Look out for these things when working on your mountain bike!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 20 лют 2023
  • I'm not the best person to give safety advice, but then again I'm also not jaded. I know better than anyone how easy it is to fall into bad habits, and how mundane things have a tendency to bite you! Today we'll spend some time in the workshop, examining a few key things to look out for. I guess you could call this a safety video!
    Free yourself from the algorithm and join us on Substack! 🚲 bermpeak.substack.com
    Videos 2 weeks early • Exclusive articles • Discussions • You’re in control!
    Berm Peak Hoodies, Beanies, Jerseys, Shirts
    cognativemtb.com/collections/...
    Want us to review your unique mountain bike or outdoor product? www.sethsbikehacks.com/produc...
    Check out our main channel / sethsbikehacks
    Follow me on Instagram / sethsbikehacks
    Berm Peak Merch cognativemtb.com/collections/...
    Music in this video is from
    share.epidemicsound.com/trQSg
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @lucidstudios64
    @lucidstudios64 Рік тому +1263

    I love the scale from park tool to whistlindiesel!

    • @Natethegreat2020
      @Natethegreat2020 Рік тому +4

      Lol😂

    • @justinjones9028
      @justinjones9028 Рік тому +19

      Wonder where MORR falls on that scale.

    • @ototso9281
      @ototso9281 Рік тому +8

      Yeah I laughed out loud. 😂

    • @mozambique32762
      @mozambique32762 Рік тому +2

      @@ototso9281same

    • @macbook802
      @macbook802 Рік тому +7

      Whistlindiesel has the world's biggest squatted truck yet he hates squatted trucks. I don't get that channel

  • @sstrazzi
    @sstrazzi Рік тому +647

    The lingering agony of sticking yourself with frayed cables deserves more recognition

    • @TivonSanders
      @TivonSanders Рік тому

      Or stepping on small fragments of them with bare feet.

    • @78910milo
      @78910milo Рік тому +45

      I got one under the nail…

    • @AnomadAlaska
      @AnomadAlaska Рік тому +12

      I solder mine for potential reuse later for a simple repair.

    • @ChronicBronchitis-mz2vn
      @ChronicBronchitis-mz2vn Рік тому +2

      @@AnomadAlaska I use shrink tubing for mine, but soldering is a great idea.

    • @TheDonlum
      @TheDonlum Рік тому +27

      Don't forget about those little frayed bits that you may cut off before putting a cable end on. They drop on the floor and hurt if you kneel on them or if you're not wearing any shoes they get stuck in your foot.

  • @SloaneDalmer
    @SloaneDalmer Рік тому +267

    The brake rotor one hits home for me. I was cleaning my bike and was well aware of the dangerous pinch point. Even just with a slight rotation in the wheel, the rotor gobbled up my cleaning cloth and pulled in my finger tip with it. The rotor sliced the tip of my finger, cut THROUGH the finger nail, and bounced off the finger bone. Luckily I could get stitches and didn't lose any finger bits or feeling in the finger. That's how I learned that it's possible to get your fingernail sewn back together with stitches

    • @DualDesertEagle
      @DualDesertEagle Рік тому +16

      *_SHUDDER!_*

    • @Sandhills_nature_hobbies
      @Sandhills_nature_hobbies Рік тому +15

      I did exactly the same thing a few months ago. It was spectacularly painful.

    • @SloaneDalmer
      @SloaneDalmer Рік тому +6

      @@Sandhills_nature_hobbies oof I feel for you! My incident was a few years back now and I've certainly learned my lesson. Can't be too careful working around any moving parts now.

    • @CJmtb91
      @CJmtb91 Рік тому +6

      Have had similar aligning a brake while tired and not being that careful, except the wheel was spinning pretty fast, disc went through my ring finger, through the bone and left the end of the finger hanging off, was pretty bad but needed finger nail removed and surgery to reconstruct the finger end, end of the finger has never felt the same since but it looks normal with no scars :)

    • @TheBlopNC
      @TheBlopNC Рік тому

      Haha, same happend to me.

  • @24speedcheetah
    @24speedcheetah Рік тому +72

    One great safety tip is when using a wrench, it's always better to pull then to push. Saves your knuckles if you slip.

    • @michaelzapack4736
      @michaelzapack4736 Рік тому +18

      And if you have to push, do it OPEN handed. That way you don't bust a knuckle if something slips! 45 years mechanic.

    • @-tr0n
      @-tr0n Рік тому +9

      Unless it's towards your face. Never punched myself in the face with a 1-1/8" wrench before...three times...

    • @str1kez367
      @str1kez367 Рік тому

      This ^^

  • @Peace4385
    @Peace4385 Рік тому +412

    Always make sure when you are done repairing your bicycle, to tighten up all the bolts

    • @sstrazzi
      @sstrazzi Рік тому +13

      Literally just remembered I'd only hand tightened my chainringbolts

    • @rondvivre3636
      @rondvivre3636 Рік тому +19

      One of my many #1 Rules is; "Never walk away from a loose bolt."

    • @HFV_Junkyardin
      @HFV_Junkyardin Рік тому +5

      Learned that as a kid. Did a wheelie and the front wheel came off.

