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I’m off to spend an hour or so checking their other work!
Long story short, the front deraileur snapped clean off my decathlon bike so I returned it to the shop for a warranty repair (there’s a story to this too but I’ll stay on point!). I then get a call a few hours later to say there is a problem with the front shifter and that they have ordered a replacement part – I hadn’t noticed an issue but they’re repairing it so hey ho.
Fast forward a week and my freshly repaired bike is ready to collect, I pop into store, give the receipt and get the bike – simples! Well, they had turned the handlebars 90 degrees, presumably to make the bike easier to store – in order to straighen them the employee started to undo the top cap?! He then straightened the bars and started to loosen the cap again, once he worked out that it’s righty tighty he cinched down on the nut and said there you go – didn’t touch the stem bolts once, and not a torque wrench in sight!
Now I’m often astounded my peoples idiocy but this was down right dangerous – he handed me the bike “ready to ride” but with bars nowhere near secure – I’d have been off at the first corner! Luckily I know what I’m looking at but I’d imagine plenty of decathlon customers rely on the shops work – accidents waiting to happen in my opinion!
I guess the lesson to be learned is never trust the shops setup! I’m sure your freindly local bike shop is different but the big box stores seem to let anyone swing an allen key!
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