WHY BUY YOUR NEXT BIKE FROM
CHAIN REACTION?
The articles below will give you an idea of why so
many people have been happy with their Chain Reaction bikes! We really do a lot
of things that surprise people, and we really do care about you & your bike long
after you've handed over your credit card and we've given you the owner's
manual. There are significant differences between various bike shops, and you'll
pick up on this if you've visited a few. Fortunately, we're in an area with a
number of reputable, caring bike shops. It's not too hard to figure out which
are good & which aren't. Perhaps the best question you can ask yourself is this-
Is this a shop that's going to take good care of me if I come back a few
months down the road with a gear issue, or maybe need some help with getting rid
of a pain I get in my shoulder on longer rides?


And what if you didn't buy your bike from Chain Reaction Bicycles, and
something's not quite right about it? We try to do whatever emergency
repairs we can to keep people on the road, but the honest truth is that, if we
were to bring in for repair every bike possible, we would quickly have a three
week
backlog and run out of storage room. The busy times of the year tend to run from
March-October, meaning that we can generally take in repairs during the winter
months. We can highly recommend a gentleman named Eric
Fetch, also known as THE BIKE DOCTOR.
For quite a few years he's run a mobile repair operation, offering pretty quick
turnaround, high quality and reasonable rates. Call him at 408 202 8833 to set
up an appointment, or email him at
efetch@yahoo.com.
Does it seem strange that we're advertising a competitor for bike service?
Perhaps. But we have an obligation to the cycling community that we take
seriously, and if we can't take care of something ourselves, we're very happy to
find someone who can.
For bike fittings, we can do a very limited number of bike fittings (on bikes
purchased elsewhere) weekdays between 1:30-3:30pm in our Redwood City location.
These have to be scheduled ahead of time, and are available only as staffing and
business conditions allow (during the busier time of the year, typically
from mid-March-September, we may not be
able to do them at all). The cost is $50 for the first half hour, and $15 each
subsequent 15 minutes. A typical fitting will involve taking your arm, shoulder,
torso, inseam & foot measurements, and then making changes to your bike
according to recommendations from the New England Cycling Academy's FitKit. We
will then look at you on the bike, because measurements are just the beginning.
Depending who is doing the fitting, you may or may not be set up in a trainer (I
would rather observe
someone doing laps in our parking lot. It's my feeling that people tend to
"perform" when set up on a trainer, trying to figure out what I'm looking for.
When outside, after just a minute or two people relax and I'll see things I
otherwise wouldn't. But that's just me; most prefer to set people up on the
trainer, feeling it's a more controlled environment and easier to work with.
--Mike--).
Just to be clear, when you buy a bike from Chain Reaction, there is no charge
for fitting you to that bike, including subsequent reassessment down the road.
On bikes we have sold, such service is included with the sale of the bike. This
includes swapping out stems during the period of time where we're getting things
dialed-in (provided changing the stem doesn't involve re-cabling the brakes
and/or gears, as might be needed if someone were to go to a dramatically-taller
stem than a bike would normally come with).
It would be nice if there was enough time to properly take care of those
we've sold bikes to, and everyone else as well. But I've found over the years
that, when we take on too much, quality (and the time you're without your bike
because it's in the shop) invariably suffers. Others may have
mastered the art of scaling their business; I haven't, and we're not willing to
lower our standards, even though doing so might result in more dollars in the
cash register. Our goal, when we sell a bike, is to do everything we can to make
sure that bike is everything it can be. We want someone to be thinking, every
time he or she walks past their Chain Reaction bike, gee, I want to get out and
ride! And doing that takes time & effort on our part. It's worth it.
Thanks- --Mike--