    • @oogaboogaman0046
      @oogaboogaman0046 Рік тому +1

      @@sstrazzi a youtube comment may have saved you from getting injured how do you feel?

    • @jayswarrow1196
      @jayswarrow1196 Рік тому

      Oh the gods of twisted pattern, forgive me for i have sinned, and fallen into an abyss of "..i gotta testride this sucker now!"

  • @MTB_CRZY
    @MTB_CRZY Рік тому +319

    As a CNC machinist, I learned very quickly that anything that moves or spins CAN AND WILL cut you.

    • @Jacksparrow4986
      @Jacksparrow4986 Рік тому

      They will try to kill you. So don't let them!

    • @Levimakehaha910
      @Levimakehaha910 Рік тому +1

      I feel like anything in the cnc industry can, and will cut you! 😂

    • @HFV_Junkyardin
      @HFV_Junkyardin Рік тому +29

      Spinning metal does not care about you or your feelings.

    • @davekal
      @davekal Рік тому +7

      I run aircraft rotors on old cnc lathes. They stop for nothing.

    • @Unwound82
      @Unwound82 Рік тому +6

      How 'bout you grab that wispy little innocuous titanium stringer, it looks just like aluminum foil, surely it's not going to leave you with a dozen stitches.

  • @ghisallo2970
    @ghisallo2970 Рік тому +24

    Safety glasses are a must when working with anything under pressure. This includes hydraulic brakes and suspension. DOT 5 in the eyeball is no joke.

    • @mx1742
      @mx1742 Рік тому +2

      I watched a few drops of DOT 5 fall on a painted floor, faded the paint pretty fast, after awhile it bubbled the paint, wear gloves & goggles when using that stuff

  • @mickreynolds3065
    @mickreynolds3065 Рік тому +20

    On my first disc brake bike, after a particularly good fall, I went to straighten my bars by straddling the front wheel and twisting the handlebars. 10 years later, I still have remnants of the imprint from my rotor branded into my calf.

  • @kevinmuzikar2037
    @kevinmuzikar2037 Рік тому +84

    In the industry we call all of those "Near Miss" incidents. Just because someone didn't get hurt doesn't mean they couldn't have been hurt and we have the opportunity to learn and adapt our approach to the work/job to avoid having an actual Hit/Injury event.

    • @MikeR65
      @MikeR65 Рік тому

      What if you just avoided a near miss could still have had a near miss??

    • @rocketsocks
      @rocketsocks Рік тому

      @@joehalisky7921 yeah, so use it as an opportunity to tighten up instead of just waiting for the inevitable to happen

  • @moonriseproductions
    @moonriseproductions Рік тому +101

    I'm happy that you started with disc brakes vs. fingers lol. I cut off the tip of my thumb while working on my bike. I also was truing the wheel and accidentally put my thumb in. It cut 75% of the way through and cracked the tip of my thumb bone. They had to put stitches through my fingernail with a fish hook looking needle and I lost some feeling. Definitely avoid this!!! I've also burned myself on hot brakes. So I am much more cautious with the brakes now lol

    • @mx1742
      @mx1742 Рік тому +8

      Had a friend who after a 9 mile downhill on the Plunge in Kern River, CA tried to grab his brake rotor, to clear debris out of it and permanently tattooed his palm in the brake rotor design

    • @hammyh1165
      @hammyh1165 Рік тому +3

      I did the same to my thumb , but setting a caliper.
      Top of my thumb was just held on with a wee flap of skin.
      Didn't really hurt though , just like hitting your thumb with a hammer , more a dull thump.
      Got congratulated on my first aid by the nurse , so I count that as a win.

    • @WellsRobertsonMTB
      @WellsRobertsonMTB Рік тому

      @@mx1742 same

    • @ESTrashfire13
      @ESTrashfire13 Рік тому +2

      Magura hydraulic rim brakes anyone? Idk some BMX rider.

    • @NathanDobbinsthelordscheeps
      @NathanDobbinsthelordscheeps Рік тому +1

      Same here, but it was a pinky…

  • @_Napoletano_
    @_Napoletano_ Рік тому +21

    Whenever you hear someone refer to fingers as "fingies" you know they have a baby at home😆

  • @andrewredding3132
    @andrewredding3132 Рік тому +14

    @5:50 also when removing a seized chain ring, be aware of where gravity and the force with which you're hitting will send it. A stock 3x steel chainring with integrated cranks came down right on a vein near my ankle. I knew i had f'd up, but when I saw the squirt and my sock filling up, I really knew I just learned a valuable lesson😀

  • @pooka1237
    @pooka1237 Рік тому +30

    Add on to letting air out of your suspension when servicing: watch out for presure in the oil chamber
    I got a shock used for cheap and since it wasn't serviced in a long time I went and thaugt of letting air out first and when I got to open the oil chamber I just opened it and the upper part of the sock flew across the room . I tried to clean the oil up as good as I could but there's still a mark of it on the ceiling.

