August 31, 2014

Bicycle Maintenance 101: Changing a Flat Tire on Your Bike

It only takes one flat tire ten miles from home to convince the newbie cyclist to carry the tools and supplies necessary to fix that flat while out on the road. The repair kit’s fairly simple: for ordinary rides, you only need to carry a replacement tube, tire levers and a pump. If a cross-country trip will take you miles from the nearest bike shop, toss more tubes, a patch kit and a foldup tire or two in the panniers or trailer. In either case, carrying a couple of paper towels is a good idea.



The Fix-a-Flat Kit

(1) a tire pump or a CO2 inflation kit
(2) a replacement tube of the proper size
(3) tire levers

It's also a good idea to carry a sheet or two of paper towel and perhaps an emergency tire patch kit



August 30, 2014

Fuel Economy Calculation and Conversion

Calculate Miles per Gallon

I already put together a little post on how to calculate your fuel economy in miles per gallon (MPG), but not everyone is interested in that particular measurement. That's 'cause there are only a few countries who use the imperial system of measurement (feet, quarts, miles and gallons), so the phrase "miles per gallon" doesn't mean much to people who live outside the USA. 

Calculate Liters per 100 km

In most of the countries that use the metric system, people share their fuel economy with a number called l/100km, or liters per 100 kilometers instead of the MPG so familiar to people in the States. You just need two numbers to calculate l/100km, though the division is a little different from what you're used to.

August 4, 2014

Bicycle Maintenance 201: How to Change Your Chain

Why change what seems to be a perfectly good chain?


The answer’s actually simple: chains wear out and even break. That wouldn’t be a problem except that “wearing out” means a chain gets longer. Here’s why: 


The anatomy of a chain.
When a chain's new, the spaces between the rollers exactly match the spaces on your chainwheels and cogs (what most call front and rear “gears,” respectively). As the chain wears, the pins connecting the links (hidden inside the rollers) wear down and allow the chain to get slightly longer. This, in turn, grinds away at the teeth on the cogs, which changes the length of their spaces. If you have to install a new chain because the old one broke or a link froze up, the spaces will no longer match. That makes the new chain skip on the cog, and can wear out the chain faster than it should. Worst-case scenario, you may need a new cogset, which costs about three times as much as a new chain (and requires special tools to install). You probably don’t want that.