Repairing a bike while it’s on the floor, or worse, upside down on the floor, is a difficult task. If you work on your bike with any frequency a repair stand will make the work significantly easier to complete. Your body will also thank you; all that bending will eventually give you a backache. Bringing the bike up to eye level with a bike repair stand is the ergonomically proper way to repair your bike.
What to Look for in a Bike Repair Stand
The most significant element of a bike repair stand is its clamp. A modern bike repair stand will have a specialized clamp that is easy to engage while you are lifting the bike. It should also limit how much pressure you can apply to your frame’s tubes or seatpost as not to crush it. Some stands hold the bike by the fork, requiring you to remove the front wheel and clamping the fork. An option to ensure that you do not damage your bike in the clamp while being able to work on the front wheel is the Hirobel Carbon Frame Clamp. Look for a review on ILB in a few weeks.
The legs of a bike repair stand should be stable, both under load of your bike and without your bike, and also out of the way. If the legs protrude too much you will trip over them as you are working on your bike.
If you have a lot of dedicated space to work on your bike, this will not be a concern, but a folding stand would be nice otherwise. It is also a bonus if you travel and need to bring a bike repair stand.
The Bike Repair Stands
Park Tool PCS-10 – Park Tool is a long-time tool maker. Their experience contributed to the updated clamp with easy pressure manipulation. The long legs spread around your work area in front of the bike while providing stability. The stand folds up with quick release levers so you can store and travel with the stand.
Topeak PrepStand Pro Bicycle – The Topeak stand has an extremely stable base and a dial clamp to fine tune pressure. An additional bonus is a small scale integrated into the arm for all the weight weenies out there.
Feedback Sports Classic – Feedback Sports sets the standard for bike work stands. Smart designs that fold up easy, work well and are lightweight set their stands apart. The anodized aluminum should resist corrosion from solvents and dirt from repairing bikes.
Tacx Spider Team – Tacx stands are a mainstay of the pro peloton’s mechanics. This stand clamps the fork dropouts to ensure your frame tubes stay pristine. The bike can spin on the stand so you do not have to walk around it.
Pedro’s Folding Repair Stand – Along with the standard features of a good bike work stand, the Pedro’s stand has a trigger activated clamp so you can easily clamp your bike with one hand. It also has a carrying bag to make travel easier.
DIY Bike Repair Stand
It may not be pretty, but you can make your own repair stand too. There are a number of ways to do it. Hanging an old tire from rafters or pipes in your garage or basement ceiling and hooking the saddle through is probably the easiest way. The bike will swing around a little but put a tube or another tire around the stem to hold it a bit more firmly. It will do in a pinch.
Building two supports into a wall (make sure the bike sits far enough away from the wall to spin the pedals) is also a pretty simple method. Think of how a trunk rack for a car cradles the bike. That’s the idea behind this. Tie down the bike to the rack to stabilize it and to keep it from jumping off.
Get to Work
A bike work stand will make repairing your bike easier. If you are not strained while working, you will work with more precision. You will also be able to clean and repair places that were once hard to reach while the bike was on the floor. Everyone knows that a clean bike in good repair is a fast, fun bike to ride, so get to work.