I think it is a confused document.
First, there has to be a balance between groups & individuals.
Second, there does need to be standards. Standards which can be challenged.
Third, while it is true that standards of values can cause troubles in that they can become dogmatic, there still needs to standards of values within a framework that can allow adjustment.
Fourth, there does have to be elements of "management". A shop cannot be run successful run over any period of time without rules & management.
Fifth, I am not sure it is "white culture" that is designating certain ways of thinking, as people of color are involved in that construction & its continuation, while there are whites who are for moving onto a new system.
Individuals need power within organizations, there needs to be a framework in which to work. There cannot be such as, "everyone is allowed~ except 'vehicular cyclists' & 'whites'". That is only perpetuating a power structure that is supposedly being rejected.
It is time to move on from these restrictive views that have failed & will continue to fail. Empowerment of the individual & individual dignity cannot be graced unto people from an organization, it can be fostered, encouraged, yes, yet it must, ultimately, come from someone's own core. This core is not "white" or any other particular color. To say that is to naturally limit responses, created resistance that would not be there, otherwise, & strains the tenets of any new concept of existence.
Arguments made against any present structures that exist, which one would like to be different, must be much more definably aimed at & not generalized into a general "us versus them". Cultures are not monolithic, which is part of the point. To assign a type of thinking or argument to a race is racist. Again, fighting against the presumable change pushed for.
To over emphasize the power of groups over the individual will cause resistance as many individuals want to be free from such authoritarian concepts. As well as those who over emphasize the power of the individual without any acknowledgement of any 'collective' leads to isolation, allows oppression in other forms &, too, is a failed path to follow.
Individual empowerment & dignity has something to do with culture & heritage, yet, is still, at heart, a personal matter. Values are internal, internally taken, can be influenced from without, but, also, internally generated. However, people, in their souls know what is right & wrong. To not say so is a cop out to shift responsibility from oneself to "the state", allowing bad behaviour to be excused, leading into a cycle of dysfunction & failure.
Culture, thought, & action cannot be changed positively unless these factors are considered.
~Robert Rands (Blackcatprowl)
On Sat, 10/13/18, thethinktank-request@lists.bikecollectives.org wrote:
Subject: Thethinktank Digest, Vol 145, Issue 6 To: thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Date: Saturday, October 13, 2018, 4:04 PM
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: white supremacy culture (Cyclista Nicholas) 2. Re: white supremacy culture (Cyclista Nicholas) 3. Re: white supremacy culture (Judith Feist) 4. Re: white supremacy culture (Cyclista Nicholas) 5. Re: Volunteer Question (Cyclista Nicholas) 6. Re: Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? (Cyclista Nicholas) 7. Re: Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? (Cyclista Nicholas) 8. Re: Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? (Sunny Nestler)
Message: 1 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2018 21:15:07 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: The Think Tank thethinktank@bikecollectives.org, Matthew McMunn matthew@therecyclery.org Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] white supremacy culture Message-ID: 7879c869f2c76f8c4bc35b793688a8fc@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Matthew,
I think those observations are on target, and that core of authenticity is why I called for a redraft. A document that is meant to change and open minds shouldn't instead confuse them, require translation, and harbor significant dangers with misinterpretation.
Sounds like you're progressing on that redraft :)
I'd suggest consulting with Angel and Judith during the process though.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-12 14:26, Matthew McMunn wrote:
Nicholas and All, I get why the title and headings
might cause you to say so, but upon
reading the article I think you
are way off. I may have not read it
were it not for your objection, so I
sincerely thank you for writing to the
group.
I find the article very helpful. I
see these many of these cultural
dynamics play out at our Chicago
community shop. If we want to be
anti-racist, we have to be better
about sharing power. My thoughts on
your response are below. Best, -Matthew from The Recyclery
The document is not describing
?white problems.? The intro says as
much. It is describing elements in ?White
supremacy culture.? I admit, that it?s
was confusing for me at first. As I
read the list I came to see that the
?culture? the article is
describing, is a grouping of practices,
attitudes, and beliefs that tend to uphold
power dynamics that exclude people of
color. This culture works against
racial justice.
The ?perfectionism? and
?objectivity? described might be more clearly
named as ?so called perfectionism?
and ?so called objectivity.? With
?perfectionism,? it is not
describing being careful to get it right.
