OMG, I was adjusting my wife's rear brakes per Bike Farmer's example, when I dropped the wrench and without a thought said “Ope!” The brakes work great, btw. I owe you!
I love learning about normal/old-school bikes, but I think the real reason I watch is for the natural and honest flow of the monologue… from filth attracting filth (Govt the world over, not just DC) to “wiping as you go… not my usual angle on things”! Ye just can’t beat Brian K’s videos.
I did my first bike flip today inspired by your videos! Thanks bike farmer! What I love most about your videos is now matter how many times youve explained your refurbishnig/tune ups techniques you never skip a beat or recommend we go watch another video of yours because youve "already covered it". now my question of the day: I went back watched your bikepacking videos but I cannot seem to figure out what Randonneuring bag and half frame bag you use on your green rivendell. If you happen to know that off the top of your head please let me know. Thank you!
I found that Hybrids make great inexpensive "gravel" bikes. I personally have a Bianchi Strada from 2001. I have upgraded everything except the frame and fork, but man it is a sweet ride.
Andy, I heard you with Russ discussing the versatility of the Bridge Club frame. Multiple builds on that frame might make a good video series , illustrating the different ways you can tailor it to types of riding.
Thank you for the great advice. I teach a bike class through Project Bike Tech. I use your videos often for the class. Your explanations make it easy for the students to follow.
I so agree with your outlook on bikes. And wish you well selling them to your community. I have a 1990s steel Marin Bonas Ridge 26 inch MTB seven speed, friction shifter triple (42, 34, 24) that I bought second-hand for £85 ($108). I made up some better quality wheels on decent hubs, fitted a butterfly touring handlebar and last summer rode it 1,400kms across France from Normandy to Provence, going up the Loire until it becomes a stream and camping all the way. Only one guy in my cycle club appreciated it: others thought it was out of date, slow and heavy (it is, but so is any camping tourer). In Provence I hired a KTM carbon road bike with Di2 electronic shifters and disc brakes and rode up Mt Ventoux. But I was quite happy to return to my bullet proof , well-loved tourer at the end. The guy who saw the point of my bike has toured down west Africa and across the Atlas mountains in Morocco, so he sets the bar quite high. You absolutely do not need expensive bikes to have fun.
My local bike shop mainly sells old worn out cheap Wal-Mart bikes that are filthy for around double to quadruple the price as new! That leaves me to have to go online to buy my bicycles.
I recently got a 97 trek 830 shx used and will soon be taking it out on local trails and begin my offroad biking journeys. Using your videos as guides i got it cleaned up and the brakes less squeaky! Thanks for your videos. Cheers from MI!
I love hybrid bikes. You can go almost everywhere and do almost everything. Century? Check. Easy trails? Check. Commuting? Check. Gravel roads? Check. ...having one stolen? Check :(
Thanks for all of the videos. I just pulled an old raleigh rapide out of my shed and got it shined up nice and running well. Now I have a nice vintage 10 speed to go with my modern MTB. One to tear up the trails and one to glide around on pavement.
Nice video again. For the longest I was worried you wouldn't drop anything. But I was relieved when the 6mm Allen wrench went down. I'll try the finger on the V-brake cable stop. That looks professional! Your affiliate links worked for me! How about adding boxes of disposable gloves to the list?
I ride one of these (a 7100 with same graphics but blue), and I really like it. And my only gripe with it is that there isn't as much tire clearance in the rear as you might think. I had to file down the kickstand plate / chainstay bridge thing a bit to allow for my 47mm width tires At this point, the only stock parts on it are the bb/crankset though. Rigid fork was the biggest/best change I made, got a lucky dirt cheap score on a rigid soma fork with tange tubing at a bike swap. These things run the "oddball" 1 1/8 threaded headset, so it's easy to go to threadless if you want to change up the fork. I dad pretty hard on my trusty trek hybrid frame, learned a ton of bike mechanic stuff along the way
Heya BikeFarmer, love your videos. And because I want you around for a while, I don't feel bad for saying: put some darn gloves on! Tri-flow isn't the kind of thing you want to be washing your hands in. Nice tuneup.
Nice video! I have wondered about those torque keys. I find the issue with all the adjustable torque wrenches, that are like the Park one, is having them correctly dialed in. Lots of potential for inaccuracies caused by turning a few degrees too much or too little.
