Easter Closure Period

Easter closure period:

We will be closed for the Easter break from Friday the 29th March and re-opening on Tuesday the 2nd April.

Enjoy your Easter holidays everyone, and good luck to those racing at Stromlo!

New Exposure Revo dynamo light

Hi,

We’ve been flat out over the first few months of the year and haven’t yet posted anything up. Just to keep things active, and because we finally bought a shop camera, here’s a photo of the new Exposure Revo dynamo light. 4 LED, should be plenty bright. Stand-light (for traffic lights or whenever else the wheels stop turning) of up to an hour, apparently. Removable plug at the light end makes it a practical choice for bikes that get locked up in public places.

More posts soon, hopefully!Image

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Christmas Opening Hours

Hi all,

We’ve had a super-busy start to summer, which has been great, but left little time for blogging unfortunately. Hopefully we can become more active with this into the new year.

With regard to Christmas opening hours:

We will be open our normal trading hours up to and including the 24th December. We will close on the 25th and re-open on the 2nd of January.

Thanks to all our customers and friends for your support over our first few months of trading, and we look forward to seeing you all in the new year.

Regards,

Monkeys.

Custom Lizard Skins grips!

Just arrived – our custom Lizard Skins lock-on grips. We’ve got the Northshore and Peaty models in, for small and large hands, with ODI collars and hardware, Lizard Skins patterns. Choice of black, blue and grey grips, and black, red, silver and green collars.

 

$25 a pair, and you won’t forgot the shop name!

 

 

Custom lockrings:

 

 

Good luck to everyone racing the Scott 24hr this weekend!

Bearing nerds look in

Anyone else get excited about bearings? While replacing the headset bearings in a Cannondale Scalpel the other day, Joel pulled the seals off the old and new bearings to compare the layout. The original SI bearings which use a caged bearing set, as can be seen, there is a sizeable gap in between each bearing, and a plastic retainer cage to maintain the spacing. This reduces the rolling resistance of the bearing at higher speeds, but doesn’t distribute load as well. It also tends to wear out quicker due to higher load on each bearing and on the races. This one has significant corrosion due to weathering and the particular exposure of the lower bearing:

Si bearing, caged

 

Compare that to the new bearing, an Enduro Max bearing, which doesn’t use a cage. Instead, there is a full compliment of ball bearings inside the cartridge. This increases the rolling resistance of the bearing at high speeds and as such is better suited to headset bearings, and suspension pivot bearings, than it is to hub bearings or crank bearings which rotate at a higher rate. As the load is distributed across a greater number of bearings, each one wears less, as do the races. This one should last much better in this application:

SI bearing Max

 

We sell Enduro Max bearings as well as Enduro standard bearings for hubs and bottom brackets.

Spinny spinny!

Taming bike-dom

Can we tame bike-dom? Plenty of work to do at Monkey Wrench this month. Local commuter bikes, plus high-end equipment from the entire Canberra region.

Our next lots of slatwall are now up, with more hanging space for Parts and Accessories. Next fitout project is the tyre and tube display stand, characteristically DIY.

It seems that we’ve tapped into a strange club of Cannondale Lefty owners and are getting plenty of work doing maintenance and repairs on the one-legged beasts.Image