Are you doing any of the mistakes Ollie mentioned? Let us know👇
@mlee60505 ай бұрын
Wanted to say be awesome for a video of bikes of different budgets and say like cost to maintain over 5 years or so of each
@SteevyTable5 ай бұрын
I use dial calipers as my chain checker tool. 1) Open the caliper to 5.6 inches/142.24mm. 2) Insert the inside caliper between the chain rollers. 3) Extend the calipers and record the measurements: New chain= 5.715 inches/145.161mm 1/2% stretched = 5.745 inches/145.923mm 3/4% stretched = 5.760 inches/146.304mm 1% stretched = 5.775 inches/146.685mm Note: This measures across six links. If you want to be extra sure, measure a few spots on the chain that don't include a quick-link.
@JoolsBurke5 ай бұрын
Si promised me WD40 was the best thing ever for chains! I've still got hundreds of cans of the stuff!
@mlee60505 ай бұрын
@@JoolsBurke well it's better than nothing
@layton35035 ай бұрын
Just once after listening to Si recommended WD40 on the Drive Train / Bike Clean.
@yeyeTF25 ай бұрын
Do not leave your bike outside. Even if it doesnt rain it will become lonely and feel very sad. Always let your bike sleep in the bed with you.
@michaelplantarich33755 ай бұрын
Mine kicks in the middle of the night though. Gotta crate train it
@nagylevi38275 ай бұрын
I tried and got oil all over my sheets. Now I just hang it above the bed on the wall. He's happy, my bed is clean and the wall is properly ornamented.
@joerenner83345 ай бұрын
It will become stolen
@bungee75034 ай бұрын
@@nagylevi3827belt drive is the answer.
@adam418g4 ай бұрын
Gotta get it a nice pillow though can't let it suffer
@kennethward95305 ай бұрын
Most important tip-don’t be afraid to learn how to work on your own bike. 😊
@khalidacosta71334 ай бұрын
*unless it's carbon. Then be very afraid. Carbon is unforgiving.
@JoaquinMaceda4 ай бұрын
Up!
@derickcastillo90835 ай бұрын
My daughter has to do a 5-minute presentation for her university collage class. She was practicing all night for it. I hope her presentation goes as well as yours has. Thank you Olie
@Diego.fromheaven5 ай бұрын
Hopefully she did well man!
@derickcastillo90835 ай бұрын
@@Diego.fromheaven Yeah, she did great! thank you
@gregtaylor61464 ай бұрын
'Collage' is being taught at university now??? ....... as if there weren't enough useless degree courses???
@brianmurray89435 ай бұрын
Great advice. I have made a couple of these mistakes over the years. The time you put into these videos saves countless hours of grief for so many of us that watch them. Thank you.
@kylehudgins52555 ай бұрын
Awesome video. Anyone thinking about working on their own bike should watch this.
@stuartdryer13525 ай бұрын
Maybe your best video ever. One more: know when you're in over your head.
@philipcooper82975 ай бұрын
Do NOT lube the chain right before you go for a ride. The lube will leak out of the rollers whilst you ride, and the lube will attract dust and dirt, making the chain crunchy in a few miles.
@michaelhayward75725 ай бұрын
And don't lube it like in this vid. You are wasting half the bottle. Only each individual roller needs a drop.
@pendodave46615 ай бұрын
@@philipcooper8297 is this for wax emulsion, or oil-based lube as well?
@konradmarais77264 ай бұрын
Every GCN video should follow this sense of urgency!! ❤
@SteevyTable5 ай бұрын
1:20 Since I'm screwing around with developing tolerances for something I'm designing with this going in the background, this was said backwards. Low tolerance is what you want in your tools (smaller window of acceptable dimensional range before quality control throws it out), high tolerance is cheaper because the larger window you can give manufacturing, the easier the part is to make, fewer parts get rejected, and usually the faster it can be made.
@DetroitJohnny5 ай бұрын
How about just using tighter and looser?
@Natuh215 ай бұрын
There are rumors that Ollie recorded this video shortly after cycling 100km because the tank was still full of energy. xD
@tomreingold40245 ай бұрын
Yes, making a change before an important ride is a big mistake. After I make any change bigger than changing an inner tube, I ride the bike around the block. Then I ride it for a couple of miles. Then I hope I have time for a longer ride than that before the big ride, especially if the big ride will be with others. I don't want my problem to become their problem. Once I made the mistake of installing a suspension seatpost. That seems pretty foolproof, but it didn't allow me to install the saddle low enough. My 100 mile ride had my saddle too high. I agree about good quality tools. They are actually a good value. However, I have installed headsets without proper tools. I guess I don't recommend it, but I haven't caused any damage to anything. Maybe I'm lucky that way. I agree about a proper bike stand. I regret all the years I spent without it. That and a proper floor pump.