I use yellow "awesome" cleaner. You can dilute it and its super cheap. I do the same thing with cables but i also clean them with a light scuff pad and awesome before i lube them. Ill put a thin film of grease on them before triflow. A lot of the bikes i sell end up living outside. Any bit of protection from the elements helps.
This bike is almost like my old 2007 Trek 7100, right down to the front suspension fork. Mine was blue/silver. Awesome bike, rode it to smithereens. Wish I still had the frame.
I also clean the hubs every time I tune a bike, but I think my way's a little faster and easier: Wheel is in the truing stand and valve is at 6 o'clock. Grab opposite (diagonal) corners of the rag. Pass one corner between the spokes at the valve, and loop it around the hub so it comes back out towards the valve. Hold the corners of the rag and floss back and forth. Then, to hit the other half of the hub, turn the wheel and push the rag as you go, and do the flossing maneuver 180 degrees from the valve.
Hey Bike Farmer! I wonder if used Treks sell better than other brands in your area due to the fact that you are so close to the Trek facility. I've got a Trek FX 7.4 that I'm going to put up for sale as soon as the weather hits that sweet spot for riding. It will get the Bike Farmer treatment and someone will be happy with it.
Recession-mobiles! you can see that 2000s were a poorer age than the 90s simply based on the colour combos, recession-mobile parts arefar lower quality than the 90s as well, but utility os them is still here.
I've got an old multi trak 720. I was going to retire it because I'm getting older and need a more upright position. I stood back and looked at it and said, "New Bosco bars & a b67 brooks, and we'll be in business!" So now I've got $100 bars and $100 saddle on $100 bike.😅
@BikeFarmer - I would never use Tri-Flow. Very concerned that forever chemical PTFE would be absorbing in my skin/bloodstream or rubbing off my hands to my food and being ingested.
Can't kill these old Trek 7k series comfort bikes and FXs. Also, MTBs from the Trek 3k and 4k series, Raleigh M series, Bouldlder era Schwinns, and any Gary Fisher.
If I didn't know better, I'd say this looks an awful lot like a Giant Cypress DX. I was once told by a Giant high up guy that these were the bikes that ran the industry back then.
Great video! I’d love to see you tackle refurbishing one of the suspension forks that used to come on old Treks like this one. The fork on my old Trek 6500 is getting wonkier by the minute. Still a great bike though
I have a 7300fx disc a 2005.. with a surly fork and a little rasp work to fit a 2.1 kenda happy medium. I tend to tighten the adjusters before setting up brakes then back off the adjusters for pull. just reset my mech discs this morning on two bikes. adjusting the rear caliper and the trigger to hold the thing with cable then just having the tiniest backing off 26:30 AMEN!!!!
Chains are inexpensive but cassettes not so much. I get my 6,7,8 speed sram chains with quick link from jensonusa for sbout $7 when u order $50+ free shipping. Still looking for a deal on cassettes though.
Looooool every seat bolt in that shop must be screaming bloody murder lol One day that bolt gonna be half striped and ur gonna fly into the other room 😂
@@bkefrmr Fantastic. Of course! As long as you didn't listen to any Pink Floyd, Deep Purple or Jethro Tull. Those bands are a little too cool for dads to be faffing about with.
Trek bikes are run of the mill bikes. My shop is 10 miles from trek HQ where it was founded. I’d say 60% of the bikes in the area are trek bikes. Most people here think they’re special, but they’re just like every other brand. I don’t know what “disc brake bikes ect, ect” means.
@@bkefrmr hey please don't think I was criticizing I love your content, I've even bought 1-step and tri-flow because it's so good based on your work. I just wondered why I was seeing trek bikes after trek bikes on your videos but now that all makes sense, thank you for replying. Disc brake bikes ect ect, I own a disc brake bike so am keen to see videos where you have to deal with mechanical or hydraulic disc brakes so I can learn more. I just started cycling again and can't stop watching your vidz Keep up the great work buddy from the UK.
The problem is that bike season is here and I already buried in bikes. Every spring I need to “catch up” financially before letting off the accelerator in June. By September, it’s adventure season and you’ll definitely see more ride videos then!
