted-Ed vibe from your voice and video :thumbs up:

  • @chrisoliveira2038
    @chrisoliveira2038 Před 3 lety

    Great tip! I work on lots of bikes every week and love an elegant and effective solution to something I do regularly. Now I will soon be obsessing over the "perfect" handlebars alignment gauge device: wood dowel, carbon arrow shaft, SS tubing, should it be a light color, maybe I should 3D print 2 x 90deg risers to touch the bars...

  • @BP-id4cq
    @BP-id4cq Před 3 lety +1

    Great tip! I’m wondering if you would consider doing one on crank lengths. My the mathematically speaking, is a 170 mm better than a 165mm?

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      It would seem that way at first, but loosely speaking, optimal crank is a function of rider leg length from my understanding

    • @oldanslo
      @oldanslo Před 3 lety +1

      Having delved into the research on crank arm length on cycling performance, it turns out that it doesn't matter over a reasonable range as long as the cranks aren't too long for you. The difference between 165 and 170 is 3%, which is pretty trivial.

  • @PaulBeiser
    @PaulBeiser Před 3 lety

    This is great, thanks! You and Dustin Klein (NOT A MECHANIC! :-) ) should partner for a set of videos, these would be awesome!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Would love to, but he’s on a higher level I think 😆

    • @PaulBeiser
      @PaulBeiser Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheBikeSauce nah, you guys would be great together!

  • @AverageReviewsYT
    @AverageReviewsYT Před 2 lety

    I jsut set them close then blind fold myself so I don’t have to see the crooked bars while riding

  • @bobwatkins1271
    @bobwatkins1271 Před 3 lety

    I've been considering deliberately skewing my handlebars to compensate for the difference in the lengths of my arms. It turns out that my right arm is about an inch longer than my left.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Oh interesting. Sounds like a pro bike fit might particularly be a benefit as they can account for this type of discrepancy very accurately

  • @ddg227
    @ddg227 Před měsícem

    1. He still has full hair, not fair. :)
    2. Be careful with finding a rod so perfectly straight, you might end up realising the fork itself is skewed...it's a slippery slope.
    3. This actually taught me how to be a better programmer.. really seemed like bad code review day in a great team.

  • @dakrisht
    @dakrisht Před 3 lety

    Great stuff as usual. #NerdShit here, for us psycho’s who need 0.0mm of angle. Haha. Love it.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      Haha. Some might require 0.00mm 😆

    • @dakrisht
      @dakrisht Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce I spent an hour aligning bars a few months back, one eye closed, angles, different positions lol. Found this trick in a blog, felt like I just finished a 2k climb 😂

  • @michaelknoblett4481
    @michaelknoblett4481 Před 3 lety

    I would of been annoyed with a 10 second video that said use a stick. Now I've got to go use a stick to align my bars, thanks.

  • @oldanslo
    @oldanslo Před 3 lety +1

    1:32 Hope your next video will show the best method to align your snowflakes perfectly.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Haha honestly, that is on the list of videos to make 😂. It’s the only problem with that supacaz stuff.

    • @oldanslo
      @oldanslo Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheBikeSauce Ah, Supacaz says these are stars. Had to do a nerdy deep dive to understand why snowflakes are always six sided while stars can be 4, 5, 6, or more pointed. The answer, of course, involves Fourier Transforms!

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Holy Moly! Fellow nerd. The day I can incorporate FFT and the frequency domain into a bike video is the day I will have made it.

  • @TheraPi
    @TheraPi Před 3 lety

    How to overcomplicate a seemingly simple thing :D
    I sometimes lay a ruler along the middle line of the stem and see if its tip then aligns with the front wheel.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Seems to be the theme of the channel 😆

  • @nonchalantgarage
    @nonchalantgarage Před 3 lety

    Is that a carbon stick?

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety +1

      😆 It is! Not trying to be cycle elitist; just had it leftover from a different project.

    • @nonchalantgarage
      @nonchalantgarage Před 3 lety

      @@TheBikeSauce Ballin, really digging your videos BTW.

    • @TheBikeSauce
      @TheBikeSauce  Před 3 lety

      Thanks!

  • @MusicBoxVinyl
    @MusicBoxVinyl Před 3 lety

    My handlebar goes to the right (crooked)

  • @michaelpalo2951
    @michaelpalo2951 Před rokem

    nah i just remove the wheel let the fork stand on a floor mop works like a charm

  • @WayneBaillie-in4ko
    @WayneBaillie-in4ko Před 10 měsíci

    It went together easily in less than an hour. czcams.com/users/postUgkxHL1v1R3NE5x4KiYfyt8dnQmyNYz7qi5L Make sure the front fork is forward or the pedals will hit the front tire. Tires are both a little soft so it needs air before I ride it. The rear wheel didn't come with a clamp regular bolts hold it on. The front had the clamp. No scratches out of box. Rims are a little off with a slight wobble. They could have spent more time with the spoke tool fixing the run out. So far out of the box I'm happy with it. I did replace the pedals with a nice aftermarket set. After riding it a bit my A$$ is a bit sore so I ordered another seat. Overall I'm nearly 60 and didn't ride a bike in 30 years. I like my new 29" Schwinn. It will be used for casual rides with my friend.