  • @pappaslivery
    @pappaslivery Рік тому +6

    Can confirm brake disc of doom. We're #1/2!
    I was cleaning the bike upside down and the wheel was spinning slowly from the hose spray. Left it spinning as I was cleaning the frame and BANG! the three stages were "Oh man that hurts"....."oh crap I'm bleeding"....oh Jesus IT'S MOVING! Sucker could flap around like a muppet head. 5 hours in the ER, x-rays, three stitches. 10 months later it still feels weird. It crushed the bone but that healed. They even saved the finger nail, although I had to go through the dead cut one falling off.
    WATCH OUT FOR DISC BRAKES!

    • @dreamcatcher621
      @dreamcatcher621 Рік тому

      Pretty much what happened to me, 2 years later and it still feels kinda weird but improving

    • @hammyh1165
      @hammyh1165 Рік тому

      Been there , took a while for the nerves to recover.

  • @ericmueser6950
    @ericmueser6950 Рік тому +14

    I've never hurt myself working on my bike, but I've seen some real injuries working on cars.
    Probably the most significant was when I had to take my coworker to the hospital after he tried to disassemble an AC system without discharging it first, and blasted himself in the face with 200 PSI of toxic refrigerant. Stay safe y'all!

  • @juliank911
    @juliank911 Рік тому +3

    Remember that one of your pedals is left hand thread. A number of years ago I was breaking down my mountain bike to package it for a flight. I thought one of my pedals was just SUPER tight. I put a trolley jack handle on my 15mm wrench to get some extra leverage... pulling towards my face (duh) I snapped the wrench and hit myself in the eyebrow with the jack handle with all my strength...nearly passed out, bled a decent amount and still carry the scar....

  • @RomansDowntime
    @RomansDowntime Рік тому +56

    I'm just happy to see the pup get a treat in the name of safety.

  • @gregorgeous98
    @gregorgeous98 Рік тому +5

    3:15 oh boy, got my first fullsuspension bike this week and as you said, during setup I pinched my fingers between the frame and the linkage… it was more humiliation than hurt, but from now on I‘m gonna be pretty careful when fiddeling on my bikes suspension👍

  • @squarewheelFTW748
    @squarewheelFTW748 Рік тому +2

    Always be careful when servicing forks, because sometimes there is pressure where it shouldn't be.
    I was servicing a relatively old fork with a Motion Control damper, when I noticed that there was pressure built up in the damper and it was pushing out the shaft. I started to unscrew the compression damper assembly, as there was no other way to vent the pressure. When it stopped hissing, I assumed there was no pressure left, but the suspension oil was probably sealing the threads, because when I continued, it shot the whole compression damper out, left a little dent in the ceiling and made a mess. I was fine, if I had been a little less careful, it could have ended badly. I had read all the manuals, but it wasn't mentioned anywhere that there could be pressure in damper side of the fork.

  • @vinny61389
    @vinny61389 Рік тому +30

    This was great. General shop/tool safety is a critical life skill that translates into many other areas.
    My first lessons in safety came not from bikes, but from cars. My father was a mechanic and **constantly** hounded me to "watch my hands" when doing anything. Thankfully I've never seriously injured myself, but I've busted my fair share of knuckles punching metal when not being careful.
    Basically, I try to ask myself: "where are my hands going to go if my tool slips?" and let that guide how I choose and position a tool, apply torque (and how much), etc.. Also, be very wary of spinny things. They will hurt you before you realize what happened.

    • @facechriscat4214
      @facechriscat4214 10 місяців тому +1

      I always say that 2 or 3 mistakes have to align to get truly injured. We have the rules in place so that we may only ever make one, and occasionally make 2. If you get negligent and unlucky that's where bad stuff really happens. Planning what you are going to do and just thinking about it a bit helps significantly. Basically anything moving that isn't designed to be perfectly safe (nerf stuff for instance) is going to have a decent chance to hurt you.

  • @dubkidzz
    @dubkidzz Рік тому +3

    I experienced literally everything you mentioned.

  • @jkimm7
    @jkimm7 Рік тому +4

    I would also like to mention that if pedals are threaded into a crank - ALWAYS tighten them. That is to say, don't get side tracked and say "I'll tighten them later" because if you go out to test ride the bike, that finger tight pedal will likely come off and if you are standing up on the pedals you can come down on the top tube very hard or even inadvertently turn the bars as you go down and core sample yourself. Have had it happen and made sure to check pedals on any bike someone else built before I test ride.

  • @kayakjack1987
    @kayakjack1987 Рік тому +2

    I work in a shop and one of our mechanics blew a tubeless road tire off the rim at around 100 psi. It rung through the whole shop. No one got hurt, but definitely had some potential damage.

  • @creepingjesus5106
    @creepingjesus5106 Рік тому +5

    The Torx fastener point is a good one - I inflicted my worst injury in a vehicle workshop on myself because a big TX slipped. It applies to all fasteners more broadly, and the special tools we get for bike stuff. Ask yourself how much force you're putting into (say for example) a cassette or BB tool, and where that force is going to go if it slips.
    Also, be careful lifting a bike up into a stand. Inflicting an injury on your shoulder or back is a royal PITA, and will stop you riding.

    • @facechriscat4214
      @facechriscat4214 10 місяців тому

      You should basically either be transferring force far away from the object or perpendicular to the face. If your tools are solid and the machining is solid you will never have any problems. Stubby screwdrivers and ratchets are more useful in more situations as a beginner but they are more dangerous in the long run if you get serious about building/rebuilding anything.