I wish there were inexpensive threadless rigid forks available, but they are not priced low enough to justify Once in a blue moon I find one at the local bike coop. @@bkefrmr
Hey Mr. Farmer, love the videos and love to see your channel starting to gain traction but a small thing that I think would improve the enjoyability of your videos is investing in rights to use some better background music. This one was almost a little distracting to me and didn’t fit the “vibe” of the video. Keep up the great work!
Personally, I like the sport saddle on my 7200. I think it's more about riding position and geometry why people think they need such a wide seat. Some Trek 7200s seem to have a more "comfort" riding position than others. Great video!!!😁
Someone needs to invent a device made of, let's say leather, perhaps a discarded section of dog collar. Something that could be buckled to a wheel's hub. It could clean the hub as the wheel turns. You could even add a small reflector to look cool.... Jus an idea...
You "bike experts" might like those hard butt crusher seats, but Dad's love cushion! The Washington DC comment made you my favorite bike expert, Ha ha ha 🤣
Bike Farmer rules. The high prices and strange selection of new bikes is a problem. I’m not against a new bike but it won’t help me get more satisfaction from riding. My entry level hybrid bike plus my local bike tech are all I need to keep me riding. This season I’m going to remove my bike computer! BTW can you add links for the comfy upgrades for seat, swept handlebars, grips, tires?
There isn't much that I "clean" with a filthy rag. I clean my bike similar to how I clean my car. Not in a car wash. It's just a used bike and whoever buys it has no idea what you cleaned it with. The good thing about inexpensive bikes is it really doesn't matter. One of the things that drives me nuts is about vehicle mechanics. How dirty their hands/gloves get and they touch keys, steering wheel, and other things in the car or on the paint. I own a plumbing company and the plumber are supposed to wear nitrile gloves when working but take them off if they need to touch door knobs, faucets, or other surfaces not related to their work.
I can't believe you lube the cables. I worked in a bike shop for a number of years. We never lubed cables. We always replaced the cables and all the housing. Tri-flow is meant to be used on the drivetrain only. New cables and housing will perform better then just using Tri-Flow on the cable. Especially if you use cables and housings that already have teflon and/or grease on them from the manufacturer.
Couldn’t agree less with almost all of your “I would do it this way” comments. You know what you’re talking about, but I could never hire you. Nothing you say makes business sense. Nobody wants to pay for all new housing and cables and labor on a $200 bike bro. Replace if NEEDED, not because you think it will perform better, which also isn’t always true. You would cost me so much money 🤣😂🤣 (but thanks for watching and commenting because that makes me money 🤑)
@@bkefrmr hey don't suggest that old cables already have all the stretch removed so are more efficient than new ones! Or that the "lube" they come with new is either useless or non existent! He's a bike shop guy he knows it all! 😂
@@bkefrmr My apologies. You are right of course. I was thinking about what I would do if the bike is mine rather then what's good from a business point of view. I know flipping bikes has a razor sharp profit margins. I've always just replaced everything on my bikes. Have you considered using a grease that sticks to the cable instead of using Tri-Flow?
@@6479rob Buying 4 cables at $4 each and housing at $2 a foot isn't going to break the bank. No where the cost of a new bike even when factoring in labor.
@@kona0197 When I had new cable’s installed for a stem raiser upgrade it wasn’t cheap like that , I asked two local bike shops for a cost after all the new parts it was definitely more than i expected.
He knows what he’s doing. Playing piano in the background. He wants us to sleep and let auto play do it’s thing😂
I tell my friends and family I’m putting boomers to sleep on TH-cam for a living now.
It's the sweetest hit😴
@@bkefrmrI would like you to know that I’m a Millennial and I don’t like labels!
@@bkefrmr I tell people who use Boomer as a derogatory name to not laugh too hard because you are next in line my friend.
I went to sleep 😂
OMG, I was adjusting my wife's rear brakes per Bike Farmer's example, when I dropped the wrench and without a thought said “Ope!” The brakes work great, btw. I owe you!
I have several nice bikes, but my Trek hybrid gets ridden the most. It works for almost every type of riding.
Same here.
I love learning about normal/old-school bikes, but I think the real reason I watch is for the natural and honest flow of the monologue… from filth attracting filth (Govt the world over, not just DC) to “wiping as you go… not my usual angle on things”! Ye just can’t beat Brian K’s videos.