Instead it is a warning about
being overly critical of others work and
neglecting to give praise and not
being able to see to take advantage
of their work. With ?objectivity? it
is not an indictment of the
scientific method. Instead, it is sceptical
of those who hold ?objectivity? as
something they alone possess.
Sometimes people and organizations don?t
seek out subjective feedback. They
become unresponsive and deaf to the
important expressions of their stakeholders.
They are not measuring the right
things, but they don?t know it because
they are not valuing subjective
experiences. Do you feel me? -Matthew
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 2:24 PM
Cyclista Nicholas
cyclista@inventati.org wrote:
That document points out a lot
of distinct problems that are important
to consider. However, with a
few exceptions, it doesn't ground itself
in examples of *how or why these
are specifically white problems*.
Additionally it:
-demonizes some utilitarian
goals, such as perfectionism
-demonizes goals that are
crucial to wisdom, such as objectivity (not
to suggest subjectivity is
inherently detrimental to that process)
-attaches debatable
characteristics and behaviors to well-known words
-demonizes goals that are
crucial for struggling nonprofit
organizations, such as a sense
of urgency
-contradicts itself by
criticizing lack of transparency in decision
and rule making while also
criticizing documentation
-sets up a condition wherein
one can be accused of white supremacy by
defending, say, perfectionism
or objectivity
Many of the issues presented
in the document are clearly important
ones we all face, and the gist is
worth meditating on. The document is,
however, an "oldie"... in that
it needs several redrafts.
One might even say...
urgently.
Apologies in advance to
everyone (including Angel) for any flame war
this might erupt.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-10 15:25, Angel
York wrote:
old but good
The ThinkTank mailing
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--
Matthew McMunn -Volunteer & Outreach
Coordinator-
(he/him/his)
http://therecyclery.org/ Facebook @TheRecyclery Instagram @TheRecyclery
Program Hours: Bike Sales: Saturday 10am-noon Open Shop: Tuesday 7pm-9pm,
Thursday 7pm-9pm, Saturday 1-5pm
Youth Open Shop Monday: 4-6pm Volunteer Hours: Tuesday: 12-5pm,
Friday: 5-8pm
Spanish Open Shop 1st Mondays
7pm-9pm
W.T.F. (Women, Trans, Femme) Night
4th Sundays 6pm-9pm
Volunteer Orientation 2nd and 4th
Thursdays 6pm
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Message: 2 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2018 21:15:07 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: The Think Tank thethinktank@bikecollectives.org, Matthew McMunn matthew@therecyclery.org Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] white supremacy culture Message-ID: 7879c869f2c76f8c4bc35b793688a8fc@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Matthew,
I think those observations are on target, and that core of authenticity is why I called for a redraft. A document that is meant to change and open minds shouldn't instead confuse them, require translation, and harbor significant dangers with misinterpretation.
Sounds like you're progressing on that redraft :)
I'd suggest consulting with Angel and Judith during the process though.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-12 14:26, Matthew McMunn wrote:
Nicholas and All, I get why the title and headings
might cause you to say so, but upon
reading the article I think you
are way off. I may have not read it
were it not for your objection, so I
sincerely thank you for writing to the
group.
I find the article very helpful. I
see these many of these cultural
dynamics play out at our Chicago
community shop. If we want to be
anti-racist, we have to be better
about sharing power. My thoughts on
your response are below. Best, -Matthew from The Recyclery
The document is not describing
?white problems.? The intro says as
much. It is describing elements in ?White
supremacy culture.? I admit, that it?s
was confusing for me at first. As I
read the list I came to see that the
?culture? the article is
describing, is a grouping of practices,
attitudes, and beliefs that tend to uphold
power dynamics that exclude people of
color. This culture works against
racial justice.
The ?perfectionism? and
?objectivity? described might be more clearly
named as ?so called perfectionism?
and ?so called objectivity.? With
?perfectionism,? it is not
describing being careful to get it right.
Instead it is a warning about
being overly critical of others work and
neglecting to give praise and not
being able to see to take advantage
of their work. With ?objectivity? it
is not an indictment of the
scientific method. Instead, it is sceptical
of those who hold ?objectivity? as
something they alone possess.
Sometimes people and organizations don?t
seek out subjective feedback. They
become unresponsive and deaf to the
important expressions of their stakeholders.
