Forum menu
i need one. needs to be fairly robust and versatile. long all day, away from town rides.....
ac282 +1
Got everything I need, even tyre levers, and I find the chain tool excellent - far better than any of the ones I have in my main toolbox!
Also cheap compared to many.
from CRC...
[url= http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/Models.aspx?ModelID=47731 ]Hummer[/url]
[img]
[/img]
[url= http://www.chainreactioncycles.com/Models.aspx?ModelID=28710 ]Hexus[/url]
[img] [/img]
have they got thsat mixed up?
+1 for Hexus (used to be called Hummer, they had to change the name)
I have a topeak alien - its an old one but it does everything I need including a good chain tool. Used for ten years and its still fine.
Probably because of the Eddie Bauer Hummer pictured by CRC
sks toolbox travel here
I've got some cheapo no-brand one, a topeak one and a slightly more bling crank bros one. All work more or less the same.
Topeak Hexus for me, Lezyne are better made but Topeak have the best chaintools and the Hexus is so nice to use. It does everything well enough and some things very well. Oh, except the tyre levers aren't very good but then they never are. It does lack a knife though, that would be useful.
I did have an Alien 2 but it was bulky and a bit more awkward to use, I didn't really get on with it and half of the extra tools are useless to me since they have no application on any of my bikes. I can see they could be more useful if you need to build a climbing frame mid-ride 😉 (or, if you ride an older bike or a tourer or you use racks or any number of other things that people do)
Lezyne. Really well made and sell all day because of this, their value for money and even the distributor's nice, which makes a change.
This is a bargain - just got one myself and its very good!
http://www.wiggle.co.uk/p/cycle/7/Lezyne_Loaded_Smart_Pack_2_Litre_Hydration_System/5360046484/
Pump (£17) levers, Multitool (£15+), 2l Hydration pack and room for a netbook for £31! Mental...
Hexus gets my vote as a trail tool as well.
Park folders as my home workshop tools, but the Hexus really does have everything you might need for trailside repairs, even including a disc rotor sized hex key.
I've always used a cheap allen key multitool, a cyclo chain tool, and park tyre levers.
I don't think I've seen a review of a multitool that doesn't include criticism of the inbuilt chain tool, or the included tyre levers, so have always stuck with the basics instead. Obviously got two sets, one live in my camelbak, one lives in a small seatpack that gets swapped between the roadbikes.
[url= http://www.fatbirds.co.uk/detail.asp/sku=xtra-TT2353 ]+1 Topeak Alien[/url]
[img]
[/img]
missingfrontallobe +1
I don't think I've seen a review of a multitool that doesn't include criticism of the inbuilt chain tool, or the included tyre levers, so have always stuck with the basics instead.
seperates all the way, the multitool is a lovely thing, like a Transformer (robots in disguise) but not actually as practical in real life use as individual tools
Park allen key tool, chain brute and some levers.
Can anybody recomend a tool with piers built in ? I have to carry a set from my home tool box on top of everything else just in case I need to open the powerlink on my chain.
EDIT : Ooops...that's pLiers, not a french bike mechanic hiding in a multitool !
Petesgaff - How big and heavy is that bag?
I have the bigger Lezyne Power Pack backpack and could do with something smaller for short rides.
Looks a right bargain.
+1 for Topeak Alien, had mine for years and its still mint. Very good chain tool on it.
Crank Bos 17 + a Leatherman Skeletool. Sorted.
The chain breaker on the CB17 is excellent as well, it won't push the pin all the way out.
Hexus/hummer - keep coming back to one of these.
Crank Bros 10, decently long keys etc.
Park chain tool.
Gerber multi-pliers.
For £30 they have the 3l version of that bag as well, I've just ordered one....
Multitool = boytoy
proper allenkeys/chain tool/torx key much better IMO and weigh less to boot.....
Another vote for the topeak alien, mine has done a decade of service too and still good as new.
Another one worth looking at from a speed point of view is the topeak ratchet rocket (think lifeline do a cheaper rip off of this on wiggle), wouldn't do on big rides as your only option but is a bloody handy addition to any pack.
I've got a soma woodie (ooer).Nice looking but quite small and a little flexy so not great for leverage. Recently got a Lezyne CRV19, top build quality and very solid.