I did my first bike flip today inspired by your videos! Thanks bike farmer! What I love most about your videos is now matter how many times youve explained your refurbishnig/tune ups techniques you never skip a beat or recommend we go watch another video of yours because youve "already covered it".
now my question of the day: I went back watched your bikepacking videos but I cannot seem to figure out what Randonneuring bag and half frame bag you use on your green rivendell. If you happen to know that off the top of your head please let me know. Thank you!
Swift Industries and Oveja Negra
Its so fun watching someone do what they do... when they actually know what they do😎👍🏻
I found that Hybrids make great inexpensive "gravel" bikes. I personally have a Bianchi Strada from 2001. I have upgraded everything except the frame and fork, but man it is a sweet ride.
Andy, I heard you with Russ discussing the versatility of the Bridge Club frame. Multiple builds on that frame might make a good video series , illustrating the different ways you can tailor it to types of riding.
Daniel, I read your comment regarding the Bridge Club video series. Maybe sending me a $1,500 Super Thanks would get the ball rolling on your idea.
Just got a multitrack 7000 and a step through 7100 today for the big cost of loading them into my truck. They seem to ride great
Thanks for showing practical methods to bring bicycles to everyone.
Your videos are so good. Thank you for such genuine and realistic videos. Biking is for the masses.
Only found this channel last week and i absolutely love your pragmatic approach.
Used to work in a shop in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s as a high school and college kid. This brings back a lot of memories.
Thank you for the great advice. I teach a bike class through Project Bike Tech. I use your videos often for the class. Your explanations make it easy for the students to follow.
i really love your channel. you explain everything well, and ramble on, but in a good informational way. ope, there it is!
You inspired me to tune up my dads old trek bike! Very similar to this bike.
I so agree with your outlook on bikes. And wish you well selling them to your community.
I have a 1990s steel Marin Bonas Ridge 26 inch MTB seven speed, friction shifter triple (42, 34, 24) that I bought second-hand for £85 ($108). I made up some better quality wheels on decent hubs, fitted a butterfly touring handlebar and last summer rode it 1,400kms across France from Normandy to Provence, going up the Loire until it becomes a stream and camping all the way. Only one guy in my cycle club appreciated it: others thought it was out of date, slow and heavy (it is, but so is any camping tourer). In Provence I hired a KTM carbon road bike with Di2 electronic shifters and disc brakes and rode up Mt Ventoux. But I was quite happy to return to my bullet proof , well-loved tourer at the end. The guy who saw the point of my bike has toured down west Africa and across the Atlas mountains in Morocco, so he sets the bar quite high. You absolutely do not need expensive bikes to have fun.
Those are great bikes to run errands, commute, etc.
My local bike shop mainly sells old worn out cheap Wal-Mart bikes that are filthy for around double to quadruple the price as new! That leaves me to have to go online to buy my bicycles.
Another great episode!
Mesmerizing. Like Bob Ross videos. Really enjoyed this video! I have actually had several of those Trek hybrids.
I had one of those. I rode it to death and got ten bucks trade-in.
lol 😂
I recently got a 97 trek 830 shx used and will soon be taking it out on local trails and begin my offroad biking journeys. Using your videos as guides i got it cleaned up and the brakes less squeaky! Thanks for your videos. Cheers from MI!
I love hybrid bikes. You can go almost everywhere and do almost everything. Century? Check. Easy trails? Check. Commuting? Check. Gravel roads? Check.
...having one stolen? Check :(
Thanks for all of the videos. I just pulled an old raleigh rapide out of my shed and got it shined up nice and running well. Now I have a nice vintage 10 speed to go with my modern MTB. One to tear up the trails and one to glide around on pavement.
Do you ever find Dutch style bikes there? Fenders, chain guards, steel lazy sit frames?
Love the Smell of Tri Flow in the Morgning
SMELLS LIKE Bike Shop😊
Just took my old 7200 for a little mid-day ride! Love my zippy dad-bike!
I like the end you always test ride the bike! other bike rehabbers don't
If it's not test ridden, it's not done!
That was a lot of fun!
Great background music! Thanks.
I have a an old 2000 era Madwagon hybrid. Recently serviced and made a bit more upright with handlebar upgrade. Perfect dad bike.
Nice video again. For the longest I was worried you wouldn't drop anything. But I was relieved when the 6mm Allen wrench went down.
