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207 points LorenDB | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.203s | source
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taeric ◴[] No.41841233[source]
Can't get past the intro sentence without getting triggered. No, most people cannot fix a bike. As evidenced by the horrid shape most bikes are in. Heaven help folks that get the brakes so that they need to replace pads. You are as often to see people that ruined rims as you are to see people that did that correctly.

Don't get me wrong, there is something there. Everyone can be trained to fix older mechanical things. This is true. And I, for the life of me, cannot understand why people get bikes that need apps to run. That is just baffling.

So, change this to "ebikes are not being designed with repairability in mind" and I think I lose near all of my complaint. I do have worries about people not realizing how powerful ebikes are. Reminds me of early dirt motorcycles you could work on back in the day. Didn't take too many kids getting hurt before people took those seriously, I don't think. Odd to see us go right back down that path all because a lot of parents assume the battery tech is the same as it was a decade or so ago.

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1. wink ◴[] No.41846281[source]
Unfortunately I am missing a "modern" rim brake bike to confirm I am not going mad, but back in the 90s about half of the time we fixed a flat at the back the shifting was off after that and needed readjusting, and replacing brake pads usually meant fiddling for an hour until everything aligned well again.

Compare to any disc brake bike I have owned (bought later than 2010)... everything is super smooth. I just can't believe both my dad and I (when I was teenager) were completely inept and now as an adult I can magically fix bikes.