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#1
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Park vs. Ultimate Workstand??
Hello all
Does anyone have an opinion related to either the Park Tool PCS-4 Deluxe Home workstand or the Ultimate BRS-80RT Pro repair stand? They are both in a similar price range and I am trying to choose between the two. Any opinions that would lead me to one to the other would be great. I am leaning towards the Park stand, mostly because I have been able to find it at several online shops. I would like a stand at home that is high quality and this seems to be the range of products for me. Thanks Joel |
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#2
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Joel Rose wrote:
Does anyone have an opinion related to either the Park Tool PCS-4 Deluxe Home workstand or the Ultimate BRS-80RT Pro repair stand? I've got the PCS-1. It's fairly similar in concept to the PCS-4. I like it a great deal, but have one major caveat: I wrench in the living room. I set a drop cloth on the carpet and put the stand on the drop cloth. I will /not/ be deprived of quality TV time just because I have bike work to do ;-) In that environment (on a tarp, on the carpet), the 'feet' are not secure enough (because they fold flat for storage). If you swing the bike around, the feet will try to fold up flat and the bike will try to fall over. This is a bad thing. On a stable surface, offering real traction, I think the PCS-4 would be ideal. The adjustments make it simple to readily find the right height and angle to fix anything. The clamps are rock solid. The material are first-rate and durable. The "fold flat" feature (aforementioned caveat aside) makes it closet-ready in a half-second. I'd like to buy the tool tray for mine. Just that much easier to keep the tool that your working with /at that moment/ right at hand. Good luck! Neil |
#3
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I REALLY(!) like the clamp on the Ultimate Pro. Rather than a vice
grip, you push the clamp shut, then tweek it gently until it holds. You're less likely to squish a frame tube with this clamp. I've never been all that impressed with the Park, even with the "shop models" in the shops because there is that vice grip action that can bend things. If you check out Excel Sports, they currently have the Ultimate Pro in black with the tool holder ($25 list) for like $140. Makes me wish I'd waited, but the one for which I paid $150 without the tool holder has gotten lots of use. Joel Rose wrote: Hello all Does anyone have an opinion related to either the Park Tool PCS-4 Deluxe Home workstand or the Ultimate BRS-80RT Pro repair stand? They are both in a similar price range and I am trying to choose between the two. Any opinions that would lead me to one to the other would be great. I am leaning towards the Park stand, mostly because I have been able to find it at several online shops. I would like a stand at home that is high quality and this seems to be the range of products for me. Thanks Joel |
#4
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"richard" wrote in message news:i4Und.75580$5K2.31720@attbi_s03... You're less likely to squish a frame tube with this clamp. You should never clamp a frame tube with your workstand. Clamp your seatpost instead. If you use a carbon seatpost, substitute it with a steel one before clamping. |
#5
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I've got the "spin doctor" G2 Pro stand and like it. Actually I'm
liking it better than the PCS-5 it replaced. My local bike shop had it on sale for $119. The clamp is nicer than most the other stands. The ultimate pro was another choice, but that would've meant paying the $189 they were asking, or mail ordering. Mark bfd wrote: "richard" wrote in message news:i4Und.75580$5K2.31720@attbi_s03... You're less likely to squish a frame tube with this clamp. You should never clamp a frame tube with your workstand. Clamp your seatpost instead. If you use a carbon seatpost, substitute it with a steel one before clamping. -- Mark Wolfe Lakeside, ca http://www.wolfenet.org gpg fingerprint = 42B6 EFEB 5414 AA18 01B7 64AC EF46 F7E6 82F6 8C71 Bill Gates to his broker: "You idiot, I said $150 million on **SNAPPLE**!!!" |
#6
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I've had both and I MUCH prefer the Ultimate. The tripod leg
configuration of the Ultimate makes a non-issue of the post below this one where the stand is tippy on carpet. The clamp is excellent, though I wouldn't clamp any bike by a frame tube... "just one more little touch tighter, to make sure..." and you've spent a huge amount of money needlessly. On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 12:29:33 -0500, "Joel Rose" wrote: Hello all Does anyone have an opinion related to either the Park Tool PCS-4 Deluxe Home workstand or the Ultimate BRS-80RT Pro repair stand? They are both in a similar price range and I am trying to choose between the two. Any opinions that would lead me to one to the other would be great. I am leaning towards the Park stand, mostly because I have been able to find it at several online shops. I would like a stand at home that is high quality and this seems to be the range of products for me. Thanks Joel |
#7
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Does anyone have an opinion related to either the Park Tool PCS-4 Deluxe
Home workstand or the Ultimate BRS-80RT Pro repair stand? I have the Park PRS-5 and I've used the Ultimate Pro quite a bit, too. I think the Ultimate tripod base is more stable. I don't understand why Park doesn't copy it. The Park stand is barely adequate for heavy bikes, uneven surfaces, or lots o' torque repairs. The clamp seems to be a matter of personal preference. I find the Ultimate slide and twist clamp easier to use, but some people like the Park. I've never had problems clamping frames or seatposts of any material with either type of clamp. I have seen people ruin frames this way, but they're usually tying to do something for which a portable stand is inadequate, anyways. I can't see why clamping a carbon seatpost could be a problem, but I see several posters have said that it is. -Vee |
#8
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I have the spin doctor pro from Performance (isn't it like the ultimate?) and have two complaints. The ratcheting circular adjustment blows, because there's often times not an adjustment that will allow the front wheel to support part of the bikes weight when you grab the seat tube or seatpost. Being able to do away with the indexed ratcheting would be good at times, but other times it's nice if you're not lifting a lot of weight. Also you do need two hands with the ratchet because the suspended objects weight makes it too difficult to push on the ratchet lever. Also, the tube holder doesn't really open up that big. I would like it to beable to clamp something much larger. -- jasong |
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