I'll try the finger on the V-brake cable stop. That looks professional!
Your affiliate links worked for me! How about adding boxes of disposable gloves to the list?
I ride one of these (a 7100 with same graphics but blue), and I really like it.
And my only gripe with it is that there isn't as much tire clearance in the rear as you might think. I had to file down the kickstand plate / chainstay bridge thing a bit to allow for my 47mm width tires
At this point, the only stock parts on it are the bb/crankset though. Rigid fork was the biggest/best change I made, got a lucky dirt cheap score on a rigid soma fork with tange tubing at a bike swap. These things run the "oddball" 1 1/8 threaded headset, so it's easy to go to threadless if you want to change up the fork.
I dad pretty hard on my trusty trek hybrid frame, learned a ton of bike mechanic stuff along the way
I also have a Trek 7100 I've enjoyed and ridden on local trails and for a few 100km rides.
Heya BikeFarmer, love your videos. And because I want you around for a while, I don't feel bad for saying: put some darn gloves on! Tri-flow isn't the kind of thing you want to be washing your hands in. Nice tuneup.
Nice video! I have wondered about those torque keys. I find the issue with all the adjustable torque wrenches, that are like the Park one, is having them correctly dialed in. Lots of potential for inaccuracies caused by turning a few degrees too much or too little.
Learn a lot from your videos, thank you!
My dad rode that exact bike for about a decade
I use yellow "awesome" cleaner. You can dilute it and its super cheap. I do the same thing with cables but i also clean them with a light scuff pad and awesome before i lube them. Ill put a thin film of grease on them before triflow. A lot of the bikes i sell end up living outside. Any bit of protection from the elements helps.
Lol i have the same dilemma with the bottle cages. They look better without but are more functional with so it's gonna depend on who's viewing it
Thanks!
Thank you!
I really have to say that the musical background has become much better...
I'll be on the lookout for the polka video
This bike is almost like my old 2007 Trek 7100, right down to the front suspension fork. Mine was blue/silver. Awesome bike, rode it to smithereens. Wish I still had the frame.
I Agree with everything you've done, but a little tension on rear derailleur is good to account for cable stretch...
The gear clicking while you were riding lol
I also clean the hubs every time I tune a bike, but I think my way's a little faster and easier: Wheel is in the truing stand and valve is at 6 o'clock. Grab opposite (diagonal) corners of the rag. Pass one corner between the spokes at the valve, and loop it around the hub so it comes back out towards the valve. Hold the corners of the rag and floss back and forth. Then, to hit the other half of the hub, turn the wheel and push the rag as you go, and do the flossing maneuver 180 degrees from the valve.
Yeah, that works too. But you still gotta get in the nooks and crannies…
Trek 4300 with wide street tires is my preferred Dad Bike! It just “feels” good!
Hey Bike Farmer! I wonder if used Treks sell better than other brands in your area due to the fact that you are so close to the Trek facility. I've got a Trek FX 7.4 that I'm going to put up for sale as soon as the weather hits that sweet spot for riding. It will get the Bike Farmer treatment and someone will be happy with it.
Recession-mobiles! you can see that 2000s were a poorer age than the 90s simply based on the colour combos, recession-mobile parts arefar lower quality than the 90s as well, but utility os them is still here.
These are the Corolla of Dad bikes. The FX is the Camry.
Thanks
Whoa! Thanks! Not sure what a DKK is worth, but it a lot to me! ❤️
watching all your vids makes me want grip shifts again
Exactly the bike my wife owns.
Burgers on the grill, a cold beer, bike farmer video! A perfect Sunday night! Cheers! Key West Rick
Damn…I gotta ride down there sometime. Sounds so lazy!
Casual peaceful dig at DC lol
I've got an old multi trak 720. I was going to retire it because I'm getting older and need a more upright position.
I stood back and looked at it and said, "New Bosco bars & a b67 brooks, and we'll be in business!"
So now I've got $100 bars and $100 saddle on $100 bike.😅
@BikeFarmer - I would never use Tri-Flow. Very concerned that forever chemical PTFE would be absorbing in my skin/bloodstream or rubbing off my hands to my food and being ingested.
I can think of a thousand things that will take you out before that
Would you consider training a TH-cam’r how to true a wheel for a possible fee if we showed up at your shop ?