@sbccbc74715 ай бұрын
Back during my bike shop days, one of the things I hate to hear the most is customers wanting their brand new bike or build ready for a maiden ride that's at least 100 km long. When I switched my frameset at home, I took it for a shakedown ride that's only less than 30 km short because I wanted to make sure everything works as expected before I take it for actual rides.
@SweetappleC5 ай бұрын
Good stuff and a must view for all newbies. How about a 5 min special on disc brake cleaning and care?
@oplkfdhgk5 ай бұрын
2:38 yeah i noticed that when i was riding my bike in winter when roads were salted to keep ice away from roads. basically every bolt on my bike was rusted after that so i invested in stainless bolts. they are great and also fairly cheap.
@morlamweb5 ай бұрын
I concur. I've bought stainless replacement bolts for nearly everything on my bike. the one exception being the bolts that fasten the rear rack to the dropouts. I put stainless bolts there once, and months later, I heard a strange noise coming from the rack. Looking around, I saw that the right side was loose and the bolt was nowhere to be found. I replaced it with a carbon-steel bolt at home (and the left side, too). But nearly everything else - including derailer adjustment screws - are stainless bolts.
@Adam-iq7nj5 ай бұрын
Be careful of galvanic corrosion when mixing metal types e.g. stainless bolts into a mild steel frame
@weitn774 ай бұрын
Keep bikes in the garage/indoor to avoid exposing them to rain and sunlight. I never spray water on my road bike. I wipe it clean with a slightly wet cloth. If a bolt show rust, apply little grease on the bolt. My 16 years old road bike looks new.
@almin97515 ай бұрын
I have followed Gcn since I started cycling around 2 and a half years ago and I have followed most of the videos and I have saved tons of money to the point I have taken my bike just twice to a shop which leads to another tip... if you do not like or enjoy or actually get a specific task done not that refined then take the bike to a shop... in my case anything related to internal cabling routing I avoid the swearing hours and just give it to me once ready😅
@waltchui5 ай бұрын
Ollie, this video is gold
@davidadamus1775 ай бұрын
Jeesh just buy the Park cable cutters, i've used them sooooooo many times changing shift cables on my bikes, my kids bikes, neighbors kids bikes.. Just awesome quality. 7 years later, still ticking.
@andrewpeacock46955 ай бұрын
In addition to use on my bike I use my Park cable cutters for braided picture hanging wire when I frame my wife's paintings.
@brautus5 ай бұрын
Another tip, and probably a matter of what terrain you're biking on.. But as one who loves riding on more forest trails than asphalt ones - I find cleaning the rotors with a decent brake cleaner helps out. Every now and then even take out the pads and clean them aswell.
@khalidacosta71334 ай бұрын
You should buy a bigger rotor, purely for the fact you'll need an adaptor to screw into your post mounts. The calliper then screws into the adaptor. Reason: You don't wear out the threads on the post mounts as you are regularly screwing / unscrewing into aluminium with a steel bolt.. i.e the expensive bits! Adaptors are cheap. Frames / Forks aren't!
@YiZongOng4 ай бұрын
bearing drift/press hack: use studding and some washers, super cheap vs brand name presses esp for a job you'd rarely do
@Przemo-c5 ай бұрын
You can cheap out on some tools but only on those that you yse rarely and dont handle latge forces on small areas. Also cheap doesn't always mean low quality. Swapping outer usually is not necessary on every cable change. It handles less tension and wears significantly slower and with intenally roured stuff changing both can significantly lengthen maintenance job. I usually go 2 cables to one housing change. Torque wrench is a godsend and even cheap ones are better than by feeling. One thing I'd add investigate any creaks. Most of the time is something just got loose and eill just increase wear but sometimes ots something as critical as a crack. One more thing. Tru to Keep your bike tools together and organised. Theres lot of speciality stuff on bikes and it's terrible when you have to di maintenance before a trip and can't find a specific tool.
@HardCOR_1075 ай бұрын
Away from your event countdown, periodically check that all of your bolts are tightened to spec., especially your pulleys, cable clamps, and brakes. There's nothing worse than an epic ride becoming a nighttime hike-a-bike and/or call of shame.
@johnreese37625 ай бұрын
Very well done, as usual! Thanks!!
