If you want to NOT buy a new kickstand and continue using yours, you need 
to do some sanding down of the plate on the kickstand that interacts with 
the plate on the bike. if i recall correctly, it would be the front left 
side. you want to sand it so that you can skew it outward and then bolt it 
down in place. 

i've had this issue with two riv's (a clem and an appaloosa) and managed to 
fix it on the clem (running 48 switchback hills). didn't bother on the 
appaloosa because i gave away the double and settled on a single. 

 





On Wednesday, July 9, 2025 at 11:21:18 AM UTC-4 Julian Westerhout wrote:

> Consider a Click-stand.   https://www.click-stand.com   Not the 
> conventional approach, but fantastic, esp. with loaded bikes -- used them 
> on lots of singles and tandems. Never clearance issues, or mud gathering, 
> etc. 
>
> Or if you really must have a  bolt-on stand IMHO the best is the Ursus 
> Jumbo Evo: 
>
> https://ursuscycling.com/collections/ursus-kickstands/products/ursus-jumbo-evo-double-legged-kickstand
>
> Julian Westerhout
> Blomigton, IL 
> On Wednesday, July 9, 2025 at 8:48:37 AM UTC-5 der_amerikanische_freund 
> wrote:
>
>> Hi all, I have a 2025 Atlantis with a Pletscher single kickstand. I've 
>> been running 700x50C tires with no issues but tried on some 29x2.1 
>> yesterday and the kickstand rubbed with the rear tire.
>>
>> Has anyone had any clearance issues with their kickstands and rear tires?
>>
>> Is there any particular model that would comfortably clear a 2.25" tire?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>

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