Love the content and a super bike 👍🏼
Love you just got me with another N+1 guess I need a 7200 now 😂
Does that Bottle of Tri Flow come with that long Thin .
Applicator
Or did you Fabricated it
Love it man. Great bike.
Can't kill these old Trek 7k series comfort bikes and FXs. Also, MTBs from the Trek 3k and 4k series, Raleigh M series, Bouldlder era Schwinns, and any Gary Fisher.
51 mph on a specialized S works 2002 if memory serves for me….. felt like a motorcycle soooo smooth. If my feet could’ve went faster so would I…..
What did it cost and what did you get for it? May I ask?
If I didn't know better, I'd say this looks an awful lot like a Giant Cypress DX. I was once told by a Giant high up guy that these were the bikes that ran the industry back then.
Since you do know better, what does it actually look like?
Great video, thanks for helping me enter the noodle zone.
Great video! I’d love to see you tackle refurbishing one of the suspension forks that used to come on old Treks like this one. The fork on my old Trek 6500 is getting wonkier by the minute. Still a great bike though
Hell yeah! Thanks!
Careful up near those handlebars. They are so high in the air there would be a lack of oxygen.
Quick question: where do you sell the bikes that you flip? Is there a specific platform that seems to work best for bikes?
I have a 7300fx disc a 2005.. with a surly fork and a little rasp work to fit a 2.1 kenda happy medium.
I tend to tighten the adjusters before setting up brakes then back off the adjusters for pull. just reset my mech discs this morning on two bikes. adjusting the rear caliper and the trigger to hold the thing with cable then just having the tiniest backing off
26:30 AMEN!!!!
All the flossing…it’s like being a dental hygienist for bicycles. Do 9 out of 10 bike farmers recommend flossing? lol
Ope there it goes
Chains are inexpensive but cassettes not so much. I get my 6,7,8 speed sram chains with quick link from jensonusa for sbout $7 when u order $50+ free shipping. Still looking for a deal on cassettes though.
What are your thoughts on those "safety brakes" on the front - the noodle with the spring in it?
Super gimmicky and they make the brakes feel soft. But it doesn’t piss me off enough to do anything about it…usually
And thanks for the $$$!
Looooool every seat bolt in that shop must be screaming bloody murder lol
One day that bolt gonna be half striped and ur gonna fly into the other room 😂
Just found out these Promax brakes on my new old Bianchi
My 2020 bike's don't feel as good as these lol
Bought another pair for 7€, just in case
Liked video. mr. Rogers, theme music I can’t take it
What do you think about the cannondale bad boy 2 lefty .?
Does a dadbike dad also listen to dadrock music? You know, like Boston, REO Speedwagon, Styx, etc...
I listened to ELO this morning before editing this video, does that count?
@@bkefrmr Fantastic. Of course! As long as you didn't listen to any Pink Floyd, Deep Purple or Jethro Tull. Those bands are a little too cool for dads to be faffing about with.
great van halen for the background noise...😜
Why do I only see trek bikes on your channel, what about the run of the mill bikes, disc brake bikes ect, ect?
Trek bikes are run of the mill bikes. My shop is 10 miles from trek HQ where it was founded. I’d say 60% of the bikes in the area are trek bikes. Most people here think they’re special, but they’re just like every other brand. I don’t know what “disc brake bikes ect, ect” means.
@@bkefrmr hey please don't think I was criticizing I love your content, I've even bought 1-step and tri-flow because it's so good based on your work.
I just wondered why I was seeing trek bikes after trek bikes on your videos but now that all makes sense, thank you for replying.
Disc brake bikes ect ect, I own a disc brake bike so am keen to see videos where you have to deal with mechanical or hydraulic disc brakes so I can learn more.
I just started cycling again and can't stop watching your vidz
Keep up the great work buddy from the UK.
Ummmmm, the front shock needs to be checked? To a lesser extent, I'd have checked the seat post shock as well.
Great channel, but imo i think it may be time to expand your content. Maybe take us on some rides, do some torture tests, product reviews...
The problem is that bike season is here and I already buried in bikes. Every spring I need to “catch up” financially before letting off the accelerator in June. By September, it’s adventure season and you’ll definitely see more ride videos then!
