Squirrel Squeezer
Member
Any suggestion for a suitable bike stand for a Kenevo / or ebike specfically? Thanks
Any work stand will work, I personally clamp my bike on the top tube with a cloth wrapped round it, as it means you don't have to extend the stand as much, putting less stress on it, and avoid hanging 22kg off the dropper.
I have an Aldi stand that is the same as the basic one you see in Halfords or amazon
Thanks- great info. I wasn’t aware of that! CheersI have a Feedback Pro Elite stand, copes with my Levo including battery no problem. I suggest against attaching the bike to anything but the seat post and even then ensure it’s extended fully. One thing to consider, even using the seat post, there is a right and a wrong way to attach it. You don’t want the clamp arm to be 90 degrees to the top tube as this will create an unnecessary balance risk. Better clamp the seat post and have the clamp 45 degrees to the top tube, it brings the bike in closer to the stand and should still allow the pedals to rotate for working.
There may be exceptions, but all the stands I’ve ever used had feet that splayed wider than the length of the arm holding the bike. As such as long as you splay the feet fully I can’t really see why the angle of the bike makes any difference - the centre of mass will still be somewhere between the base of the vertical and the end of the feet, meaning it can’t tip. If you don’t fully splay the feet or you work on the “wrong” side of an asymmetric stand like the Park Tools PCS-9:I have a Feedback Pro Elite stand, copes with my Levo including battery no problem. I suggest against attaching the bike to anything but the seat post and even then ensure it’s extended fully. One thing to consider, even using the seat post, there is a right and a wrong way to attach it. You don’t want the clamp arm to be 90 degrees to the top tube as this will create an unnecessary balance risk. Better clamp the seat post and have the clamp 45 degrees to the top tube, it brings the bike in closer to the stand and should still allow the pedals to rotate for working.
There may be exceptions, but all the stands I’ve ever used had feet that splayed wider than the length of the arm holding the bike. As such as long as you splay the feet fully I can’t really see why the angle of the bike makes any difference - the centre of mass will still be somewhere between the base of the vertical and the end of the feet, meaning it can’t tip. If you don’t fully splay the feet or you work on the “wrong” side of an asymmetric stand like the Park Tools PCS-9:
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...I suppose you might have a problem, but that is purely down to not reading the manual!
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