  • @charleswhite7612
    @charleswhite7612 Рік тому +11

    Great tips Seth. After 30+ yrs wrenching on MTB’er, I JUST took a fingertip off doing the manual caliper adjust, just like you said. It’s extremely dangerous.😮 Bridging the open spaces with thin aluminum might be safer and help dissipate heat better. Ok boys, there’s your next $million dollar idea.👍😉

    • @chadbouterse8617
      @chadbouterse8617 Рік тому

      My new Shimano XT 4 piston brakes that I got last june have the exact rotors you’re describing!

    • @spyder027
      @spyder027 Рік тому

      It would be more surface area for heat dissipation but it would weigh more

  • @tecno2053
    @tecno2053 Рік тому +5

    I learned the brake rotor thing the hard way a month ago. Thankfully I didn't get too hurt. My finger nails are still screwed up though.

  • @MisterMkey
    @MisterMkey 7 місяців тому +1

    My worst injury was when I was bikepacking. I have a 2x11 drivetrain and the chain was in the inner position in the front, had to do something with the bike, dont even remember what and it started falling down. Mind you, I had like 30 kgs of stuff on the bike. So when it fell, I tried to stop it from falling , leg went on the other side of the bike between the wheels and the front chainring squeezed into my shinbone. Got lucky cause i had no infection or anything and didnt even go to the hospital, but I had to clean the wound for about a month while cycling to southern Italy. And now I got a nice souvenier from my first bikepacking trip, along with a puppy I found on the streets 😅

  • @ryanv1279
    @ryanv1279 Рік тому +2

    Ive been binging these videos like crazy trying to kill anxiety over a new job. Thanks Seth 🙏🙏

  • @lukef.132
    @lukef.132 Рік тому +15

    Worst case I had? just retuning my brakes as a kid, went at a slow speed to test thefront and back induvidually and see how responsive they were after fiddling - even at such a slow speed, the front brake sent me straight over the handlebars and would've sent my skull into the road; I'm thankful to this day I'd left my helmet on while i was fiddling around because it would have been bloody otherwise 😅

    • @Tiaan90
      @Tiaan90 Рік тому +1

      My chain jumped a few teeth or off the inner chainring about 20 years ago and I jammed the rear of my ankle into the outer chainring 😅
      Still have a 5cm scar.
      I bought a new chainguard after that..!

  • @genericinternetperson
    @genericinternetperson Рік тому +7

    Never been hurt working on a bike but I'm pretty cautious about things that can injure me in general. Still good to see advice from a master of the "learn by doing" technique though. I wouldn't have even thought about some of that suspension stuff.

  • @prothompson
    @prothompson Рік тому +2

    This brings back memories!! A friend cut half a finger off with the chain and sprocket on a BMX. In the early days of disk brakes, I've also caught my fingers in them. I remember when the Hayes disk brakes just came out and no one really knew how to bleed them. We had a tech trying to bleed the brakes and the hose came off the bleed nipple while he was squeezing the syringe. He ended up taking a full syringe of DOT fluid in the eye.

  • @cmmoney
    @cmmoney Рік тому +1

    Dropped a chainring and cranks on my shin on the way out of the bike shop. 9 stitches. Good reminder to just carefully handle bike parts in general

  • @CalebCarterFilm
    @CalebCarterFilm Рік тому +4

    The ballistic gel hand looks like anakins Hand and from the end of Star Wars episode three doesn't it! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @phoenixGrassl
    @phoenixGrassl Рік тому +9

    Seth is so entertaining 😂

  • @glitchman3194
    @glitchman3194 Рік тому

    The zip tie wrench extension was great. Thanks for sharing. Enjoy the ride

  • @andrewjacobs7860
    @andrewjacobs7860 Рік тому +1

    Best channel on UA-cam. Seth, you make everything interesting. Thank you.

  • @themulchmen
    @themulchmen Рік тому +8

    Hi Seth! Just wanted to confirm that I didn’t let all the air out of my fork once and the cap did explode of the top of the fork at near to terminal velocity! 😂

  • @IMikePlays
    @IMikePlays Рік тому +9

    Worst experience I got when working on a bike was when a frayed cable poked my eye, felt the pain for a few days and I was very lucky it didn't hit anything major, keep safe everyone!

    • @jolirosi7382
      @jolirosi7382 Рік тому +4

      Omg that's like my worst nightmare!

    • @HFV_Junkyardin
      @HFV_Junkyardin Рік тому +2

      Ouch! I got a single wire of a frayed cable in my skin like a stainless steel splinter. Boy that hurt.

    • @spyder027
      @spyder027 Рік тому

      I got a flake of aluminum under my fingernail once it hurt so bad

  • @michaelb1761
    @michaelb1761 Рік тому +1

    Depending on what I'm doing, I wear mechanics gloves not just rubber gloves (some repairs require fine motor skills that you lose when wearing the gloves). Lots of scraped knuckles while working on cars finally got me to wear them.