Hey BujeFarmer, I notice you pretty much ignore the old suspension forks on these rehabs. You ever replace with rigid or service the fork in any way?
Not worth the effort. They’re gimmicks anyway.
I wish there were inexpensive threadless rigid forks available, but they are not priced low enough to justify Once in a blue moon I find one at the local bike coop. @@bkefrmr
Hey Mr. Farmer, love the videos and love to see your channel starting to gain traction but a small thing that I think would improve the enjoyability of your videos is investing in rights to use some better background music. This one was almost a little distracting to me and didn’t fit the “vibe” of the video. Keep up the great work!
Personally, I like the sport saddle on my 7200. I think it's more about riding position and geometry why people think they need such a wide seat. Some Trek 7200s seem to have a more "comfort" riding position than others. Great video!!!😁
Can you tune my Colnago C40
Can you show us wheels that are to far gone sometime ?
This was a nice video even from a editing standpoint.
It’s bound to happen sooner or later. Gotta keep watching I suppose!
I have a 7200.
Someone needs to invent a device made of, let's say leather, perhaps a discarded section of dog collar. Something that could be buckled to a wheel's hub. It could clean the hub as the wheel turns. You could even add a small reflector to look cool.... Jus an idea...
When I was younger used to see people tie a small piece of shoelaces tied around hubs for cleaning purposes
When i was a kid thay had leather loop things with a refector in them that hung in the hub
Very 70’s feel but it did keep the hubs somewhat clean.
You "bike experts" might like those hard butt crusher seats, but Dad's love cushion!
The Washington DC comment made you my favorite bike expert,
Ha ha ha 🤣
Bike Farmer rules. The high prices and strange selection of new bikes is a problem. I’m not against a new bike but it won’t help me get more satisfaction from riding. My entry level hybrid bike plus my local bike tech are all I need to keep me riding. This season I’m going to remove my bike computer!
BTW can you add links for the comfy upgrades for seat, swept handlebars, grips, tires?
There isn't much that I "clean" with a filthy rag. I clean my bike similar to how I clean my car. Not in a car wash. It's just a used bike and whoever buys it has no idea what you cleaned it with. The good thing about inexpensive bikes is it really doesn't matter. One of the things that drives me nuts is about vehicle mechanics. How dirty their hands/gloves get and they touch keys, steering wheel, and other things in the car or on the paint. I own a plumbing company and the plumber are supposed to wear nitrile gloves when working but take them off if they need to touch door knobs, faucets, or other surfaces not related to their work.
What retail price would you put on that bike?
$399
I can't believe you lube the cables. I worked in a bike shop for a number of years. We never lubed cables. We always replaced the cables and all the housing. Tri-flow is meant to be used on the drivetrain only. New cables and housing will perform better then just using Tri-Flow on the cable. Especially if you use cables and housings that already have teflon and/or grease on them from the manufacturer.
Couldn’t agree less with almost all of your “I would do it this way” comments. You know what you’re talking about, but I could never hire you. Nothing you say makes business sense. Nobody wants to pay for all new housing and cables and labor on a $200 bike bro. Replace if NEEDED, not because you think it will perform better, which also isn’t always true. You would cost me so much money 🤣😂🤣 (but thanks for watching and commenting because that makes me money 🤑)
@@bkefrmr hey don't suggest that old cables already have all the stretch removed so are more efficient than new ones! Or that the "lube" they come with new is either useless or non existent! He's a bike shop guy he knows it all! 😂
@@bkefrmr My apologies. You are right of course. I was thinking about what I would do if the bike is mine rather then what's good from a business point of view. I know flipping bikes has a razor sharp profit margins. I've always just replaced everything on my bikes. Have you considered using a grease that sticks to the cable instead of using Tri-Flow?
@@6479rob Buying 4 cables at $4 each and housing at $2 a foot isn't going to break the bank. No where the cost of a new bike even when factoring in labor.
@@kona0197 When I had new cable’s installed for a stem raiser upgrade it wasn’t cheap like that , I asked two local bike shops for a cost after all the new parts it was definitely more than i expected.
Hey bikeflintstone did i hear you say Liddledabbaloob? ♥️
More click$ and I don't mean STI. Now get some WD40 and saturate, air in the rubber and go fetch $25. That'll cover lunch McChemical's.
You're looking more and more like Jeffery Dahmer's mugshot