They are not measuring the right
things, but they don?t know it because
they are not valuing subjective
experiences. Do you feel me? -Matthew
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 2:24 PM
Cyclista Nicholas
cyclista@inventati.org wrote:
That document points out a lot
of distinct problems that are important
to consider. However, with a
few exceptions, it doesn't ground itself
in examples of *how or why these
are specifically white problems*.
Additionally it:
-demonizes some utilitarian
goals, such as perfectionism
-demonizes goals that are
crucial to wisdom, such as objectivity (not
to suggest subjectivity is
inherently detrimental to that process)
-attaches debatable
characteristics and behaviors to well-known words
-demonizes goals that are
crucial for struggling nonprofit
organizations, such as a sense
of urgency
-contradicts itself by
criticizing lack of transparency in decision
and rule making while also
criticizing documentation
-sets up a condition wherein
one can be accused of white supremacy by
defending, say, perfectionism
or objectivity
Many of the issues presented
in the document are clearly important
ones we all face, and the gist is
worth meditating on. The document is,
however, an "oldie"... in that
it needs several redrafts.
One might even say...
urgently.
Apologies in advance to
everyone (including Angel) for any flame war
this might erupt.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-10 15:25, Angel
York wrote:
old but good
The ThinkTank mailing
List
Unsubscribe from this
list here:
http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.or...
The ThinkTank mailing List
Unsubscribe from this list
here:
http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.or...
--
Matthew McMunn -Volunteer & Outreach
Coordinator-
(he/him/his)
http://therecyclery.org/ Facebook @TheRecyclery Instagram @TheRecyclery
Program Hours: Bike Sales: Saturday 10am-noon Open Shop: Tuesday 7pm-9pm,
Thursday 7pm-9pm, Saturday 1-5pm
Youth Open Shop Monday: 4-6pm Volunteer Hours: Tuesday: 12-5pm,
Friday: 5-8pm
Spanish Open Shop 1st Mondays
7pm-9pm
W.T.F. (Women, Trans, Femme) Night
4th Sundays 6pm-9pm
Volunteer Orientation 2nd and 4th
Thursdays 6pm
The ThinkTank mailing List
Unsubscribe from this list here: http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.or...
Message: 3 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2018 17:38:39 -0400 From: Judith Feist judith@backalleybikes.org To: thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] white supremacy culture Message-ID: CABQKaWtzpddt3_Setvm8_PMm_Mi2u1m6qhqQUDfz==1mjv3jVQ@mail.gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Thanks for your input, Matthew and Nicholas. Thought provoking, for sure.
Ride on,
Judith C Feist Co Director, the Hub at Back Alley
*"*Radical simply means 'grasping things at the root'"- Angela Davis
"A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle." -Gloria Steinem
I think [the bicycle] has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world...It gives a woman a feeling of freedom and self-reliance.~Susan B. Anthony
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Message: 4 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2018 23:05:28 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: Judith Feist judith@backalleybikes.org Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] white supremacy culture Message-ID: 1e3479a3819d9ca4dedae8b780316c5b@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
All,
Rereading over this thread, this really stood out to me:
They are not measuring the right
things, but they don?t know it because
they are not valuing subjective
experiences. Do you feel me?
Yeah, I definitely feel you.
Thanks.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-12 21:38, Judith Feist wrote:
Thanks for your input, Matthew and
Nicholas. Thought provoking, for
sure.
Ride on,
Judith C Feist Co Director, the Hub at Back
Alley
*"*Radical simply means 'grasping
things at the root'"- Angela Davis
"A woman without a man is like a
fish without a bicycle." -Gloria
Steinem
I think [the bicycle] has done
more to emancipate women than anything
else in the world...It gives a woman a
feeling of freedom and
self-reliance.~Susan B. Anthony
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Message: 5 Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2018 23:51:34 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: Edward Kirkwood kirkwoodea@yahoo.com Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] Volunteer Question Message-ID: f6105d56c309dc58d8d4c6b001558f47@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Broke Spoke Folk,
We have a similar configuration as you do, except our hours are of course different, we don't charge anything for stand time, we regard every participant in open shop as a sort of volunteer-in-waiting, and we don't service bikes for people unless it's warranty service on a bike they bought from us. Our shop is heavily skillshare/mutual aid oriented.