  • @samjames2007
    @samjames2007 Рік тому

    Shop mechanic here - letting the air out of your fork is more important when servicing your air spring. I’ve forgotten that before and holy cow does that thing come out fast. 100psi behind an aluminum rod is something to behold - I’m lucky to be alive.
    Also on pedal removal - have the bike upright, rotate pedal in question to forward position, put tool on pedal also pointing forward. Put foot on pedal with all your weight on pedal. Pull up on tool HARD. Not only does this ensure your fingies are nowhere near anything that you can punch but there’s a TON more force and makes removing stubborn pedals very very easy.

  • @ethanjiinkies5450
    @ethanjiinkies5450 Рік тому +3

    This is a great video! Another one I’d add is to be careful not to touch the disc brake rotors after a long descent. I’ve done this once and the rotors burnt my fingers and through my gloves due to the amount of heat generated by braking!

    • @reecenewton3097
      @reecenewton3097 Рік тому

      That heat represents all the dinner you ate converted into muscle power pedaling uphill converted into heat which is lost energy! Mean old downhill, and mean old brakes.

  • @elenderKnecht
    @elenderKnecht Рік тому +3

    Loosening a casette is always a hot contender for hurting your knuckles. Helps to fix the wheel between your legs and apply pressure downward with enough clearance.

    • @jakobc1998
      @jakobc1998 Рік тому +2

      Another good option is to have the chain whip and the wrench/breaker bar you're using separated by just a few degrees, making a 'V' shape. Then you just grip the two handles in one hand and squeeze them together - you get a lot of leverage and don't risk smashing your knuckles into anything. Just a small quality of life thing I learned working at a bike shop in the past

    • @denishuber7758
      @denishuber7758 Рік тому +1

      I messed my hands countless times removing the cassette...with sudden release hit my fist into the spokes... heard my knuckles pop

    • @lewisflintham
      @lewisflintham Рік тому +1

      I was looking for someone saying "The casette!". Got a scar on my thumb from this. One of those moments where you just hold onto your hand, hardly daring to look at it, to see how bad the injury is.

  • @jkimm7
    @jkimm7 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for pointing these out Seth! I made the brake rotor mistake only once and I will never adjust my caliper with the wheel spinning again because of it. I used to assemble bikes at a bike shop which always included installing and adjusting the front caliper. all it took was a bit of speed from the wheel and a split second of not being aware of my fingers position and it split my finger in two. I nearly lost the tip of my finger but luckily did not break the bone and only lost the fingernail. The finger still has some nerve damage from this. Since then, I made a point to tell anyone new who started building bikes about this danger and to not put their fingers near the rotor when it was spinning. Just like power tools: all it takes is a minor lapse in judgement and you can end up with a permanent injury. Glad you are making people aware of the dangers of bike maintenance!

  • @jasoncass8771
    @jasoncass8771 Рік тому +2

    What a great topic! I don't think I've seen anyone cover shop safety yet.

  • @Greg41982
    @Greg41982 Рік тому +2

    Yep, I've been mountain biking since 1988 and just a couple months ago, I snagged my finger in my brake rotor. I did it once in my spokes about 30 years ago. It happens, folks!

    • @wg2060
      @wg2060 Рік тому +1

      Yup, also been riding for decades. That rotor surprise cut can happen in a blink of the eye.

  • @SkonkBot
    @SkonkBot Рік тому +3

    Half way in and so far I've hurt myself via every method mentioned.... I suspect the trend will continue for the rest of the video :)

    • @SkonkBot
      @SkonkBot Рік тому +1

      So... yes, I have hurt myself via every method including (technically) the inflated fork opening.
      I once unscrewed what I thought was the Air Cap on some forks, but it was actually unscrewing a rod that held the entire lower section in place and after a few turns the bottom of the fork exploded and dumped out all the oil it had inside. It DID go off with a bang and some of the oil went in my eyes :(

  • @pinoyteam6417
    @pinoyteam6417 Рік тому

    I've been following you since 2016. Never have I ever been not entertained by any of your videos. Always enjoyed them and I'm usually learning something. Maintain your excellence and peace out.

  • @doichindoichev6274
    @doichindoichev6274 Рік тому +1

    Wow, good thing you mentioned the risk of injury due to the rotors! One time I was being careless while adjusting a client's caliper at my dad's shop and stuck my pointer finger in but as a matter of luck, the disc didn't cut completely through. It got stuck in the nail right above the bone and only some meat was left hanging. I got away just with some stitches!

  • @ToddHanson
    @ToddHanson Рік тому +3

    Seth: "I don't think I have a bad safety record."
    Also Seth: "Let me show you the numerous ways I've been hurt."

  • @harrisonmcphee2507
    @harrisonmcphee2507 Рік тому +5

    I’ve never seen him so safe

  • @raketoped663
    @raketoped663 Рік тому

    good reminder, thank you

  • @josephkysylyczyn1823
    @josephkysylyczyn1823 6 місяців тому

    Great video! back when i worked as a bike mechanic on my first day! I was spinning a wheel just like in the video adjusting a brake caliper without paying too much attention to my hands and CLUNK about half an inch of my finger chopped clean off. stay safe everyone rotors are dangerous!!

