thecannibal
Retro Guru
I often read threads on this forum and occasionally post. It's a great resource with a lot of cool old bike tat to look at and a nice community feel, but if one thing puts me off it's the phenomenally crap advice on technical issues that's doled out so liberally by so many. Obviously there are loads of knowledgeable people on here, but their number seems equally matched by those who want to 'help' when questions and queries arise, regardless of whether they know the answer.
I've seen countless threads where someone's offered technical 'help' that's been at best useless and often highly dangerous. I can only assume people pretend to know about stuff they don't in order to massage their egos, but they just end up looking like a chump, so the whole affair's a bit pointless. It's one thing taking a shot at identifying a frame and getting it wrong; it's quite another to claim experience and chat bollocks that might lose someone their front teeth if they listen to you.
If someone has an idea of how a mechanical/compatibility issue might be resolved, how about making it clear that you actually have little or no knowledge on the subject, rather than putting others' lives or (worse still) bikes at risk?
I've seen countless threads where someone's offered technical 'help' that's been at best useless and often highly dangerous. I can only assume people pretend to know about stuff they don't in order to massage their egos, but they just end up looking like a chump, so the whole affair's a bit pointless. It's one thing taking a shot at identifying a frame and getting it wrong; it's quite another to claim experience and chat bollocks that might lose someone their front teeth if they listen to you.
If someone has an idea of how a mechanical/compatibility issue might be resolved, how about making it clear that you actually have little or no knowledge on the subject, rather than putting others' lives or (worse still) bikes at risk?