I think Lezyne make the nicest stuff, of the major brands anyway, lovely. But the tools don't seem to be as well thought our as the Hexus, I guess Topeak have been making it and evolving it forever so they've had more time to get it right. If Lezyne made the Hexus it'd be the best tool in the world, probably.
I have two smaller Soma onea - wood is very nice and hasn't gone all tatty. Hex keys seem to be tough and haven't rounded any bolts. Recommended (unless you put them down and wander off, because you'll never find it again).
happy with my soma woody too, bit of surface rust on the tools, but nowt bad. nice thing about it is that the joining pins have never come loose on mine, unlike on previous tools - so nice not to have it all wobbly or too stiff.
recommended.
crank brothers 10 for me, looks great, tough and 10 year warranty i think 🙂
[b]@Br1zz[/b] Pliers = leatherman tool doesn't it, but they don't have allen key tools on, only screwdrivers I think.
Don't take this the wrong way, but why would you need to open a powerlink on a ride, and can't you open it by hand anyway?
proper allenkeys/chain tool/torx key much better IMO and weigh less to boot.....
fail....
what multitools have you been using that are that heavy ?
All I carry is the topeak alien. It has everthing I need on it and little that I don't. It is lighter (at a guess) than carrying separate tools and is certainly more convenient.
[b]missingfrontallobe[/b]
OK, I can't think of a good reason to be undoing a powerlink on a ride...except, if I start thinking about NOT being able to undo it I'll worry about it constantly and it will spoil every ride I ever go on. Maybe.
Or...I'll discover why I need to undo one when I really need to undo one in a hurry in the middle of nowhere...hmmm...I think I might need to start worrying about this possibility too.
TBH I just like the idea of carrying enough stuff to cope with every eventuality, but doing so with the minimum amount of kit.
Oh and if you know the knack of how to undo a powerlink with your hands please pass it on - I must be doing something wrong because it's like trying to push a piece of string !
I am thinking about getting a trailer, that way I can just take my stand and toolbox with me. Could even fit in a stereo and some beer...just like fixing stuff at home.
Oh and if you know the knack of how to undo a powerlink with your hands please pass it on - I must be doing something wrong because it's like trying to push a piece of string !
i would tell you but id have to kill you ....
reality - i could explain to you till your blue in the face the knack BUT unless i showed you and taught you youd never get it !
I have a leyzene after my topeak rusted to buggery and my cheapy no name rattled itself apart and I couldn't find all the bits.
The philips screwdriver dosn't actually fit any of the philips head screws on my mechs and it dosn't include an allen key the right size for my Oro lever adjustment bolts. Not impressed. Beautifully made, but not as well thought out as it could be.
br1zz -Oh and if you know the knack of how to undo a powerlink with your hands please pass it on - I must be doing something wrong because it's like trying to push a piece of string !
Ever since I've used them I've been able to undo powerlinks by hand, I know that a common theme on forums is how to do so, I couldn't instructions how, I just can - and it isn't a strength thing, I wouldn't say I have particularly strong hands, it's just a knack I've acquired.
The need to remove a chain mid-ride can be required due to severe chain suck, BTW. Had that happen once.
Damn!
What if that happens to me ?!
I think it would be best if I avoid cycling altogether.
Anything I should know about walking places ?
The Alien doesn't have a 2.5m allen key, IIRC.
This is the size of the bolt holding the bottom jocky wheel in X9 mechs - and they tend to seize up quite a lot.
I've had to depend on others having the right size allen key before, until I remembered the pull-out rebound adjuster in my RS forks was the right size.
Not sure why I bothered typing this, but I know I was quite pleased with myself when I realised.
I think squeezing the powerlinks together as you push on them helps.
until I remembered the pull-out rebound adjuster in my RS forks was the right size.
Genius! I think that may solve my problems too ...
chakaping - Member
The Alien doesn't have a 2.5m allen key, IIRC.
Pretty sure mine does, but it is quite short and was difficult to access the two 2.5mm bolts I needed it for.
Personally, I don't like the fiddly nature of tightening bolts up with a multitool (some bolts are much easier than others, obviously). I'm inclined towards individual allenkeys, and these look like a quite compact arrangement:
[img]
[/img]
I could ditch the 10mm out of that, and everything is covered.