  • @sethgarland9374
    @sethgarland9374 Рік тому +8

    I may or may not have stuck my hand in my disc brake out of “curiosity” (lack of common sense) when I was in middle school. let’s just say I will NEVER do that again 😂

    • @triley9587
      @triley9587 Рік тому +2

      A few years ago I had a oops... I had biked into work that morning and about halfway in I could hear the pads rubbing on the disk. At lunch I flipped my bike upside down in my office and spun the wheel and was listening and looking to see what was going on. It looked like the pad wasn't seated all the way for some reason and I went to push it in. Well that was about the time a speed hole in disk on the SPINNING wheel came by and lifted my fingernail up like the hood of a 69 camero. It didn't feel good... To this day, when I sneeze it feels like that nail may fall off.

    • @sethgarland9374
      @sethgarland9374 Рік тому

      @@triley9587 😬ouch

    • @hammyh1165
      @hammyh1165 Рік тому

      😂😂

  • @lucaspaytowinbroski7993
    @lucaspaytowinbroski7993 Рік тому +6

    Safe? No that’s not allowed

  • @JasonFoxLCB
    @JasonFoxLCB Рік тому +1

    Always know where your hand is going to go when that bolt finally breaks loose. Learned this more working on my car than my bike, but still.

  • @ProtoV33MK1
    @ProtoV33MK1 2 місяці тому

    The one that kept getting me was back when I had a Schwinn StingRay. The forks are at a really shallow angle (chopper-style) and it has this big metal plate on the fork. If you grab it under the fork mount (where you commonly grab a normal bike from) when the wheel tips one way or the other, that plate will come around and slam right into your finger. The amount of times I got myself with that while converting it to electric before I converted it back and sold it.

  • @laurarose4370
    @laurarose4370 Рік тому +4

    love the videos! one suggestion is that maybe you could post raw riding videos. no commentary, just you being you. A lot of riders I know are impressed with your abilities on the bike so it would be entertaining to watch. Not to mention free content if you decide to ride. Again keep up the good work, I assume it must be challenging to juggle between family and 3.5M strangers across both channels.

  • @djSpinege
    @djSpinege Рік тому +3

    I know that was supposed to represent a Finger but my man parts are hurting from empathy now.

  • @Cheap_Grey_Plastic
    @Cheap_Grey_Plastic Рік тому +1

    I've done pretty much all of these things to some degree over the last 20 years, mostly when I was like 14 lol. One thing to be mindful of is that some air shocks and forks have multiple reservoirs (connected by tiny channels that can clog), and occasionally you'll empty the main and there will still be high pressure in the res. Cycle the shock a few times when letting the air out. Also, for the underinsured, keep super glue in the shop for relatively minor, clean cuts that should have stitches- it's the same thing they would use if you went to the ER.

  • @antonioZaRasFiNaLbOsS
    @antonioZaRasFiNaLbOsS Рік тому

    Honorable mention to spokes. I was in the park with a vintage bike when the shifting got messed up. I lifted the bike off the ground grabbing it from the chain stay, i spin the wheel to check the shifting and because the barrel adjuster was on the derailleur, I went for it and almost caught my fingers between the spokes and jokey wheels. So be aware of the spokes!!!

  • @landisdell8996
    @landisdell8996 Рік тому

    Awesome! I’ve done almost all of them. As you say, the danger isn’t always as obvious as you’d think!

  • @senorpants5604
    @senorpants5604 Рік тому

    While working on my bike I had it in the repair stand, clasped in by the seat post. I did not realize the clamp that kept the bike from rotating back and fourth needed to be tightened. Standing behind the bike, bending over slightly, I took my rear wheel off and the bike, now heavier in the front, took a nose dive. The part of the frame where the seat stay meets the chain stay hit me sqaure in my front tooth. This was a heavy, steel bike too. Thankfully it didn't knock my tooth out, or loose. It hurt just enough for me to learn my lesson. Tighten all the clamps on your repair stands fellas!

  • @pood1nk
    @pood1nk Рік тому

    i switched pedals today and just when i was about to start releasing the pedals i remembered the tip you gave in the vid about puting your chain on the largest cog and it saved me from an injury cause my wrench slipped in the middle on the release 😅 thanks for the tip

  • @mikespanner3096
    @mikespanner3096 Рік тому

    I have had on a couple occasions an air fork top cap blow off . It’s pretty scary!! And one of the times I injured my finger. Have had other minor injuries in my 30 plus years of being a career mechanic. I find your show entertaining and informative:). Keep up the good work 👍

  • @TheRex101Rex
    @TheRex101Rex Рік тому

    I'm amazed how you nailed each and every stupid things I've done on working on my bike.

  • @josiasmangussiborges
    @josiasmangussiborges Рік тому +1

    My little brother (4 yrs old) turned the wheel of a 29 and put his finger between disk rotor and frame...
    the worst day i could remember, he almost lose his nail matrix.
    Luckly he recoreved pretty well and now he know this is dangerous.
    Nice advice Berm! thanks for sharing

  • @andor_yoko
    @andor_yoko Рік тому +1

    Plenty of parts of me got hurt by working on bikes; finger in the brake rotor, almost passed out; plenty of smashed knuckles from bad tool placement; ears ringing after inner tube explosion; metal in my eye from using an angle grinder, while I was wearing safety goggles.

