Fairly certain LBS damaged my frame, am I crazy?
#1
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Fairly certain LBS damaged my frame, am I crazy?
Bought an old Raleigh Friday (531 full butted) , took it to the shop Saturday for 27 clinchers and had them grease the seatpost while I was there to prevent it from ever getting seized. When I got the bike back, I noticed this.
These crimps are both symmetrical, with a ridge running in the middle of two identical dents. I believe they're almost certainly caused by a repair stand clamping the butted seat tube too hard. I don't own a repair stand in my apartment and did nothing with the bike that would have involved any kind of force, other than a shakedown ride of a mile or so. The only work I did was move the seat down about a centimeter.
The shop is adamant that the frame was already damaged when the bike was brought in. I had photographic proof that the bike was not damaged as late as last night, but they told me that the bike could have been damaged between Friday night and Saturday morning (it was leaning against a wall in my living room).
Is there anything I can do here? And am I jumping to conclusions about this being the most likely cause of the crimping marks? I don't have like, a video of them actually putting the bike in the stand by the seat tube, so it's not like I can take this to court or anything, but would asking for a refund of labor costs and possibly some of the cost of frame repair be reasonable?
I'm mainly confused because this is a shop with a sterling reputation in Seattle, deals with used bikes a lot, and would usually know better than to clamp a butted steel frame by the seat tube.
These crimps are both symmetrical, with a ridge running in the middle of two identical dents. I believe they're almost certainly caused by a repair stand clamping the butted seat tube too hard. I don't own a repair stand in my apartment and did nothing with the bike that would have involved any kind of force, other than a shakedown ride of a mile or so. The only work I did was move the seat down about a centimeter.
The shop is adamant that the frame was already damaged when the bike was brought in. I had photographic proof that the bike was not damaged as late as last night, but they told me that the bike could have been damaged between Friday night and Saturday morning (it was leaning against a wall in my living room).
Is there anything I can do here? And am I jumping to conclusions about this being the most likely cause of the crimping marks? I don't have like, a video of them actually putting the bike in the stand by the seat tube, so it's not like I can take this to court or anything, but would asking for a refund of labor costs and possibly some of the cost of frame repair be reasonable?
I'm mainly confused because this is a shop with a sterling reputation in Seattle, deals with used bikes a lot, and would usually know better than to clamp a butted steel frame by the seat tube.
Last edited by sheddle; 09-20-20 at 07:33 PM.
#2
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I don't quite understand the purpose of bringing it to a shop. They have little interest in the long-term health of your bike. They will never treat the details as well as you.
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#3
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That sucks!
I’m not sure how a repair stand clamp could do that damage. It looks very strange to have two rather smooth dents in different parts of the tube and at different angles.
Good luck getting it sorted!
I’m not sure how a repair stand clamp could do that damage. It looks very strange to have two rather smooth dents in different parts of the tube and at different angles.
Good luck getting it sorted!
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I needed 27 clinchers and was hoping for a used frame pump, and didn't want to wait to have them mail ordered. I like the shop so I decided to pay for installation (and the seatpost grease) while I looked around at their used parts.
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#6
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How did you transport the bike to the shop? Did you speak with the owner on the phone, or an employee? Next step may be to take the frame back to the shop and respectfully ask to speak to the owner and look at the workstands to see if the clamps they use match the indentations on the frame.
It is strange that the frame could be dented so badly without damaging the paint. There is some extremely remote possibility that a vacuum seal was somehow created inside the seat tube, and a pressure or temperature differential caused the tube to collapse... I can't think of anything else that could have caused this.
The dents may be able to be rolled out or pressed out with frame blocks. This would damage the paint. In Seattle I think Aaron Goss (Aaron's Bikes/Rat Rod Bikes) could do this or point you in the right direction.
It is strange that the frame could be dented so badly without damaging the paint. There is some extremely remote possibility that a vacuum seal was somehow created inside the seat tube, and a pressure or temperature differential caused the tube to collapse... I can't think of anything else that could have caused this.
The dents may be able to be rolled out or pressed out with frame blocks. This would damage the paint. In Seattle I think Aaron Goss (Aaron's Bikes/Rat Rod Bikes) could do this or point you in the right direction.
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I rode the bike to the shop, about half a mile downhill. I don't want to rule out that it could possibly have been damaged by that rude but I've never had that happen before, especially in a low stress area like the middle of the seat tube.
I asked in another thread and they believed the denting without paint damage was because it was clamped by something soft or padded: ie a repair stand.
I asked in another thread and they believed the denting without paint damage was because it was clamped by something soft or padded: ie a repair stand.
#8
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The crimps do look about the size of the Efficient Velo Tools "right arm repair clamp", which is something I'd expect a better shop in the Northwest to have, and can very easily be tightened too hard.
