utahdog2003
Senior Retro Guru
- Feedback
- View
I did a good long tour in multiple shop employment in my time, and I support mail order. If I go into a local shop here in town and request a part to be ordered (because nobody stocks a damn thing around here), they will invariably order what they feel is a comparable part instead of what you wanted. Order a Race Face bash guard?...get a QBP/Salsa. Order a Magura brace?...get a Tektro...Order RS shock oil?...get Finish Line. Irritating...I ask for a part by name, that's what I want, do not take it upon yourself to second guess me. These turkeys always seem to be able to order what they want for their $7K dirtless, never ridden, 'personal bikes' that hang all over, but when it comes to the customers request...well lets just say the customer is apparently never right. I wind up having to give people my cycling industry resume and a terse "look, people...I know what I'm doing. Just sell me the 261 mm spokes already and save the 'wheelbuilding is hard' speech for another time! :? :x
If I'm buying shoes or a helmet, something that is very fit specific, I'll do it locally, but even then it means you'd better be OK with a private label branded helmet and not the newest Giro stud-bucket.
I order online, and I never have to talk to an idiot, I pick exactly what I want or I go to another online shop, It's on my doorstep faster than waiting for the local shops to get around to their "order day", and again, and most importantly...I get what I want.
Best thing is, I don't have to hear a load of editorial crap about how my steel fork and quill stem make my road bike heavy, or how the Beast of the East is too old to worry about, or about how my EWRs are too heavy or not very good because "I haven't heard of them" or about how Cannondales are supposed to creak or blah blah blah.
Shops have a problem, they don't want to pay people to stay and work to gain knowlege, but they expect the bicycle public to believe that the 16 y/o kids are 'trained mechanics'. You have to pick one or the other because it' s like Bontrager says..."Pick two...Light, Strong, Cheap."...16 and experienced are not likely descriptors of the same body.
As for specific shops to avoid, in my experience they are all very similar in todays industry...much like the carbon black wonder-bikes they hock. Why target one particular shop for exclusion? :cry:
If I'm buying shoes or a helmet, something that is very fit specific, I'll do it locally, but even then it means you'd better be OK with a private label branded helmet and not the newest Giro stud-bucket.
I order online, and I never have to talk to an idiot, I pick exactly what I want or I go to another online shop, It's on my doorstep faster than waiting for the local shops to get around to their "order day", and again, and most importantly...I get what I want.
Best thing is, I don't have to hear a load of editorial crap about how my steel fork and quill stem make my road bike heavy, or how the Beast of the East is too old to worry about, or about how my EWRs are too heavy or not very good because "I haven't heard of them" or about how Cannondales are supposed to creak or blah blah blah.
Shops have a problem, they don't want to pay people to stay and work to gain knowlege, but they expect the bicycle public to believe that the 16 y/o kids are 'trained mechanics'. You have to pick one or the other because it' s like Bontrager says..."Pick two...Light, Strong, Cheap."...16 and experienced are not likely descriptors of the same body.
As for specific shops to avoid, in my experience they are all very similar in todays industry...much like the carbon black wonder-bikes they hock. Why target one particular shop for exclusion? :cry: