Dan,

Not sure where you are located I am happy to assist or consult and bring 
tools, if that would help. I am just outside Philadelphia.

Brian "Visual Learner" Campbell


On Thursday, October 24, 2024 at 11:16:00 AM UTC-4 Bill Lindsay wrote:

> "As I am sure most of you are aware, Rivendell sends complete bikes mostly 
> built with the exception of the stem, seat tube saddle and pedals"
>
> This is a true statement about two VERY different things:
>
> 1. A pro at Rivendell, like Mark Abele, personally pulled together your 
> build, did the entire build like the pro he is, and THEN handed it over to 
> Antonio or somebody else who professionally boxed it up by removing the 
> parts you list.  
> 2. You bought a Riv Complete, which came in a box in a container from Asia 
> and was partially assembled at the factory.
>
> Which of the two cases are we talking about?  If it's #1, then I concur 
> that it's not a huge job.  You've already paid Mark to do "the build" and 
> paid Antonio to do "the boxing".  The job you are paying a shop for is not 
> "a build".  It's an "unboxing".  Sure, if it's an unboxing, do it yourself. 
>
> If it's #2, then to do it right, a lot of what has been "assembled" should 
> really come apart so it can be done right.  A $150 quote is roughly 2.5 
> hours of work, and that's about right for a good mechanic to execute a 
> proper build on a Riv Complete, in my opinion.  If you've never done any of 
> that before, if you were determined to do it right, then budget for 2-3x 
> that time.  If you were determined to leave the pre-built stuff exactly as 
> it is, and not re-do anything, that's another approach, but it's not a 
> substitute for the $150 job you'd get from a good mechanic at a good shop.  
>
> Bill Lindsay
> El Cerrito, CA
>
> On Wednesday, October 23, 2024 at 10:37:54 AM UTC-7 Dan wrote:
>
>> So my beautiful Appaloosa has arrived. I am practically foaming at the 
>> mouth as I type. As I am sure most of you are aware, Rivendell sends 
>> complete bikes mostly built with the exception of the stem, seat tube 
>> saddle and pedals. I originally planned on bring my bike to a shop to have 
>> them complete the build for me but after some shopping around, the shops 
>> will charge a full build fee which averages around $150. That is far too 
>> much for such little work in my opinion.
>>
>> I am no bike mechanic. I have always enjoyed tinkering though so I have 
>> half a mind to attempt to put the rest together myself and then bring it to 
>> a shop to be tuned, which would cost much less than a "full build". 
>>
>> Should I go ahead and give it a shot? I have access to the proper tools, 
>> I just do not know where to start and obviously do not want to damage 
>> anything in the process.
>>
>

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