I am, by trade, a bicycle mechanic. I currently have a little over a year and a half of experience working as a mechanic in a small, privately run shop. Within the dirty, grimy walls of Ike's Bikes I developed a set of very specific skills to repair, diagnose and build bicycles. Being in a tiny "closet-sized" shop in the middle of a place where bicycles are not revered and at best tolerated, I was taught with fire and malice, wielding it to subdue stupidity and misconceptions as they came at me almost constantly during the warmer months of the year.
The hell-fire I proudly consider home. |
Beautiful. |
A beautiful lugged steel frame; I'd take it over carbon fiber anyday. |
I don't own a bike that properly fits me.
I don't want to use--and have never used--clipless pedals.
I would never own anything made of carbon fiber on a bicycle.
My riding attire is what I wear at work, lounging in the house, or walking through the mall.
You'll never see me like this. |
Because of this, I can't really say a lot about riding stance or bike fitting. My expertise extends to if a bike fits someone or not--and even then there are a lot of grey areas with my method--and that is about it. I can help people get more or less length on a certain aspect of the bike, but if that is good for them I usually can't help that much. Instead I get to listen to my coworkers and managers talk to customers about all of these abstract concepts that I both don't understand and don't care about personally. I am, in most things, concrete.
At the end of the day, I've learned that just because I can't precisely fit someone to a bike doesn't mean I don't know what I'm talking about. I can still fix most things on a bicycle, and keep my bicycles running for hundreds of dollars less than some people. My natural feel for the mechanics involved in a bicycle still gives me an edge over people who rely on the books and manuals. As far as I'm concerned, I learned in the best shop in the world, and I'm going to spread the methodology of that shop everywhere I go.
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