10-11-2024, 09:27 AM
I was just reminded about patience. Ok, not a direct motorcycle reference, and yeah, bicycles again, but the principle is the same.
I've been rotating bicycle and motorcycle commuting for the past few months. Recently, I restored an old bike, and I'm really happy about how it came out. It moves fast with rather low effort, so this morning I decided to take it out for the 12.5 mile commute to the office and leave the "new" bike in the garage.
Most of the way in, I got a flat front tire. Bummer. But, I was on a river trail heavily used by serious cyclists, and it wasn't long before I was able to flag down another rider who was carrying a pump. I didn't see anything sticking out of the tire, so I pumped it up and made a mad dash for the office before it went completely flat again. I was curious, as the tube and tire are new as part of my restoration.
While I don't ride with a pump and patch kit, I keep a pump, spare tubes and tools at the office in case they're needed, and glad I had them today.
Taking the tire and tube off of the rim for inspection, I quickly figured out what happened. A sharp plastic clip had gotten inside the tire and sandwiched between the tire and tube, it had worn a hole in the tube. Where did the clip come from and why was it in there?
Thinking back, I had finished the last details of this bike at 3 am in the garage. There was no need to work late into the night. I was tired, bleary-eyed, swigged down a cup of coffee, and kept at it. I thought "I want to see this thing sitting on its own wheels before I go to bed!" That meant cleaning and repacking bearings and reassembling gears before I could get to the tires and tubes to put it all back together.
The clip held the reflector on the wheel. I pulled it off because reflectors are lame, and the reflector was in the way of polishing the spokes. I heard the clip plink around the garage but didn't pay much attention to where it went.
Finally, one of the last steps was to put the tube in the tire, mount them to the wheel and pump it up. Did I notice that the clip had probably stuck to the fresh rubber of the tube? Or inspect the inside of the tire? Nope. Just stay awake and finish the job.
When I staggered to bed, yup, it was on its wheels. I just didn't know that in my tired carelessness, it would need to be back off of a wheel before I knew it.
Get your sleep, people!
I've been rotating bicycle and motorcycle commuting for the past few months. Recently, I restored an old bike, and I'm really happy about how it came out. It moves fast with rather low effort, so this morning I decided to take it out for the 12.5 mile commute to the office and leave the "new" bike in the garage.
Most of the way in, I got a flat front tire. Bummer. But, I was on a river trail heavily used by serious cyclists, and it wasn't long before I was able to flag down another rider who was carrying a pump. I didn't see anything sticking out of the tire, so I pumped it up and made a mad dash for the office before it went completely flat again. I was curious, as the tube and tire are new as part of my restoration.
While I don't ride with a pump and patch kit, I keep a pump, spare tubes and tools at the office in case they're needed, and glad I had them today.
Taking the tire and tube off of the rim for inspection, I quickly figured out what happened. A sharp plastic clip had gotten inside the tire and sandwiched between the tire and tube, it had worn a hole in the tube. Where did the clip come from and why was it in there?
Thinking back, I had finished the last details of this bike at 3 am in the garage. There was no need to work late into the night. I was tired, bleary-eyed, swigged down a cup of coffee, and kept at it. I thought "I want to see this thing sitting on its own wheels before I go to bed!" That meant cleaning and repacking bearings and reassembling gears before I could get to the tires and tubes to put it all back together.
The clip held the reflector on the wheel. I pulled it off because reflectors are lame, and the reflector was in the way of polishing the spokes. I heard the clip plink around the garage but didn't pay much attention to where it went.
Finally, one of the last steps was to put the tube in the tire, mount them to the wheel and pump it up. Did I notice that the clip had probably stuck to the fresh rubber of the tube? Or inspect the inside of the tire? Nope. Just stay awake and finish the job.
When I staggered to bed, yup, it was on its wheels. I just didn't know that in my tired carelessness, it would need to be back off of a wheel before I knew it.
Get your sleep, people!