@ZanderJam5 ай бұрын
Super informative video there Ollie! - Ta v much 👌🚲🧠
@simonsaville99624 ай бұрын
GCN Tech - "Caffeine Bomb Edition" Love it!
@mechanicaldavid48274 ай бұрын
Park Tools needs a better QC on the T handle Torx tools, but their hex T handles are a pleasure to use.
@NoelSlevin5 ай бұрын
I removed the bar tape from my indoor bike - no salt problem, as it has nowhere to gather! One quick wipe at the end of the session and that's it.
@Z-u-m-a5 ай бұрын
Nice one Ollie.
@aaronedgeart5 ай бұрын
Solid recommendations, as always!
@johnstrac5 ай бұрын
Another winner Ollie, good work. A chain checker is a crackin' investment.
@davidadamus1775 ай бұрын
Yup, got over 10,000 MI on my 105 cassette. Just keeps going! Gone thru so many chains though lol.
@s_mores5 ай бұрын
holy sh*t, never tought about the salt from my seat. Thanks for the tips
@easterguts5 ай бұрын
Wanted to buy a copy of the GCN Maintenance book. But I’m not about to pay $49 delivery cost to Australia for a book that costs $41!
@dannyzuehlsdorf36975 ай бұрын
Thanks, Darby. Good advice
@SBanderaB4 ай бұрын
me too when I was 16. by 17 I had been working on bikes for 11 years
@sophiescyclingandwalkingch42942 ай бұрын
Parktool are brilliant but Unior and Teng make high quality tools also.
@paolopetrozzi22135 күн бұрын
Thanks.
@sebjak765 ай бұрын
Super useful material !!!
@debreczi25 ай бұрын
Excellent video, I agree with every word!
@pjerOSRS17 күн бұрын
Not looking at your bike the night before a race is a bit silly IF mechanically inclined. Pro teams literally do this before every stage, and I used to religiously do this the night before races and caught many issues ignored while training. - professional mechanic for over 10 years that also raced at elite level.
@BenGoldNYC5 ай бұрын
The amount of bikes I see around NYC that have huge areas of rust or rusty bolts is devastating. Granted most of the bikes I see like that are older steel fixed gear or single speed bikes, but it still hurts me.
@samfrombelgium5 ай бұрын
"If you dont respect the bike , then the bike doesnt respect you." (Jason Statham).
@HeyWattsUpCycling5 ай бұрын
ugh... you might be making me repaint my pinarello in that new metallic/satin blue. looks too good...
@pendodave46615 ай бұрын
Always take a couple of pics before diving in. I know this because I didn't .
@gcntech5 ай бұрын
nothing like an unplanned jigsaw is there?!
@JamesSmith-qs4hx5 ай бұрын
Rim brakes for the win 💪
@DCM777.5 ай бұрын
Disc is way better.
@edymarkonthego40965 ай бұрын
Headset bearing must be keep an eye as well. I could suggest that once a month cleaning is enough.
@adamtudor79135 ай бұрын
Wish you’d have done this video in the style of ‘Wear Sunscreen’ by Baz Lurhmann 😂
@vo2maximus1775 ай бұрын
Having mentioned being careful not to overtighten carbon parts by using a torque wrench Ollie, you forgot to mention using carbon paste to help stop slippage. An otherwise perfect piece, go to the top of the class 😏.
@offsitearchive2 ай бұрын
Carbon or assembly pastes in general also allow you to tighten with less torque. The specified torques are often maximum values and not recommendations
@Biking3605 ай бұрын
Solid advice
@ltu425 ай бұрын
I think you're wrong about outers! They do outlive a few inner cables. Flushing the insides with the straw of death might be a good idea. The hardest working piece of cable is the short bit near the rear derailleur, replacing it will probably improve shifting even with the old outers under the bar tape.
@adriansmith385 ай бұрын
They always snap in the shifter, so suggest that's the hardest working part..
@nicolasmcmillan12105 ай бұрын
Do not do anything ever to do with your tubeless tyres on your best rug!
@a1white5 ай бұрын
0:49 haha is Hambini watching 😅
@Reclusetube4 ай бұрын
im gonna use all these tips to pretend I cycle to have something to talk about with my colleagues after their weekendrides.
@gertsport44805 ай бұрын
Use a bike stand clamp from the seat tube, never clamp from the top tube: absolutely correct, but why showing then a snippet (starts at 2:22) of washing a bike clamped from the top tube 🤔
@juniorcoder52445 ай бұрын
I think it might be the editor's fault.
