Each of us remembers how they became a Velominatus. For me, it was at Grimpeur Wielersport, in Zevenaar, The Netherlands. Its the perfect place: a small shop, on a small street, in a small town, in a small country, run by a Giant of the Sport, Herman van Meegen. I haven’t been back in years, not since my mentor and original owner was forced to retire due to a nagging back injury.
Despite it’s diminutive appearance, inside this small shop existed a world vast beyond my wildest imagination. The owner spoke with the soft ‘G’ – typical of the Dutch dialect in the region. Former head mechanic at Helvetia – La Suisse, and later for Team 7-Eleven, he had previously wielded a wrench at the world’s major events including Le Tour before opening this shop. He knew everyone. Pros strolled into his shop on a regular basis. Imagine the awe of a thirteen-year-old Velominatus Novus as Erik Breukink wandered into the shop and dallied about for a bit.
But it was the tales and experience from many years on the Pro circuit that made those visits to special to me. He explained in detail the way Steve Bauer preferred to ride a smaller frame than his contemporaries or how Pascal Richard liked the tension of the spokes “just so” as he laced a set of wheels for my dad. He showed me how he filed out the holes in the hub flange to cradle the spokes better and reduce the chance of breaking one. He built wheels on a truing stand he built himself and to which he affixed a micrometer. He told me that a perfectly true wheel will never go out of true, not even on the cobbles. “Maar het moet werkelijk perfect zijn.” But it has to be absolutely perfect. Sounds like something you need a custom truing stand and micrometer for. (That bike is now something like 20 years old, and has never seen a spoke wrench; the wheels are still perfectly true.)
He was personal friends with Eddy Merckx and picked up a frame my dad had ordered after dinner with The Man at the factory in Belgium. A prototype Campagnolo saddle with titanium rails and air bladder that never made it to production somehow found its way atop my dad’s seat post. I can’t imagine how his insides churned as my dad insisted on having a set of Scott Drop-Ins installed on that bike. He never uttered a word about it, opting instead to teach me how to seamlessly splice two rolls of bar tape together to accommodate the long bars – a skill he picked up wrapping the bars of riders who wanted double-wrapped bars on the tops but not the drops at Paris-Roubaix. He taught me to cut my cables short and solder them before cutting for the perfect, sleek finishing touch. He taught me how to “feel” a bolt to get it just the right amount of tight – where it holds but the soft aluminum doesn’t strip. He taught me to trim soda cans and tuck them in between the bars and stem of a handlebar that persistently slips. But most importantly, he showed me the intricate beauty of our machines.
He also stocked a backpack called the “Body Bag” which I always felt could have used a more sensible name and whose marketers perhaps missed a nuance in the language.
Apart from his poor choice in backpacks, this was a man who understood the finer things about bicycles, and I’m grateful he took the time to teach me even a tiny little bit of what he knew.
So, I leave you today with this question: if you could ask a pro bike mechanic – perhaps even one on the ProTour circuit – one, single question, what would it be?
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I recently bought a new bike and just had to re-wrap the bars as they were just all wrong: stuffed in with the end caps, figure-8ed, then very sloppily electrical taped. First time I've used Fizik and I was surprised how stout and un-stretchy it was. I'm not at all satisfied with the job I did as the tape was pre-stretched all wrong at that point, but I'm sure they pass most people's standards. I just wrapped the rain bike in the cheapest black tape I could find that didn't smell like a plastic factory.
@mouse
Grats!
@frank
Okay, sweet. Thanks for the heads up. Gotta change whatever it is that's stock. Just looks manky.
@michael
Re figure 8ing the tape around the lever bodies.
What @Oli said.
Just use a short length of tape to cover the back of the clamp, then wrap the tape from the bottom up and around the lever body. Figure 8ing just adds bulk to where you don't neccessarily want it, wastes valuable length in the tape where you can't get the wrap overlap nice and tight, and creates a tear in the space time continuum to get the helix shape you've just created to run in the proper direction required on top.
@mouse
A+1
@mouse
Also, the last pack of Fizik Microtex tape I purchased came with two small strips in addition to the tape for the handlebars, for just such a purpose.
I can't re-8 it, I cut it short already.
This might in fact not be orthodox, but this is the way I wrap my bars; always the same, so it wraps in opposite directions from the bottom in clockwise on the right and counter-clockwise on the left, so they wrap in towards each other. My OCD nature will accept nothing less.
That's perfectly fine with adhesive backed tape, but would probably unwind over time with the non-sticky stuff. It looks good anyway, and that's all that matters, right?
@Oli
Whew. That was close. When I read the first half of your post, I thought you were agreeing with me, which, quite honestly, scared the piss out of me. Then I finished reading, and we're back to normal.
I can't think of a single time that I've had a bike not wrapped like this, although I've never thought about wrapping it this way until I was taping up the Soloist after having this discussion last week and I wanted to pay attention. That's when I noticed I was doing it, and went and looked at all the bikes in the house and rambled through some old pictures of previous bikes. All the evidence I could find have the bars wrapped like this. Even the bar tape on the handlebar ends on both mountain bikes is wrapped like this. Always towards each other. OCD (which I've been diagnosed with but take no medication for) really is a funny thing.