MTB maintenance manuals
MTB maintenance manuals
Author
Discussion

moles

Original Poster:

1,847 posts

267 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
Can anyone recommend a good book on bike maintenance. Looking for a Haynes type manual for bikes?. Also do any manufacturers have service manuals or is it all generic?. (I have a Cube but cannot find anything)

mk1fan

10,847 posts

248 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
err... Try the Haynes one.

Or The Blue Book by Park.

Zen and the Art of Mountain Bike Maintenance.

Amazon search with give you plenty to choose from.

moles

Original Poster:

1,847 posts

267 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
Which ones are any good though have read mixed reports on the Haynes one.

gbbird

5,197 posts

267 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
Zinn and the Art............. is very good IMHO. It helped me build x2 MT bikes from scratch, with limited previous MTB maintenance experience

Edited by gbbird on Sunday 29th March 09:52

mk1fan

10,847 posts

248 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
The Park book is the daddy - although can feel a touch patronising if you're reasonably competant. Individual sections are available from the Park website too.



Edited by mk1fan on Monday 30th March 13:43

moles

Original Poster:

1,847 posts

267 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
OK will have a gander. Thanks smile

BOR

5,085 posts

278 months

Friday 27th March 2009
quotequote all
Here's the link for Cube tech documents. Only in german, I'm afraid. If you have a specific request, I'll try to help.

http://www.cube-bikes.de/xist4c/web/Bedienungsanle...

moles

Original Poster:

1,847 posts

267 months

Saturday 28th March 2009
quotequote all
Cheers BOR. biggrin

Jimbo.

4,167 posts

212 months

Saturday 28th March 2009
quotequote all
I can't recommend the Zinn book highly enough. As sad as it is to admit, it's an utter joy to read and ever better to follow. Not patronising, not "over yer' head" technical, explains things nicely, have excellent diagrams and covers everything you'd ever need to know.

stewies_minion

1,167 posts

210 months

Saturday 28th March 2009
quotequote all
I've got a copy of Zinn. I'm woefully inept at fixing my bikes - but the book is thorough and not at all patronising.

Chris_w666

22,655 posts

222 months

Sunday 29th March 2009
quotequote all
I can recommend the park book, I am a total bike numpty and can now do things I would have previously paid someone to do and that is after only a few minutes looking at it. I get the feeling I could do much more if I had to and followed it carefully.

LRdriver II

1,936 posts

272 months

Monday 30th March 2009
quotequote all
problem is that alot of books get outdated by the time they get published. Technology moves so damn quickly that the books cant cover each manufacturers procedures. I have the haynes book and it has most of the newer stuff in it (the revised 5th edition?) so its OK.. but I have to go to the manufacturers websites to get the detailed servicing instructions (SRAM have alot of their stuff as how-to videos on youtube, and Hope have on their website)

anniesdad

14,589 posts

261 months

Monday 30th March 2009
quotequote all
I can also recommend the Park book. I'm no bike expert (my bike experience until recently, was all single speed BMX back in the day) but am now reasonably competent at the more regular maintenance but still have the shop(s) do the harder stuff. I really enjoy getting out into the garage, fiddling with the bikes.

smile


mk1fan

10,847 posts

248 months

Tuesday 31st March 2009
quotequote all
Once you uinderstand the basics and if you have a mechanical mind then there's not an arwful lot of things that you can't figure out. Internals of suspension units aside.