@teclo10575 ай бұрын
after removing the excess salt from under my bar tape, is it ok to put it on my fish and chips?
@juliancochran5 ай бұрын
Yes, it works fine. The salt from sweat is sodium chloride largely which is simply table salt, so will taste indistinguishably. There are traces of potassium and magnesium which are in any case healthy and won’t alter the flavour with such small amounts.
@jamesetheridge62245 ай бұрын
Realistically, unless it's obviously damaged/rusty, a cable outer can last 2 or 3 inners.
@IIISentorIII2 ай бұрын
Don't work on your bike when you're having a bad day. Cleaning is okay, but not replacing cranks, tires, or other stuff. 😉
@lukevirtualgameruk35234 ай бұрын
Bike and car mechanic with bikes best tip don't use a torque wench the torque always seems off if you don't know what tight enough is dont touch your bike.
@6242-j1z3 ай бұрын
is it true that some bikes e.g. trek bikes require less maintenance ?
@AlexRochette5 ай бұрын
What’s that Orbea?
@AtlasWilderness5 ай бұрын
Delivery of the book is super expensive. Any sources for it in Germany?
@IanB175 ай бұрын
What’s that thing called that stops the handlebars moving about when it’s in the workstand?
@easterguts5 ай бұрын
A flop stop
@knifesharpeningnorway5 ай бұрын
Do you know if the peatys foaming degreaser is strong enough to remove the factory grease from a chain before i use squirte lube on it?
@jonandclareraymond67375 ай бұрын
Peattys recommend their solvent degreaser to get the factory grease off
@knifesharpeningnorway5 ай бұрын
@@jonandclareraymond6737 hm they said on a other video the foaming normal degreaser should take it off
@timtaylor95905 ай бұрын
use a dremel to cut cables and housing
@derekklein501324 күн бұрын
I am posing the following question to any bike experts who know a lot about hydraulic brakes. This question concerns a recent real life situation. What do you think of a bike manufacturer who sends a customer a $1400 bike with DOT4 oil in both hydraulic brake reservoirs that were clearly labeled "MINERAL OIL"? The customer wondered why ALL his brake fluid leaked out at around 970 miles.
@glennicol13615 ай бұрын
How do you clamp a Giant TCR?
@xtrailz5 ай бұрын
I don't think Ollie would approve of the Bikehut 30pc Bike Tool Kit I got for £50 at Halfords
@johnwpotter5 ай бұрын
Well done 😂
@lil__apan5 ай бұрын
is 42cm aero handlebar better than 36cm round bar?
@sbccbc74715 ай бұрын
I doubt so because your frontal area is larger than if you're on 36 cm handlebars since you're not required to squeeze your arms closer together.
@lil__apan5 ай бұрын
@@sbccbc7471 thats fair enough
@byeboy003 ай бұрын
I already failed I’m doing my maintenance while watching this video 😂
@TheHermeynator5 ай бұрын
Is it safe to use a bike stand with an aero carbon seat post? #askgcn
@sbccbc74715 ай бұрын
The vast majority of seatposts are designed to be clamped anywhere throughout its length, so if they can hold the concentrated compression force from a seatpost clamp, they can withstand the more distributed compression force from a workstand's clamp. Darimo, MCFK, Schmolke are some of the brands where their seatposts are not meant to be clamped on workstands because they're only reinforced in a certain area for the seatpost clamp. The rest of the seatpost is too weak for compression forces. Always check with the manufacturer.
@endcensorship8745 ай бұрын
NO MAJOR SURGERY THE WEEK BEFORE AN EVENT. And that is anything more complicated than tires, tubes, lube. And even with that I want two rides on them, minimum.
@darrylstark92595 ай бұрын
I always clamp my bike on the top tube. There's no way my work stand can clamp with enough force to deform it.
@truthseeker84835 ай бұрын
I use the "tube of death" to spray dry PTFE spray everywhere......my bike hasn't died yet.....😁
@NeoPayneHK5 ай бұрын
02:23 what was that????🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@thsaintful5 ай бұрын
2:22 shows bike clamped at the toptube, continues with " never clamp at the toptube" 🤣. Do as I say, not as I do I guess 😅
@gcntech5 ай бұрын
ah! you found our deliberate mistake!
@MrSifter7705 ай бұрын
Should be marked as ad?
@Dangling_Carrot5 ай бұрын
Agree with everything in video but one there is no data that putting the top tube of danger if that truly is the case, then why do you and everyone else at GCN sit on the top tube.