Our volunteer nights are pretty much invitation only. I say pretty much because we do post advertisements for it from time on Facebook (eww), but there we specify that we need trained mechanics or at least people with some mechanical experience. If we're doing construction or such, we'll advertise that we need people with experience with those kinds of tools.
Generally when we feel someone is coming up to speed in terms of skills during normal open shop time, we tell them about volunteer night (sometimes called Monday Night Work Party) and ask them to show up; by making it invitation only, we can also do a bit of screening at these times for gender and cultural balance. If we're severely white-dude-heavy at a given time, we may refrain from invites until someone capable and not a white dude presents themselves. This is not because white dudes suck, it's to keep the social chemistry of the shop more representative of the city demographics. Our mission is to use cycling, community, and knowledge of bicycle mechanics to empower all people, but explicitly has a mandate to reach out to, include, and ultimately in part comprise ourselves of communities of color and marginalized/threatened people in general. We are explicitly working to dismantle patriarchy.
Volunteers are also welcome during open shop, many of the people helping other people on any given night are volunteers. We also often have people sorting parts and whatnot during open shop. As long as it doesn't get in the way, sometimes people even do things like mow the lawn or cut back vines. Since open shop is not invitation only, open shop is often when we get unskilled volunteers that just want to do small or simple things.
Open shop nights are also great times for volunteer training; people who want to learn something typically don't have to stand around long before some fundamental process like truing a wheel or repacking a bottom bracket is getting taught to a participant. The volunteer can sit in and learn at the same time as the participant. The line between participant and volunteer is very thin; basically it comes down to whether you're working on your own bike or not.
We get totally random turnout with these methods. Some volunteer nights, we have five dedicated people tasking it up, other nights it's just staff (often literally just me), but it still really is useful because work can be done without distraction. Some open shop days we have several volunteers, others we have none and it's just staff.
Full disclosure: we are also not a volunteer-run shop. We have dedicated paid staff, volunteers are auxiliary.
cyclista Nicholas
Director, Recycle Ithaca's Bicycles
On 2018-10-09 15:05, Edward Kirkwood wrote:
I volunteer at Broke Spoke
Community Bike Shop here in Lexington, KY.
We are currently a 100% volunteer
run community bike shop that is open
the following hours: Wednesday 6-9
pm Volunteer Only Night, Thursday
6-9 pm Open Shift and Sunday 1-5
pm Open Shift. To clarify, our
Volunteer Night is for volunteers
to come in and work on bikes that
have been donated to us along with
other tasks such as parts sorting.
We do not offer sales or service
to the public on Wednesdays. Open
shifts are open to the public for
individuals to come in rent our
workstands and do work on their
own bikes and shop for bikes and/or
parts. Open shifts are staffed by
a manager and trained volunteer
mechanics. Volunteer Nights are
staffed with a manager and 1-2 long
term volunteers along with an
unlimited number of volunteers that
range from complete novices to
regular volunteers.
My questions for the ThinkTank is
regarding our Volunteer Night, if
you have a similar volunteer-only
night: (1) Do you limit the number
of volunteers? and if so (2) How
do you implement this limitation?
The reason for my questions is
that sometime we have more volunteers
than we can find quality tasks for
them to do. It also limits the
amount of in-shift training that
we can provide to each volunteer. In
addition, space and tools become a
limitation.?
Allen KirkwoodBroke Spoke
Community Bike Shop
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Message: 6 Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2018 00:10:52 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: Sunny Nestler programs@bikecoop.ca Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? Message-ID: 5dc2a37ae8da8fb4913a9b6a397e6d68@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
Our popup kit has everything that Kickstand's and AMS's does, except we only use one tent and we don't bring spare parts or other bikes. Our popup is transported by bike trailer, complete bikes wouldn't be manageable.
A couple of things we tend to bring that haven't been mentioned are a few fresh cables, a flat file, and some electrical tape to make rim strips (first wrap sticky side up, second wrap sticky side down, puncture to make valve hole).
Housings are considered a bit out of scope. We'll ask people to come by the shop if the repairs require too many spare parts. SO MANY MANGLED REAR DERAILERS. UGH.
Lol@Sunny:
set with 3
missing
...important!
