Tuned this up for a kid today. I tried to test ride it. I made it about 100 feet and had to walk it back. Something was bizarrely wrong. If felt like my leg stopped working or my hip was going to dislocate. Turns out the crank is not 180, more like 170/190 degrees. This why our shop policy is to test ride every bike. There are some problems you will never notice on the work stand. Issues that will be revealed in seconds while riding. I replaced the crank and all is okay. The right side bearing cage was shredded as a bonus.
I've called it "Hip Popper crank". I'm thinking the crank will go on a full size demo bike that needs a name like "most undesirable ride". Here ride this and tell me what you think. Paint it some bright color and brand it "Hip Popper". It could make for a fun bait bike too.
View attachment 283058View attachment 283060View attachment 283059
Second bike, frame exchange. Move the wheels, seat, etc from the girls Cranbrook to the Sante Fe.
That's definitely a fringe benefit Rick.Oh yeah, one more note. I let my wife take one out for a ride. The fat tires make her look pretty skinny. :shock: :shock:
I use three pounds of tire pressure for snow bike trails. Higher pressure will cause ruts in the set track and other riders won’t appreciate you. They’ll let you know. I use ten pounds for plowed snow covered gravel roads. You can’t ride plowed gravel and snow on three inch wide tires unless it’s frozen. It’s easy with 3.8 or 4 inch wide tires.Keep your box if you decide to return it.
I have been running just over 10 psi on mine.
Enter your email address to join: