Deliver to Peru
IFor best experience Get the App
🚴♂️ Elevate Your Bike Game with Every Repair!
The E Bike Repair Stand is a heavy-duty maintenance solution designed for e-bikes, mountain bikes, and road bikes, featuring a super-strong 6070 aluminum frame, a micro-adjustable clamp, and a user-friendly design that ensures easy handling and storage.
R**E
Works on my cargo bike.
Purchased this (after a purchase via Ebay that laughed at the stand). Given the pics & reviews in regards to using this on fat bikes appears to hold true. Have a AWD Cargo Bike in which weighs around (probably) the max acceptable wt of the bike (bike weight is also incl. battery & rear trunk bag so removal is necessary). The frame is an "S" flat top tube (clamp does work but a job to get on (a 2 person job as stated here in reviews) so seat tube was used for work on rear work (drivetrain & disc brake) which allowed plenty of space to do the work (tire off the ground w/o needing to raise/increase the height). No bending/space btwn the teeth of the clamp as well. Hope that this review may help for some riders using fat bikes.
J**S
I Would Make These Corrections
This is a fairly good bicycle stand; I have two of them, but I would make these improvements: The tubing is smooth and slippery. This can cause the quick release skewers to slip causing the stand to collapse. After setting up the stand and making sure everything was as tight, the height adjust quick release started to slowing slip down causing the stand to fall forward with my bike on the ground. My bike is a GT MTB 29", not electric. To correct this, I placed adjustable pipe clamps just above the skewers to make sure this would not happen again. Additionally, the folding legs should be longer. I compared them to the Park stand legs and noticed the Gioventù are considerably shorter.
D**O
This is the bike you want to get if you have an e-bike (Radpower or other)
I bought another bike stand before this one; rated to 66 lbs--silly me. That isn't enough to withstand both the weight of a RadRunner 2 or a RadPower 6 plus AND the torque of you wrenching on it. lol. The reinforced plastic parts of that stand never really had a chance (entirely my mistake).So, if you go back into bike maintenance rating sites and look up "bike stand" you get professional ones that start around $395--which seems like overkill.Or, you can get this one, which, if you pick the heavier duty version, says it will take 120 lbs. And, so far, that seems to be entirely true. I'm delighted.Easy to assembly, easy to stand up, compacts down to a small tubular shape when you don't need it, clamp has been pretty sturdy.By the way: this is non-intuitive but if you read deeply into the websites--you want to clamp the (very securely tightened down) VERTICAL SEAT POST--not the top frame tube--of a bike you put into a stand. Apparently, while not always true, it's a good habit to get into because tightening a clamp on a horizontal frame tube can dent/crush it and then set it up for failure.The seat post tube, on the other hand, is routinely thicker and tougher (well, you do put your entire weight on it and then bounce up and down)---and is much less likely to crush.So far, so good for this bike stand!
M**I
Customer Support
Item arrived with broken parts but nothing serious enough to return it. I tried to contact the manufacturer for advice on a workaround via email, however, I did not receive a response even though gmail showed that the email had been opened and read.Update; customer support contacted me and settled the matter at hand quickly and efficiently
S**.
Not a lifetime tool. There’s a reason it’s half the price of a Park Tools stand.
Just to be clear, I’m a bike nut. Worked in a bike shop for a few years, have well over 100K miles on bikes, and own two other Park Tool stands. The reason that the seller is able to hit this price point is in thin walled metal and lighter materials. It’s literally half the weight of my folding Park stand with very thin walled metal. (I put it on my digital bike scale and compared it to my Park stand). That said, it seems to be okay for light use. One of the feet was cracked right out of the box. Repaired it with gorilla tape out of the box but it’s a bummer to have to seek small parts replacement for a stand that been used for less than 2 hours. The rubber on the handlebar holder tore on the first use as well. The clamp, legs, and adjustable height seems to work fine. The tool tray is great. I’ve only used it so far with lightweight carbon bikes (under 20 pounds). Will update once I stick one of my heavier mountain bikes on it. The price is good for the stand and it does work fine. Definitely not a lifetime tool. I expect the plastic parts to fail or the thin walled metal to bend prematurely. Hopefully I can get a few years out of it. If I had to order again, I’d have just ordered a Park Stand and had a tool that would last for the rest of my life. You get what you pay for in tools. That said it’s fine for an occasional use hobbyist stand.
J**.
So far so good!
This was easy to set up and it seems pretty sturdy, holding my 65 pound e-bike! I had it set much higher than this for about a couple of hours, but decided I really didn’t need it that high.
K**R
Good quality
Good quality, but a little awkward to use. Only used twice so could be user error. Good price.
D**C
Not for heavy bikes. Dangerous and difficult to use.
I purchased this stand because of the advertised "110 lb capacity". I have a Cannondale Moterra E Bike that weighs about 60lbs loaded and less than 50lbs without the battery. This stand was to replace my 15 year old Park Tool stand.When the stand was assembled I was surprised how easy it was to tip backwards. Even just brushing by the stand it would tip backwards. I figured it would probably be usable with a heavy bike latched to it so I gave it a shot.The first problem is the jaw operation. I have to use my seatpost to clamp the bike because its carbon and the way the frame is designed. In order to get the seatpost into the jaws, you have to open them several turns with the small adjustment handle. Once you get the bike in place, you have to tighten the handle several times by spinning it all while placing your foot on the leg of the stand so it doesn't fall backwards. Again, this is all being done while trying to hold a 60lb bike, one handed, at shoulder level.Once the bike was finally in place, it was very unstable. I was trying to install the back wheel and the bike stand fell back crashing to the ground while holding my $8,000 bike.I wouldn't recommend this stand to anyone, with any bike at any weight. Just far too dangerous.
F**O
Bastante bueno por el precio
Ligero, buen diseño, buena construcción. Suficiente para el hobby
A**R
As Advertised - Perfect
It does what it advertised. Holds Heavy Electric Bike with ease. Can rotate, raise & lower height, folds up with ease, all as stated in ad. Have used twice and I can see I will be happy with this product.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 semana
Hace 1 día