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-11 21:39, Sunny Nestler wrote:
Here's ours
EXTREME Roll
-
wrenches: -
box (7-17mm)
& tri socket
-
cone (13,
15-19, 2x 15)
-
headset (32,
36 & 36, 40)
-
bottom
bracket
-
brake, 2x -
pedal -
adjustable -
allen keys: -
multi -
tri -
set with 3
missing
-
crank puller -
4th hand tool -
cable cutters -
tire levers, 4x -
chain checker -
pliers, regular &
headset
-
pin spanners, 2x -
screwdrivers, 1
flathead, 1 phillips
-
vise grips -
exacto knife -
pokey tool
Missing:
-
3 allen keys -
chainbreaker
(ordered)
BASIC Roll
-
wrenches: -
box
6-17mm (3 x 13mm)
-
headset
(30/32, 36/40 mm)
-
bottom
bracket x 2
-
brake -
Scissors -
Pokey tool -
Allen Keys -
6-2.5 mm -
multi tool -
Chain breaker -
exacto knife -
Torque key multi
tool
-
Flathead, phillips
one big one small, screw driver
-
4th hand tool -
vice grip -
chain checker -
tire levers x 3 -
patch kit -
file -
brush -
pin spanners (round
and flat)
*Sunny Nestler*, *Programs
Manager*
AMS Bike Co-op University of British Columbia 604-822-2453 | bikecoop.ca |
@ubcbike
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 12:21 PM
John Young jmyoung73@gmail.com
wrote:
We do these about once a month
at a soup kitchen type facility in
Raleigh. Here is what we bring:
- One or two
tents (10' x 10')
- Bike Stand(s) - Bike Tools
(fairly complete set of common bike tools, fit in a
standard size
carryable tool box)
- Regular Tools
(including common hand tools plus hack saw, bolt
cutters, tin
snips)
- Truing Stand - 1-2 parts
bikes. These are fairly complete bikes that have been
deemed too far
gone to fix. We strip parts as needed to make repair
- 1-2 exchange
bikes. These are donated bikes that are ready to go,
if someone brings in
a daily driver that we deem to be unsafe we try
to exchange. - Tubes (3-4 26",
1 each of 700 x 32, 24", 29", 20" all schrader)
- (2) floor
pumps
- Zip Ties - Assorted used
tires (mostly 26")
- Park Tools book
on bike repair
- Brake pads - Brake cable and
housing
- Shift cable and
housing
- Chain lube, PB
Blaster, Grease (for wheel bearings), spray bottle
of rubbing alcohol
(to remove grips), 3 in 1 oil (for rusted chains
worth saving)
Could probably get away with a
lot less but this is what we have
evolved to over the last 1.5 years. We
have a great group of volunteers who
are not afraid to do some
extensive repairs.
John Raleigh Community Kickstand https://www.facebook.com/RaleighCommunityKickstand/
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 2:02
PM Josh Bisker jbisker@gmail.com wrote:
What's your list of things
to bring to a pop-up repair event? Which
tools, ancillary supplies,
etceteras do you make sure to have?
JoshJoshJosh
Josh Bisker 914-500-9890 New York Mechanical
Gardens Bike Co-op http://bikecoop.nyc/
596 Acres http://596acres.org/ Bindlestiff Family Cirkus
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Message: 7 Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2018 02:02:37 +0000 From: Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org To: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Cc: Sunny Nestler programs@bikecoop.ca Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? Message-ID: 59302b87be6d76dc74bdb0bf99c4c2c9@inventati.org Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
I forgot! We also bring two folding tables. They fit on the trailer because they are rectangular and really narrow.
We got ours from Craigslist, but new they seem to come from Walmart: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Cosco-20-x-48-Resin-Top-Folding-Table-Black/50872...
They are pretty lightweight; they also help create a bigger platform for carrying things on the trailer.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-13 00:10, Cyclista Nicholas wrote:
Our popup kit has everything that
Kickstand's and AMS's does, except
we only use one tent and we don't
bring spare parts or other bikes.
Our popup is transported by bike
trailer, complete bikes wouldn't be
manageable.
A couple of things we tend to
bring that haven't been mentioned are a
few fresh cables, a flat file, and
some electrical tape to make rim
strips (first wrap sticky side up,
second wrap sticky side down,
puncture to make valve hole).
Housings are considered a bit out
of scope. We'll ask people to come
by the shop if the repairs require
too many spare parts. SO MANY
MANGLED REAR DERAILERS. UGH.
Lol@Sunny:
set with
3 missing
...important!
