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Bike Maintenance, Rob Van Der Plas (2007)Cycle Publishing/Van Der Plas
Publications 1 892495 53 8 Octo 176pp $16.95/£10.95
Lavishly illustrated in colour, this is a very competently written
and assembled guide to fixing most things on most bikes, as well
as such mountain-bike specific jobs, such as servicing your suspension

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There is a tension at the heart of cycle
culture. On the one hand, part of the appeal of cycling is that it stands apart
from late-period capitalism. Bicycles span more than a century scarcely
changed as a piece of technology. One can be had for peanuts, and riding it costs
not a groat. So, by doing so you enter a real, wind-in-your-hair world, that stands
apart from the oil-guzzling simulacra of majority culture.On the other
hand, without effectively making and selling things, there would be no bicycles.
Cycling requires the on-going invigoration provided by new techniques in production,
sales and marketing . Modern groupsets, for example, are fantastically better
than their 1970s counterparts but keeping up with Campagnolo and Shimanos
planned obsolescence
and Chinese-menu marketing
methods is endlessly frustrating.
This book is a product of that tension. It is a simple, effective guide
to cycle maintenance that should allow all but the mechanically dyslexic
to keep their cycles on the road. By doing so, those wielding spanners
and hex wrenches will be taking their own little stand against the buy
it, dont use it, chuck-it-away current that flows through
the modern world.
But one cant help but wish that a single book should
serve for all bicycle maintenance needs. Of the 18 chapters in this book, only
three (disk brakes, front suspension and rear suspension) are mountain-bike specific.
True, for someone who simply wants to maintain their mountain bike, they will
purchase no needless chapters on brake-lever-control gears, for example. Such
guidance doesnt take up much of more general guides, however.
Van Der Plas is a titan of cycle maintenance publishing, and clearly
needs to make a living to keep his company afloat. And any business school
will tell you that they more products you can create from the same stock
of intellectual capital, the more you will sell.
Part of me admires him for rebottling his ideas
with such verve. Part of me wishes that it was possible for someone of his standing
to commit all his best ideas to a single volume and sit back happy in knowledge
that such a publication was in the spirit of cycling.
Pedalspinner Feb 09
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