hey,
we are going through this exercise right now too. a goal for us is to have one master tool bench with all the heavies. but we're organizing smaller "kits" based on the work we need to do for now.
one job we do is flatten bikes for the village bicycle project in moscow, idaho. we just need to remove pedals, loosen stem bolts and turn the handle bars. that kit (we figure we should have 3 kits) will have a 15mm combo wrench, couple of rags, hex wrenches 2-8, and a medium crescent wrench.
we're also finding the tools we need lots of are pretty common/nonbike specific tools like 15mm combo wrenches, medium and large crescent wrenches, flat and philips head screwdrivers, needle-nose pliers, side cutters, cable cutters, utility knives. lots of hex sets or the 4,5,6 & 8,9,10 y-tools brian mentioned are really handy too!
best, liza
On 9/28/07, veganboyjosh@gmail.com veganboyjosh@gmail.com wrote:
josh @ community cycles here.
free ride in pittsburgh has some awesome diy stands, the design for which i've stolen for our shop. they're made 100% from bike parts.
here's what you need:
2 bmx bars with stems. 2 bmx forks. 2 sets of drop road bars, with stems. one top tube, which is the same inner diameter as the steerer tube on the bmx forks are outer diameter.
cut off the dropouts on both sets of forks. the bmx bars/stems are inserted into the bottom of the forks, one stem in each arm of the forks. this is the base, so that the steerer tube stands straight up. the top tube goes over this steerer tube, then the other fork (with road bars/stems inserted into it's arms), goes into the top of the top tube. the drop bars are turned so that the ends of the bars are hooks to hold a bike to be worked on. the bmx bars are wide enough that the stand can hold two bikes at once, without tipping over.
someone on the list i'm sure has some pics, which make the design much easier to figure out than my paltry description.
cheap, easy, diy, and best of all, it looks bikey, so people are into it...
On 9/28/07, Urban Bike Project of Wilmington, Inc. urbanbikeproject@gmail.com wrote:
Don't know about grants but I have a few suggestions on necessary tools...
-Workstand (you don't need it, but it makes life wonderful ) -Ratcheting 14mm and 15mm wrench (indispensable for quickly removing
wheels)
-"Y" style hex tools with 8-9-10mm (everybody needs at least one of these
for brakes)
-Chain breakers (get both for 3/32 and 1/8in chains, i recommend the park
ones that you can change the pins out on, get plenty of extra pins too. you (or someone in your shop) WILL break these)
-At least 2 sets of Allen keys (they will get lost. it's handy to have
one "flip-out" set with the keys attached)
-Pedal wrenches (get good ones with a lot of leverage)
Perhaps we should all collaborate on a more comprehensive list to put up
on the wiki "Bike Collective Starter Kit". I skimmed the pages but didn't find one.
Happy Friday!
Brian Windle Urban Bike Project of Wilmington
On 9/28/07, Ariel raymon < bikefarm@gmail.com > wrote:
Hey everyone, Ariel from bikefarm here. We're starting to make our space into a shop,
and are looking at the tools we need to purchase.
Suggestions on bare minimum tools for a funcitoning shop would be really
helpful, as we'll be making a large order from the
UBI distributors in a month or so. Also, Are there grants for things
like this? Thanks,
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