Old 07-31-11, 10:57 AM
  #19  
wrk101
Thrifty Bill
 
wrk101's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Mountains of Western NC
Posts: 23,524

Bikes: 86 Katakura Silk, 87 Prologue X2, 88 Cimarron LE, 1975 Sekai 4000 Professional, 73 Paramount, plus more

Mentioned: 96 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1236 Post(s)
Liked 964 Times in 628 Posts
One thing to consider in the future if you are going to work on MTB shifters, the WD40 route is a common approach. If it fails, an alternative is to just replace the shifter. On six and seven speed bikes, I use the Shimano Tourney trigger shifters. I really like them, and you can buy them complete with cables and housings for less than $13 at Niagara Cycle. If you do much service, you will probably end up doing business with Niagara, as they are the cheapest source I have found for chains, bearings, cables and housings, and tires.

Just be prepared for SLOW service. Niagara orders take me 2 to 2 1/2 weeks to get. So I try to order BEFORE I am out of parts. I screwed up recently, and am now out of chains (did a lot of bikes recently).

I wish I would have picked up bike maintenance as a hobby back in my college days. Instead of working minimum wage, I could have made decent money, on campus, on my schedule, working on bikes.

Last edited by wrk101; 07-31-11 at 11:47 AM.
wrk101 is offline