  • @Noondog
    @Noondog Рік тому +1

    Experienced bike enthusiast here. Even still, I detonated my tire literally days before you posted your old video. I blew off the cassette 20 feet and the pawls out of the hub. Sounded like a bomb went off. It unseated a DH casing tire with cushcore in the blink of an eye!! It was violent! Many doubted it could cause that carnage until I showed them your video a few days later 😂😂 What a coincidence. What a memory.

  • @CipoCat6
    @CipoCat6 Рік тому

    Former mechanic: frayed cables in the fingertips and under the nails, metal slivers, poked a hole in my thumb nail (mandatory ER visit) when a bolt broke free and I hit a rear rack, permanent scars on my knuckles while "reminding myself" to keep the chain on the biggest ring when working on a crank, so many pinches on random things that led to blood cleanup (pieces sliding together, like a loosened gooseneck stem), blew a tire off a rim trying to set up an old rim with a "make it tubeless setup" (never again) and lost my hearing for like 30 seconds and had a fluorescent pink hand for a few hours due to the impact, and many cuts, amongst the things I've forgotten. I like to think of scars as DIY tattoos.

  • @OutdoorDad-nv5mg
    @OutdoorDad-nv5mg Рік тому

    Excellent tips. I used to wrench for a local bike shop in the late Nineties and had my share of repair related cuts and bruises. I forgot to let the air out of a Cannondale Headshock and let me tell you there was no warning. Just BANG and a face full of oil. Never made that mistake again.

  • @shrinkingshrimp
    @shrinkingshrimp Рік тому

    Oh the chainring one made me remember one of my worst injury from my childhood and a good point against 3X setups:
    My right feet slipped down from the pedal and went across to the other side between the wheels, I didn't go over it with the rear wheel, but the chain was on the smallest ring, so instead I just punctured my calf in a nice straight line with the biggest ring.
    My favourite thing is that the plastic protector that I always hated and tought it was useless was still on the ring that supposed to prevent stuff like this.
    That was the most I have bled ever, ruined my sock and shoe, but fortunately it was nothing serious. Amazingly after some moths-years there was no scars visible (considering that it was a deep oily wound).

  • @cringemaster5871
    @cringemaster5871 11 місяців тому

    It's always very nice that someone's been through countless painful experiences so that the audience can learn from them. It's just too bad it had to be you and not the majority learning.

  • @brad.coombes
    @brad.coombes Рік тому

    Highly entertaining, thanks :) I have a special category of bike repair stoopid: attempting to fix things on the move. Last time I did this, I had been trying to set the sag on some forks (that might also be a separate, extreme category of bike repair risk). I went for a test ride with the forks locked out, then stupidly, opened them out one click while riding - Crown hit tyre, creating a very effective brake and I went over handlebars, resulting in four fractures to various parts of the body. Men can't multitask, so riding-while-repairing (or testing) is super dumb... But I'll do it again, for sure.

  • @romariossoossoiramor150
    @romariossoossoiramor150 7 місяців тому

    Thanks

  • @bikdav
    @bikdav Рік тому

    Good video. It’s helpful for future reference.

  • @wrongusername
    @wrongusername Рік тому

    Didn't expect this to be ashelpful as it was. I can imagine me doing many of these things, but just havn't gotten to it yet :D Thanks!

  • @Josephkazak
    @Josephkazak Рік тому

    Love this video!

  • @MrJonathanpearce
    @MrJonathanpearce Рік тому

    Same goes for spokes when spinning your wheels, I cut nearly to the bone when my finger got too close! Needless to say I learned my lesson. And totally agree with leaving the chain on, lost count of the times my knuckles have “found” the chainring when working on my bike 😂.

  • @WalkerBikes
    @WalkerBikes Рік тому

    Cut off my finger last year in a rear brake rotor in the shop....the thumbnail hit home.
    Literally exactly what happened in the first B-roll 🤣
    Big early 2000s 203mm rotor, reached around to manually close the caliper before I had hooked up the cable. Now I make sure I do the brake cables first instead of the shift cables

  • @BurritoMaster24
    @BurritoMaster24 Рік тому

    had a very budget bike stand just set it up and I pushed the cam down onto the top tube of my bike! When the cam snapped down my finger was in the mechanism! I lost a chunk of skin the size of a dime that day... now id also add watch your fingers arround cams and even the small ones on a seat post or any QR system.

  • @Eestlane08
    @Eestlane08 Рік тому +1

    As with tubeless tyres, when overpressuring, they might make loud bang so do inner tubes when not seated properly. Higher the pressure louder the bang :D I changed the inner tube of a road bike and didn't put a little air in the tube nor checked if the tube seated properly in the tyre... So at about 7 Bar the tyre blew :D. The blow was so loud that me and one of my then colleagues heard whistling sound several hours afterwards :D
    So remember: always put a little air into the new tube when replacing inner tubes :D

  • @johanvandermerwejohan6291
    @johanvandermerwejohan6291 Рік тому +1

    Yes Seth!!! New to your channel... dammit i find your stuff super awesome.. keep it up

  • @rocketappliantist4969
    @rocketappliantist4969 Рік тому

    This reminds me of the (in)famous Look Pivot ski binding. The way the heel piece snaps closed can easily crush your fingers. Seen people lose portions of their fingers from them. Absolutely love the bindings but everyone who owns a pair should know about that.

