I think the relative difficulty of mounting aluminum fenders varies
from one bike to another.  I acquired my Honjo fenders before the
YouTube existed, and I used a photograph in a book to get the fender
struts positioned correctly (a photo of a very cherry Rene Herse
Randonneuse bike in the book "Bicycling A Guiness Superlative Guide",
on page 77).  I'd previously mounted a set of Lefol fenders on my
Paramount P-15 back in the day (photos here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/37964304@N05/sets/72157627672432684/), so
I had some experience with the process.

When I recently transferred the fenders to my Rivendell Road Standard,
things got much more "interesting".  I mounted the fenders using the
stainless steel sliding bridge bracket on the rear fender.  The
installation went well and proceeded without any real problems.
Later, however, I had a vexing problem with the rear fender rattling.
I bent the stays trying to subdue the rattling with little effect.
Finally, I used the fender mounting tap on the bottom of the brake
bridge to secure the rear fender.  Rattling gone....

I think aluminum fenders are very attractive, but they're not quite as
utilitarian as some of the various plastic fenders IMHO.

Jim Cloud
Tucson, AZ

On Sep 16, 3:27 pm, Steve Palincsar <palin...@his.com> wrote:
> On Fri, 2011-09-16 at 15:07 -0700, Michael Hechmer wrote:
> > Kelly, thank you, thank you, thank you for the honesty of your post.
> >  As both an amateur mechanic and amateur woodworker I have been
> > repeatedly snookered by "expert" instructions that lulled me into
> > thinking something would be straightforward and doable, only to be
> > reduced to speaking anglo-saxon.  Last night I installed a pair of the
> > tektro canti brakes and discoverd that the instructions failed to
> > mention that only a mutant with four hands would find this straight
> > forward.
>
> > I have bikes with plastic, aluminum, and steel fenders but I wouldn't
> > ever again install fenders without both rereading the instructions and
> > remembering that it will be a PIA.
>
> Actually, installing Honjo fenders is pretty straightforward - there's
> nothing really 'clever' or 'complex' about it - but it's slow and can't
> be hurried.  Reading the instructions about 20 times for a week or two
> ahead of time, and working on visualizing what goes on helps.
> Understanding on a deep-down level that it simply cannot be hurried or
> sped up helps the most.  
>
> One. Step. At. A. Time. First install.  Mark.  Remove.  Drill.
> Reinstall.  Mark the next.  Remove.  Drill.  Reinstall.  Mark.  Remove.
> Drill.  Reinstall.  Breathe.  
>
> Once you get your mind wrapped around the pace - the process as a whole,
> but especially the pace - it's not really much of a pain in the a$$.  At
> least, not until your hand cramps and you drop the parts to the draw
> bolt in the grass and can't find them again.  It helps a lot to spread
> some cloth under where you're working, because your hand is almost
> certainly going to cramp and you almost certainly are going to
> drop /something/.
>
> The instructions on the VO and Jitensha web sites are pretty good.  So,
> too, are the articles published in BQ.

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