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-11 21:39, Sunny Nestler
wrote:
Here's ours
EXTREME Roll
-
wrenches: -
box
(7-17mm) & tri socket
-
cone (13,
15-19, 2x 15)
-
headset
(32, 36 & 36, 40)
-
bottom
bracket
-
brake,
2x
-
pedal -
adjustable
-
allen keys: -
multi -
tri -
set with
3 missing
-
crank puller -
4th hand tool -
cable cutters -
tire levers, 4x -
chain checker -
pliers, regular
& headset
-
pin spanners, 2x -
screwdrivers, 1
flathead, 1 phillips
-
vise grips -
exacto knife -
pokey tool
Missing:
-
3 allen keys -
chainbreaker
(ordered)
BASIC Roll
-
wrenches: -
box
6-17mm (3 x 13mm)
-
headset
(30/32, 36/40 mm)
-
bottom
bracket x 2
-
brake -
Scissors -
Pokey tool -
Allen Keys -
6-2.5 mm -
multi
tool
-
Chain breaker -
exacto knife -
Torque key multi
tool
-
Flathead,
phillips one big one small, screw driver
-
4th hand tool -
vice grip -
chain checker -
tire levers x 3 -
patch kit -
file -
brush -
pin spanners
(round and flat)
*Sunny Nestler*, *Programs
Manager*
AMS Bike Co-op University of British
Columbia
604-822-2453 | bikecoop.ca |
@ubcbike
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 12:21
PM John Young jmyoung73@gmail.com
wrote:
We do these about once a
month at a soup kitchen type facility in
Raleigh. Here is what we bring:
- One or two
tents (10' x 10')
- Bike
Stand(s)
- Bike Tools
(fairly complete set of common bike tools, fit in a
standard size
carryable tool box)
- Regular
Tools (including common hand tools plus hack saw, bolt
cutters, tin
snips)
- Truing
Stand
- 1-2 parts
bikes. These are fairly complete bikes that have been
deemed too
far gone to fix. We strip parts as needed to make
repair - 1-2
exchange bikes. These are donated bikes that are ready to
go, if someone
brings in a daily driver that we deem to be unsafe we try
to exchange. - Tubes (3-4
26", 1 each of 700 x 32, 24", 29", 20" all schrader)
- (2) floor
pumps
- Zip Ties - Assorted
used tires (mostly 26")
- Park Tools
book on bike repair
- Brake pads - Brake cable
and housing
- Shift cable
and housing
- Chain lube,
PB Blaster, Grease (for wheel bearings), spray
bottle of rubbing
alcohol (to remove grips), 3 in 1 oil (for rusted chains
worth saving)
Could probably get away
with a lot less but this is what we have
evolved to over the last 1.5
years. We have a great group of volunteers who
are not afraid to do some
extensive repairs.
John Raleigh Community
Kickstand
https://www.facebook.com/RaleighCommunityKickstand/
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at
2:02 PM Josh Bisker jbisker@gmail.com
wrote:
What's your list of
things to bring to a pop-up repair event? Which
tools, ancillary
supplies, etceteras do you make sure to have?
JoshJoshJosh
Josh Bisker 914-500-9890 New York Mechanical
Gardens Bike Co-op http://bikecoop.nyc/
596 Acres http://596acres.org/ Bindlestiff Family
Cirkus http://bindlestiff.org/
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Message: 8 Date: Sat, 13 Oct 2018 12:36:11 -0700 From: Sunny Nestler programs@bikecoop.ca To: cyclista@inventati.org Cc: The Think Tank thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org Subject: Re: [TheThinkTank] Softball Question: What's in Your Mobile/Pop-up Kit? Message-ID: CAK_PEs6dum4Hh0abP0G4cPwP3t7gysnRSRZ-qqauivibgPzstg@mail.gmail.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
LOL i didnt have time to edit that last email but yes, very important to make sure you are always missing AT LEAST 3 hex wrenches ?
*Sunny Nestler*, *Programs Manager* AMS Bike Co-op University of British Columbia 604-822-2453 | bikecoop.ca | @ubcbike
On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 7:02 PM Cyclista Nicholas cyclista@inventati.org wrote:
I forgot! We also bring two
folding tables. They fit on the trailer
because they are rectangular and
really narrow.
We got ours from Craigslist, but
new they seem to come from Walmart:
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Cosco-20-x-48-Resin-Top-Folding-Table-Black/50872...
