I find the biggest challenge is to educate users on the difference between the standard Shimano remover and the almost identical Falcon one.
Mark
On Dec 13, 2017, at 5:22 PM, Bob Giordano mist@strans.org wrote:
All sounds good, the only new thing I'll add is a handy 'tool' we made: welded the FR1 freewheel remover to a small steel plate, then bolted the plate to a wall, right next to our truing stands and cone wrenches.
Several times a day it's used: push the wheel onto the tool, spin counterclockwise and off comes the free wheel. our 1st one lasted 2 years til too stripped, then made another.
Other than that, all other FW, Cassette and BB removers are on a spinning carousel we call the 'spline tree'.
-- Bob Giordano Free Cycles Missoula Shop: 732 S. 1st St. West, ph. 541.7284 10AM-6PM Tues-Sat, www.freecycles.org Missoula Institute for Sustainable Transportation www.strans.org, mist@strans.org, 406.830.7676
Jean-François Caron wrote: At the Bike Kitchen in Vancouver (from what I recall, having left over a year ago), we only had the common Shimano-style freewheel and cassette tools. The freewheel tool has a hole in it, so we just put it on a nail in the wall, the cassette tool has a steel rod, so we stuck it in a hole in the wall next to the aforementioned nail.
Anything other than the standard Shimano-style tools, you had to ask a mechanic to get it behind the counter. This is both because it's less confusing for newbies who 99% have the Shimano style, but also because a lot of the other styles are much easier to strip, e.g. the two-knotch Suntour.
Y'all know the trick about keeping the freewheel tool engaged with a nut right?
Jean-François
On Dec 13, 2017, at 13:59 , Gabriel Trainer getrainer@bikefarm.org wrote:
At Bike Farm we have all of the freewheel and cassette tools laid out on a magnetic strip so you can see the different shapes easily. Still a guess and check method, but better than a bin of tools thrown together. Gabriel
On Dec 13, 2017 7:41 AM, "Ainsley Naylor" <needleandthread@gmail.com mailto:needleandthread@gmail.com> wrote: Because these are the type of tools which are SMALL, important, easy to break/strip, and not always cheap (hello, did you order a Maillard french freewheel tool off of the internet because they are super hard to find???) we DO keep ours in a closed bin on the table with our vices. Bottom bracket tools are actually kept in our special tool area at the front of the shop because if people can grab stuff they are more likely to break it :( Hell even volunteer who do know how to use these tools properly still abuse and break them.
I guess generally we expect that volunteer will determine what tool is required for a repair and retrieve and explain it, rather than people figuring it out/finding it for themselves....
NOT THE ANSWER YOU WANTED SORRY JOSH!!!!
Ainsley.
On Wed, Dec 13, 2017 at 1:31 AM, Josh Bisker <jbisker@gmail.com mailto:jbisker@gmail.com> wrote: Heyyo! I've been in co-ops where they have neat ways of displaying the various freewheel and cassette tools, like on a board next to the hub types they fit. Is YOUR shop one of these? (Or do you just have 'em jumbled unhelpfully all together in a bin like we do?) Send a pic of what you got!
tldr: show us your rad way of housing freewheel/cassette tools that makes it easy for folks to find the right one.
EXTRA CREDIT: same question re bottom bracket tools!
xoxo
Josh
Josh Bisker 914-500-9890 tel:(914)%20500-9890 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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