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How did you transport the bike to the shop? Did you speak with the owner on the phone, or an employee? Next step may be to take the frame back to the shop and respectfully ask to speak to the owner and look at the workstands to see if the clamps they use match the indentations on the frame.
n.
n.
Once again this is a shop with a very good reputation and that I generally trust- which makes me think that they're not lying- but they might be simply wrong. I've made enough mistakes with repairs in my life to know that sometimes your memory is outright faulty, and that the part you swear on the Bible you left on the counter is in fact inexplicably on the windowsill by the bathroom.
I was going to take the bike to the Rodriguez shop, since they also offer frame repair, and hopefully get a quote.
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I spoke with both the owner and one of the mechanics who worked on it (more than one mech touched the bike which I think makes a mistake more likely). Owner deferred to the mechanics, which was fair, and the mechanics were adament that the damage was existent when they received the bike..
..............
Last edited by branko_76; 09-20-20 at 08:20 PM.
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Incidentally, this is safe to ride for now right? Seat tube damage away from the stay cluster and BB is a low stress area, though I'm somewhat concerned about creasing (it's still round, but a bit narrow)
#13
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You could also have someone expert dust the bike for fingerprints. That might tell you something about who is personally responsible.
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This is rather puzzling, a repair stand does seem like the culprit, but someone would have to doing it really, really wrong to produce dents like this it seems.
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What I was going to do was go to the Rodriguez shop (really well regarded frame builders who also do steel frame repair) and get a) a quote for repairs, and b) hopefully an opinion that this was almost certainly due to a repair stand.
I figure that if I have a) a time stamped photograph showing no frame damage the night before, b) a statement from the seller that the damage didn't exist at the time of sale and I somehow missed it (already confirmed this) , and c) a statement from a frame builder that this was almost certainly a repair stand, then I can probably have enough leverage to hopefully get the repair costs covered.
Suing them isn't an option, I'm a poor bastard who spends all his money on old bikes.
I figure that if I have a) a time stamped photograph showing no frame damage the night before, b) a statement from the seller that the damage didn't exist at the time of sale and I somehow missed it (already confirmed this) , and c) a statement from a frame builder that this was almost certainly a repair stand, then I can probably have enough leverage to hopefully get the repair costs covered.
Suing them isn't an option, I'm a poor bastard who spends all his money on old bikes.
Last edited by sheddle; 09-20-20 at 08:51 PM.
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If you've got pictures from the night before that show it whole and undented then you need to make them deal with this. There's not much, practically nothing, that will make a tube dent like that especially just falling over. But I've seen clamp damage like that and if you've got a pic showing its undamaged you need to show them the pic and ask for it to be fixed.
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I'm not familiar with that repair stand, but I can't imagine how hard I would have to crank on my park tools repair stand to put dents like that in a seat tube.
This is rather puzzling, a repair stand does seem like the culprit, but someone would have to doing it really, really wrong to produce dents like this it seems.
This is rather puzzling, a repair stand does seem like the culprit, but someone would have to doing it really, really wrong to produce dents like this it seems.
I wonder if the clamp was setup for a seatpost and the doofus didn't adjust it for the frame
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I'm not familiar with that repair stand, but I can't imagine how hard I would have to crank on my park tools repair stand to put dents like that in a seat tube.
This is rather puzzling, a repair stand does seem like the culprit, but someone would have to doing it really, really wrong to produce dents like this it seems.
This is rather puzzling, a repair stand does seem like the culprit, but someone would have to doing it really, really wrong to produce dents like this it seems.
The one thing I wonder is if the seatpost being removed may have made it more likely to bend the tube.
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What I was going to do was go to the Rodriguez shop (really well regarded frame builders who also do steel frame repair) and get a) a quote for repairs, and b) hopefully an opinion that this was almost certainly due to a repair stand.
I figure that if I have a) a time stamped photograph showing no frame damage the night before, b) a statement from the seller that the damage didn't exist at the time of sale and I somehow missed it (already confirmed this) , and c) a statement from a frame builder that this was almost certainly a repair stand, then I can probably have enough leverage to hopefully get the repair costs covered.
I figure that if I have a) a time stamped photograph showing no frame damage the night before, b) a statement from the seller that the damage didn't exist at the time of sale and I somehow missed it (already confirmed this) , and c) a statement from a frame builder that this was almost certainly a repair stand, then I can probably have enough leverage to hopefully get the repair costs covered.
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The repair stand has to be adjusted for pretty much every bike that gets placed in it as there are so many different diameters of seat tubes and seat posts, some seat posts are larger diameter than some seat tubes and so on...
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This is pretty much proof they did the damage, how they did the damage doesn't really matter at this point, although I am interested in how they mangled a steel frame like that.
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I'd like to say I fought them on this point but I'm not really a combative person, I was practically in tears because I loved the frame so much.