I have a question that might have some general interest beyond Knuckles (Pan, Inidans, most older bikes), but wasn't sure where to put it other than here ...
I love the stability and ability to do some minor work on my 1940 EL while it's on its rear stand, however I've never heard anything about the optimal way to get it up there. I know you can rock it forward for easily getting it down, and I've seen a guy use a curb while rolling it back to lift it, but in general, I was wondering if there's some "nifty" way of getting it up on the rear stand without risking having the bike fall.
I used to lift the bike by the rear fender braces until I popped a fender/brace rivet, plus that requires a little bit of back & leg power, so I'm not sure that's what was originally intended. I guess that before the Jiffy stand, the rear stand was all that was available, so lifting the bike from the back without having a jiffy stand to hold it upright would've been disastrous. Did people just "lean" the bike as they would a bicycle without a kick-stand?
Anyway, I'm guessing that there is some very obvious and easy technique that I haven't figured out intuitively yet, and will feel silly when the answers come in, but am willing to throw myself on the mercy of those in the know.
Thanks!
Vic
I love the stability and ability to do some minor work on my 1940 EL while it's on its rear stand, however I've never heard anything about the optimal way to get it up there. I know you can rock it forward for easily getting it down, and I've seen a guy use a curb while rolling it back to lift it, but in general, I was wondering if there's some "nifty" way of getting it up on the rear stand without risking having the bike fall.
I used to lift the bike by the rear fender braces until I popped a fender/brace rivet, plus that requires a little bit of back & leg power, so I'm not sure that's what was originally intended. I guess that before the Jiffy stand, the rear stand was all that was available, so lifting the bike from the back without having a jiffy stand to hold it upright would've been disastrous. Did people just "lean" the bike as they would a bicycle without a kick-stand?
Anyway, I'm guessing that there is some very obvious and easy technique that I haven't figured out intuitively yet, and will feel silly when the answers come in, but am willing to throw myself on the mercy of those in the know.
Thanks!
Vic
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