Beginner to biking
#101
I wouldn't go cutting your steerer tube just yet. That's something you can't come back from. And the spacers do serve a useful purpose from what I can tell. You can just transfer the ones from below the stem to above it unless your stem was all the way at the top of the steerer with nothing above it.
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Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),1990 Concorde Aquila(hit by car while riding), others in build queue "when I get the time"
Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),
#102
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 57
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From: San Diego, CA
Bikes: 2009 Giant FCR 3
I wouldn't go cutting your steerer tube just yet. That's something you can't come back from. And the spacers do serve a useful purpose from what I can tell. You can just transfer the ones from below the stem to above it unless your stem was all the way at the top of the steerer with nothing above it.
#104
This bike is cat approved
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 1,531
Likes: 0
From: Lincoln, NE
Bikes: To many to list...
I thought about doing that. There's a cap with a hole for the bolt to go through so that it's not just a tube sticking out. But with what I've done, not sure if it lowers my posture enough, and putting ALL the spaces above just looks silly. My thing is, all the pictures I see of other FCRs, none have those spacers. So why is my bike different, and is there a way to buy a different tube, or is it permanently attached to the forks?
#105
"Fred"--is that bad?
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 512
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From: 214 Represent!
Bikes: Felt f85 (11); Trek 7.3 FX (07); Schwinn Super Sport (86); Specialized Rockhopper (87)
Don't do any cutting just yet. Give yourself some time to be sure it's what you want. Kind of a "measure twice and cut once" deal.
As for the cramping--be darn sure you are taking in enough fluids and, if you are sweating a bunch, potassium/sodium like has already been suggested. I believe that cramping in usually a sign of lack of minerals. Also, the stretching will help.
As for the derailleur adjustment: it, along with things like fixing a flat and adjusting brakes, can be learned by watching YouTube videos. There is a ton of good instruction on there. For me, I have to be able to see how it's done before I can learn it. One word of caution: for any repair you want to learn, watch at least 2 or 3 videos. Most of them I have seen are fine but occasionally I run across one where the guy is teaching something completely wrong. If you watch a couple and they agree on how to do something then you should be fine.
As for the cramping--be darn sure you are taking in enough fluids and, if you are sweating a bunch, potassium/sodium like has already been suggested. I believe that cramping in usually a sign of lack of minerals. Also, the stretching will help.
As for the derailleur adjustment: it, along with things like fixing a flat and adjusting brakes, can be learned by watching YouTube videos. There is a ton of good instruction on there. For me, I have to be able to see how it's done before I can learn it. One word of caution: for any repair you want to learn, watch at least 2 or 3 videos. Most of them I have seen are fine but occasionally I run across one where the guy is teaching something completely wrong. If you watch a couple and they agree on how to do something then you should be fine.