@pierremaggi86615 ай бұрын
A clamp is not the same as sitting down on it.
@byeboy003 ай бұрын
If you’re worried about your bike getting scuffed you should consider a new sport 😅
@derToblin3 ай бұрын
Watching you clean an already clean cassette at 3:10 hurts my feelings...
4 ай бұрын
Pro tip: spend a lot of money. :(
@Rayy6902 ай бұрын
Pro tip:take it to a bike mechanic
2 ай бұрын
@@Rayy690 A bike stand is not going to crush an alloy top tube. Some bike mechanic lol.
@AquaAguaWaterEau-DML4 ай бұрын
L' incessammente publicité en bas de la vidéo, masquant également la traduction illisible. Désabonnement immédiatement.
@markharrison61205 ай бұрын
Brought to you by Parktool......
@GCNuser1235 ай бұрын
100%
@MarianVC573 ай бұрын
So... yes. I was about to inster bearings with a hammer 😬
@ThePeter123a5 ай бұрын
Use gloves on the indoor trainer. These gloves absorb most of the sweat.
@DarrenMansell5 ай бұрын
Great tips but all seems to boil down to "spend more money"
@byeboy003 ай бұрын
So don’t used air compressor oil for brake fluid 💀🙈
@danstenis6605 ай бұрын
Can you work with Chinese manufacturing and put together a kit for home DIY bicyclists that would allow complete bicycle repair and maintenance. Go with the best price for quality. There are a million of us out there who would buy this kit.
@sbccbc74715 ай бұрын
No two bike builds are identical, so the best way to go about it is to configure your toolset based on what your bike needs. No single kit can work on every single bike build all the way. For example, my bike will never use cartridge BBs, so I'll never need a crankarm puller.
@danstenis6605 ай бұрын
@@sbccbc7471 If I am thinking of buying a Trek Émonda ALR 5 www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/bikes/road-bikes/performance-road-bikes/%C3%A9monda/%C3%A9monda-alr/%C3%A9monda-alr-5/p/41426/?colorCode=red_reddark or a Trek Checkpoint ALR 5 www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/bikes/road-bikes/gravel-bikes/checkpoint/checkpoint-alr/checkpoint-alr-5/p/35172/?colorCode=white_black or a Domane AL 5 Gen 4 www.trekbikes.com/us/en_US/bikes/road-bikes/performance-road-bikes/domane/domane-al/domane-al-5-gen-4/p/41395/?colorCode=black What bicycle tool kit would you recommend for best value for quality?
@sbccbc74715 ай бұрын
@@danstenis660 None, you need to configure your own set since you want to be able to maintain the bike completely. My toolset is completely self-configured. I buy what my bike needs.
@danstenis6605 ай бұрын
@@sbccbc7471 Would love to see a video of your bike tools.
@moongoosee5 ай бұрын
Pure bollocks. Have you ever seen Sam Pilgrim's bike maintenance videos? Have you seen how cleverly he sands the freshly cut steering tube of his new FOX fork worth billions of coins?
@tonisalhodeen61803 ай бұрын
Best advice is don't go to a bicycle shop 😮
@glennoc85854 ай бұрын
Average Joe bike mechanic doesn't need park tool a setbif Stanley allen keys or torx keys will do the job for much less
@julianallen5155 ай бұрын
" always clamp from the seat tube" Err, seat POST.
@PoulHansenDK5 ай бұрын
"ten years"!!? hehe, Ive repaired bikes for probably 50 years but not much of the early experience is relevant nowadays. :-)
@truthseeker84835 ай бұрын
10 years seems like a long time when you are 20 years old....😁
@petervick47755 ай бұрын
A blatant ad for park tools from start to finish. £££😂
@allisgood.61915 ай бұрын
Where is the Pinarello 😂 bait switch
@4115steve5 ай бұрын
bro you said in 5 minutes, not 5 minutes and 21 seconds. lol jk
@timtaylor95905 ай бұрын
his new bike is too big
@GravelGorauGwynedd5 ай бұрын
Looking at your previous exploits at cycling weekly, most of your advice will be obsolete in 10 years
@kevin-w3f7o2 ай бұрын
Only Park tool ads. Do not watch it.
@wyrierit5 ай бұрын
Actually, the timer is incorrect. Intro is 3-4 seconds long and timer got past 2 seconds only. HMMMMMMM)))
@musclelessfitness20455 ай бұрын
Liar !! with the 100 cuts and the multiple recordings, it took you more than 5 mins ... probably 30-60 mins :P