They are pretty lightweight; they
also help create a bigger platform for
carrying things on the trailer.
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-13 00:10, Cyclista
Nicholas wrote:
Our popup kit has everything
that Kickstand's and AMS's does, except
we only use one tent and we
don't bring spare parts or other bikes.
Our popup is transported by
bike trailer, complete bikes wouldn't be
manageable.
A couple of things we tend to
bring that haven't been mentioned are a
few fresh cables, a flat
file, and some electrical tape to make rim
strips (first wrap sticky
side up, second wrap sticky side down,
puncture to make valve
hole).
Housings are considered a bit
out of scope. We'll ask people to come
by the shop if the repairs
require too many spare parts. SO MANY
MANGLED REAR DERAILERS. UGH.
Lol@Sunny:
set
with 3 missing
...important!
cyclista Nicholas
On 2018-10-11 21:39, Sunny
Nestler wrote:
Here's ours
EXTREME Roll
-
wrenches: -
box
(7-17mm) & tri socket
-
cone
(13, 15-19, 2x 15)
-
headset (32, 36 & 36, 40)
-
bottom bracket
-
brake, 2x
-
pedal
-
adjustable
-
allen keys: -
multi
-
tri -
set
with 3 missing
-
crank
puller
-
4th hand
tool
-
cable
cutters
-
tire levers,
4x
-
chain
checker
-
pliers,
regular & headset
-
pin
spanners, 2x
-
screwdrivers, 1 flathead, 1 phillips
-
vise grips -
exacto
knife
-
pokey tool
Missing:
-
3 allen
keys
-
chainbreaker
(ordered)
BASIC Roll
-
wrenches: -
box
6-17mm (3 x 13mm)
-
headset (30/32, 36/40 mm)
-
bottom bracket x 2
-
brake
-
Scissors -
Pokey tool -
Allen Keys -
6-2.5 mm
-
multi tool
-
Chain
breaker
-
exacto
knife
-
Torque key
multi tool
-
Flathead,
phillips one big one small, screw driver
-
4th hand
tool
-
vice grip -
chain
checker
-
tire levers
x 3
-
patch kit -
file -
brush -
pin spanners
(round and flat)
*Sunny Nestler*,
*Programs Manager*
AMS Bike Co-op University of British
Columbia
604-822-2453 |
bikecoop.ca | @ubcbike
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at
12:21 PM John Young jmyoung73@gmail.com
wrote:
We do these about
once a month at a soup kitchen type facility in
Raleigh. Here is what we
bring:
- One or
two tents (10' x 10')
- Bike
Stand(s)
- Bike
Tools (fairly complete set of common bike tools, fit in a
standard
size carryable tool box)
-
Regular Tools (including common hand tools plus hack saw, bolt
cutters,
tin snips)
- Truing
Stand
- 1-2
parts bikes. These are fairly complete bikes that have been
deemed
too far gone to fix. We strip parts as needed to make
repair - 1-2
exchange bikes. These are donated bikes that are ready to
go, if someone
brings in a daily driver that we deem to be unsafe we try
to
exchange.
- Tubes
(3-4 26", 1 each of 700 x 32, 24", 29", 20" all schrader)
- (2)
floor pumps
- Zip
Ties
-
Assorted used tires (mostly 26")
- Park
Tools book on bike repair
- Brake
pads
- Brake
cable and housing
- Shift
cable and housing
- Chain
lube, PB Blaster, Grease (for wheel bearings), spray
bottle of rubbing
alcohol (to remove grips), 3 in 1 oil (for rusted chains
worth saving)
Could probably get
away with a lot less but this is what we have
evolved to over the last 1.5
years. We have a great group of volunteers who
are not afraid to do some
extensive repairs.
John Raleigh Community
Kickstand
https://www.facebook.com/RaleighCommunityKickstand/
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018
at 2:02 PM Josh Bisker jbisker@gmail.com
wrote:
What's your list
of things to bring to a pop-up repair event? Which
tools, ancillary
supplies, etceteras do you make sure to have?
JoshJoshJosh
Josh Bisker 914-500-9890 New York
Mechanical Gardens Bike Co-op http://bikecoop.nyc/
596 Acres http://596acres.org/ Bindlestiff
Family Cirkus http://bindlestiff.org/
The ThinkTank
mailing List
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