  • @joshuabuilds3051
    @joshuabuilds3051 Рік тому

    I was also trying a rotor and did that. Left thumb tip a couple months ago.

  • @motionstudio77
    @motionstudio77 Рік тому

    Great safety tips, being hurt bu the rotor before, & it was really painful…

  • @TheMayeah
    @TheMayeah Рік тому

    I have another fun one. Removing the cassette when it sits a bit tight. Grabbing underneath the biggest sprocket and just pulling or even leveraging your fingers against the spokes. That's a great way of ramming the cassette into the base of your thumbs when it finally comes loose. Happened to me twice. Cassette sprockets are really sharp and there was a lot of blood.

  • @lukevanwagner
    @lukevanwagner Рік тому

    Like 6 days ago I got my hand in a pretty fast moving rotor while adjusting my brakes and just about went through the whole finger. Definitely learned something.

  • @marcogiampa283
    @marcogiampa283 Рік тому

    trying to push a tyre lever along a stubborn tyre, slipping and slicing your hand on a bladed spoke. one of my personal favorites

  • @michaelsummer7082
    @michaelsummer7082 Рік тому

    When I was a bike mechanic at the shop, I was removing some speed play pedals. There were no flats for a wrench so you had to use an Allen key. This was back in the day and it had a triple, when the pedal broke free my middle finger tip have a chain ring and it smashed/ stabbed it off. I still have a tiny numb spot 17 years later

  • @kainpwnsu
    @kainpwnsu Рік тому

    I discovered rear shocks that have t been serviced in years DO NOT ALWAYS FULLY DEPRESSURIZE. At least I didn't have to drain the oil and use a pick to remove the rings... When I unscrewed the can, the oil blew out into a fine mist and rings popped off the piston head. I was also rewarded with ringing ears and whacked fingies.

  • @ryanv1279
    @ryanv1279 Рік тому +1

    When I would BMX as a kid I would always hurt myself cleaning my bike. For some reason once its on a stand I would forgot the handlebars turn. So when I would go to swap side I would grab the bike by the bars, usually causing the entire frame and rear wheel to slam into me.

  • @CarterBreckenridge
    @CarterBreckenridge 9 місяців тому

    I was once drilling out a stuck seatpost bolt. Thing was stuck BAD, so I drilled through the screw from one direction, but couldnt get all the way through, so I went at it from the other side, without noticing I was using my thump to brace against the seatpost clamp. The drill bit hooked into the screw, which now had a super sharp and hollow point, and drilled the screw straight into my thumb. Stopped on bone but took a nice core sample of the thumb.

  • @kr94.
    @kr94. Рік тому +1

    1:36 i did the exact same thing but it sliced half of my finger nail off. Be very careful you don’t realize how sharp those edges are on the rotor.

  • @andyswales781
    @andyswales781 Рік тому

    The disc rotor brings back some memories first finger experience whilst sanding disc on the rear with a wheel spinning at a good rate of knots my finger went straight in cutting it three quarters of the way around luckily the bone stopped it

  • @erictrelz3519
    @erictrelz3519 7 місяців тому

    Seth, great reminder message. I too have blown a tire off the rim. Destroyed the rim and tire and left ringing in my ears for days from the explosion. Tire sealant everywhere which is near impossible to clean. Stupid mistake by me and a painful reminder to pay attention at all times when working on your bike.

  • @flyingfish555
    @flyingfish555 Рік тому

    I have had an air cap fly off hard enough to make a bang and put a small dent in my drywall. It was on a relatively recent Manitou mattoc comp (2019 or 2020 model year I think). I let most of the air out with a shock pump but apparently there was still some residual. Now I know you're supposed to let the rest out by depressing the valve pin with a small tool after you get the majority out with a shock pump. I'd guess it depends on where the o-ring is situated. If it's still sealing in the air when you reach the end of the threads you get a bang.

  • @Xibalba28
    @Xibalba28 Рік тому

    I hyper extended my thumb trying to break the bead off a rim one time. Tire wasn't even tubeless of all things.
    Customer was right there and I saw/felt the pop of my thumb knuckle and I had to carry on like nothing happened while profusely sweating in pain lol. It's all healed up and good now :)

  • @austinsears2299
    @austinsears2299 Рік тому

    In the 4th grade I got a nasty staff infection in the back of my leg from my bike because it had a frayed brake cable. Good tips Have watched your videos since middle school and now I’m graduated

  • @Billsgarden
    @Billsgarden Рік тому

    To accompany the spinning brake disc. Be careful if you happen to adjust derailleurs while spinning the drivetrain. Once when I was adjusting the min max screws the screwdriver slipped and hit the wheel/gears and flew straight to my lip. Beast case it hit me with the dull end and all I got was a bruised lip for couple days.

  • @erickroeger1012
    @erickroeger1012 11 місяців тому +1

    Working in a bike shop, I would regularly get poked with frayed cables. Once, my thumb swelled up and throbbed for 3 days. Sleep was impossible, it hurt so much. I had a red streak (sepsis) that ran 1/2 way up my arm. I was young and dumb, but I wish I'd understood how serious it was. Fill out the L&I forms and go to the doctor.