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Old 02-01-2009, 12:21 PM   #1
rlfaubion   rlfaubion is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

It all started in the midst of the winter. Redeye and Valdez decided to purchase and install tire-changing equipment for Their comrades and them. They were influenced to do so from some motorcycle show’s vendor making it look so EZ, and the idea of convenience, with some savings, and the satisfaction of doing their own maintenance.

They installed the tire changer, bought the necessary accessories, went to work, and changed two tires on Redeye’s Nomad over the weekend. They may have worked harder than they might normally have until they read the instructions through completely, but regardless, saved the $20.00 per tire it would have cost to outsource this tire change. At the end of the day, they analyzed their financial position against the effort put forth and here’s the break down.

Equipment Cost = $275.00
Harbor Freight Changer
Mojo Blocks and Bar
Mounting hardware


Labor factor = 1/3 of tire change income ($20 divided by 1/3) = $6.67

Tire changes required to break even, ($275 divided by $13.33) = 20.63 tire changes

Average miles between changes (rear 11,000 miles, front 16,000) = 13,500 miles

Miles required to recapture equipment investment (less labor) = 275,000 miles

Average miles ridden per year (your miles may vary) = 15,000 miles

Amortized years for return on investment (275K mi divided by 15K mi) = 18 years

Bottom Line:

Age of investors at time of $$$ recapture is Redeye 74, Valdez 79,
Two old guys making $3.33 an hour each,
The convenience of changing tires and riding the same day, while drinking beer in Ole Smokey’s garage (not OSHA approved)…….

PRICELESS!





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Old 02-01-2009, 01:10 PM   #2
paul   paul is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

You guys are funnier n' a man tryin' to explain to his wife where he found the bra and why he's wearin' it!? ROFLMAO

They say age brings wisdom. Is this true?? ???
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Old 02-01-2009, 01:45 PM   #3
cactusjack   cactusjack is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Ron, I look at it this way...you can inspect things while the bike is apart that otherwise might not be noticed. Plus, you can clean and polish as you re-assemble, something a dealer isn't going to do for you. That adds value to the whole equation.
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Old 02-01-2009, 05:15 PM   #4
dogdoc   dogdoc is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

What Im wondering is why two old men are changing their own tires anyway? Funny post Ron. Im hiring mine done for sure. :-)
 
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Old 02-01-2009, 06:02 PM   #5
audiogooroo   audiogooroo is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Too funny Ron! :)
But honestly, how many of us do what we do with our scoots because it makes fiscal sense? Hmmmm?
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Old 02-01-2009, 06:27 PM   #6
Netnorske   Netnorske is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

This got me wondering what the price breakdown would be for me to ride to northern Cal for them to change my tires for me. Hhhhmmmmm..... ;)
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Old 02-01-2009, 11:26 PM   #7
biscuitsngravy   biscuitsngravy is offline
 
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Ha Ha!! Well written!!
BnG
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Old 02-02-2009, 01:05 AM   #8
schoeney   schoeney is offline
 
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Yeah..... but they will make it up in volume!
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Old 02-02-2009, 01:18 AM   #9
josh   josh is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Are you guys a traveling tire change service??
 
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Old 02-02-2009, 04:36 AM   #10
jmorrow   jmorrow is offline
 
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Who Pwayed the pwaino while Wan changed the tires ???
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Old 02-02-2009, 12:49 PM   #11
watchman   watchman is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

When I bought my tire changer and told all my friends about it I soon found out I had a lot more friends than I ever thought of. Started charging $20.00 and a case of beer to change a tire thinking that would stop the flow, but it actually increased. People started telling there friends about me. Found out a tire change and balance around here was $75.00 if you brought the tire in off the bike. I finially just had to start refusing to do it. I haven't bought any beer in the last 14 months. Changer paid for it's self the first summer.
 
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Old 02-02-2009, 05:09 PM   #12
bear   bear is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

I asked my local dealer what the cost was for him to replace the tires on my bike. His reply, $100 dollars labor for the front and $150 labor for the rear (something about more pieces to take off to change the rear). Of course that didn't include the cost of new tires at $250! I promptly went to Sears, bought a bike jack for $150, took off the tires and had them swapped out at my local auto shop for twenty bucks total. By the way both new tires were $200 from an online tire discount site.
 
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Old 02-04-2009, 01:17 AM   #13
skeeter   skeeter is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing


Quote:
Originally Posted by Netnorske
This got me wondering what the price breakdown would be for me to ride to northern Cal for them to change my tires for me. Hhhhmmmmm..... ;)
If it's anything like the first time around..... watching them do it....priceless
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Old 02-05-2009, 03:05 PM   #14
donoller   donoller is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

i bought two changers one harbor frieght, and one nomar paid for both the first summer the nomar is higher in price but does the best job without messing up the wheels.
 
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Old 02-05-2009, 05:18 PM   #15
redeye   redeye is offline
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Adventures in Tire Changing

Valdez bought the No-Mar blocks & breaker bar for the harbor freight tire changer.

Both worked as advertised, AFTER we read the COMPLETE instructions.

As they say, "experience is the best teacher."
 
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