Peddle Noise!

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chillyuk

Guest
Therein lies one of the results of trying to be clever and correct someone's spelling. If the OP is dyslexic, and we have no reason to doubt his word, being picked on will do little for his confidence. We are here to talk bikes and cycling not hold English classes.
 
OP
OP
ChrisRicho

ChrisRicho

Active Member
Therein lies one of the results of trying to be clever and correct someone's spelling. If the OP is dyslexic, and we have no reason to doubt his word, being picked on will do little for his confidence. We are here to talk bikes and cycling not hold English classes.

Hey its no problem.

I can only learn from it, i do try hard to spell things correctly i just get a bit jumbled up now and again.

Took me till mid teens to master writing the correct b or d.
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Still managed to get two GCSE B's
 

Little yellow Brompton

A dark destroyer of biscuits!
Location
Bridgend
Temperamental i would assume is the main word to describe this situation..
whistling.gif

" A hit, a very palpable hit!" :cheers:
 

ColinJ

Puzzle game procrastinator!
Perhaps the crash bent the frame so one crank arm is now catching on a chain stay?
The guy in my local lbs said that the frame had not bent. I don't know if they can definitely say that? Im pretty new to all this.

I suppose i could take it in and re ask..
If the crank is touching the chain stay, you should be able to see it if you rotate the cranks by hand when you are off the bike. The inside of the crank would probably have scraped the paintwork.

It might be that the crank is very close to the stay and only actually touches it when you are applying a fair bit of force to the pedals, causing the frame to flex slightly. I had that once when I had used a bolt that was too long to hold my front derailleur on. It rubbed on my back tyre when I stood up on steep hills.

Of course, there might be a completely different explanation!
 
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