One of my front tires would only hold air for an hour ride. I assumed I would just take off the wheel and replace the tube inside my apartment. Nope, the wheel does not come off. So I popped one side off with my plastic tire irons, pulled out the tube and stuffed a replacement in, had to wedge a screwdriver handle under the tube stem so I could get the pump valve far enough on to actually push air into the tube, that only took a half dozen tries. When I used to bike to work in Minneapolis I would have at least 10 flats yearly, bought tubes 4 at a time, got extremely efficient at changing tubes. Biked 9 months a year for 25 years in any weather; rainstorms, snow, cold - down to 25F, that required a headband to keep my ears from freezing, also had to put a rain cover on my helmet to keep the freezing air from my bald head. All that exercise probably helped me survive the stroke.
Putting the seat on with its' two support tubes at the same time takes at least 15 minutes, then another 10 minutes to get the holes lined up to push the pin clips through. A two handed person would get that whole thing done in 2 minutes.
You have to get both posts going at the same time. I'm using the most upright position. You'd practically be lying down at the lowest position.
The pin clips for the seat posts |
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