Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

Review – Crankbrothers Speedier Lever Tool

I’ve changed a lot of bike tires and replaced/repaired lots of tubes since I started biking as a kid.  Probably most of us have reading this.   
 
For me that included tires and tubes ranging from way back with the huge ones on the first bike I had – an antique cruiser bike (the original type that was already decades old when I was given it, the kidn with the giant spring and facade metal work, not the modern retro models) up through thin (and sometimes tighter and harder to change) road bike tires and tubes. 
 
Ah, and there’s nothing like being on a nice ride or almost through a metric century or something and blowing a tire and having to fix it beside the road. 
 
Holes, cuts, slashes, and worn out tubes and tires – some day you have to change a tire or have someone else do it for you. 

Well, unless you are my Canadian friend Stephen who has had supremely good ‘flat’ luck.  There’s probably a Canadian joke in there somewhere but I’m not clever enough to come up with one. So anyway…
 
I’ve gotten pretty good at changing tires and can change a tire in a short time using conventional tire levers.  Some are good, some are bad and bend, some have funny shapes that are made to supposedly ease how they fit or work. 
 
But before I go any further I want to side-track for a short, and I want to mention that I have dramatically decreased the number of flats I have had in the last few years by using Stop Flats2 tire liners (make sure you get the right color for the right size tire).  These are an extra piece of protection between the tire and tube in the form of a plastic or nylon or other material that goes around the outer part of the tire.  This doesn’t protect your sidewall but of course the vast majority of road debris is going to be coming through the part of the tire that’s actually touching the road.  Weight weenies will complain I suppose.

But liners are great and the small amount of weight these thing pieces are is negligible at worse.  You can also get Continental Gatorskins or other comparable anti-puncture tire but you’re doing the same as putting the liner in a regular tire, for the most part.

If you’re like me you remember as a kid cutting up old tubes and doing the same thing to stop punctures, which many times was amazingly effective but the tubes in those days were quite a bit thicker than the tubes now are, adding weight and mass.

With the modern liners I am using there have been times when I have noticed huge holes and cuts in the tire that would have ripped up my tube, but the liner had done its job and protected the tube and in fact the liner itself is usually pristine, while the tire itself might look like it’s been through a war zone.  Hell, I’ll usually still ride on it for awhile with no problems.

I don’t like to ride on the nasty detritus-strewn local roads around here without liners.  But once in awhile even the liners don’t stop a particularly big piece of metal, a long screw, or big pieces of glass. 
 
Iit seems to me; at least from my casual observation, that there are more rear tire flats than front.
 
I suspect that many times the piece of sharp junk has come to lay relatively flat, over time, and the front tire pulls it up, or disturbs it in such a way as to position it for the rear tire to be penetrated.  And some of this stuff will go through anything – liners, puncture-proof tires, etc.

And of course tires wear out in general and get old, as well as tubes.  Or you need to change to a different tire for a different surface or upgrade your tires or tubes, switch to a trainer tire or something lighter or something thinner or whatever, etc.

There’s usually a need to change tires or tubes at some point.
 
So anyway, on to the actual review after this sidetrack.

I thought I’d like to try one of the so-called quick change tire levers or tools out there – both for my own evaluation and use as well as for a nice blog review.  
 
Especially I want to be able to change tires easier (and quicker) under colder conditions when it’s much harder and more time-consuming in some cases, and hard on the hands.  A quicker change in general is a big bonus of course!
 
I decided to give the Crank Brothers Speedier Tire Lever a try as it got great reviews across the internet generally, and was usually mentioned along with other quick change and easier change tire levers and tools and lists thereof.

After carefully examining pictures of  the Crank Brothers tool online; I could see the concept seemed to make a lot of sense. 

But would what looks like a good idea translate to real life?

The lever came relatively quick, in the bottom of the Amazon box that my brand new tire had shipped in (I confess that I didn’t notice the lever there in the bottom of the box at first).

I want to mention here before I go any further that the tool does have a lifetime warranty.  I know from some reviews that people have managed to break it right off the bat, I suspect incorrect usage and lack of experience and common sense.  Or maybe a bad lever.
 
Visually, the lever looks moderately heavy-duty compared to many tire levers, but it is a bit wide to carry in a bike seat bag due to the double pieces that you put your hand through.

Considering the ease of use (that I will get to shortly) of the Crank Brothers Speedier Tire Lever it may well be worth the extra mm’s of space it takes up, and you should be able to replace your two or three normal tire levers with just this one.

BTW, there is a Crank Brothers Speed Lever Tool also, a little bit older.  Notice the difference between the “Speed” and “Speedier” moniker.  The Speed Lever uses a different concept, attaching to the hub and letting you crank it around.  I couldn’t find it on Amazon but if you look around a bit you will likely come across a video on it, and maybe one kicking around for sale.

The packaging that the tire lever is attached to has a little visual instruction on the inside of the folded cardboard but the lever itself also has a very self-explanatory “REMOVE” and “INSTALL” printed right on the lever itself at opposite ends, just in case you forget or something. 
 
After familiarizing myself with the printed instructions I took a closer look at the lever.   
 
In a way it looks maybe, kinda similar to a regular tire lever but with additional open area in the middle. Kind of, I suppose, as if you took two tire levers and bent them outward in the middle and attached them at the ends so you put your hand through the middle where it would be protected from touching the rim when running it around the wheel.  Yep, the idea here is to make sure your hand and knuckles don’t get bumped, hit, cut, or burned from sliding it around the rim.   
 
This is good also because if there is a piece of metal or something jammed in the rim or a marred rim edge then you are also protected from all of that. 
 
So I gave the tool a try on my front road bike wheel, the tire of which needed to be replaced after thousands of miles and a little dry rot and tons of holes and cuts (again, this stuff would have caused multiple flats if I hadn’t been using tire liners.  Yea, I can’t say enough about them.
 
One of the things people mentioned as well as is referenced in the description for the tool is how quickly you can use it to slip around the rim to get the tire off, and back on again.
 
You use the REMOVE end, slipping the hooked part under the bead, and positioning the little ridge that is situated a little below the hook down against the wheel rim. 

Then you slip your fingers through the opening and start sliding the tool around the rim. 

This is where I noticed that it is possible to accidentally catch or pinch the tube as you do this if you are not careful. After testing on various tires it seems that this is much less likely to happen with a wider tire like a mountain bike tire and more likely with thinner tires. I especially noticed that with tubes that are on the larger range compared to the size of the tire are more likely to take up more space then a tube that is in the smaller range for the tire.

What I mean by this is that if you have a 25 millimeter width tire and you have a tube that is meant to fit 25 to 28 mm tires it is of course going to take up more space in the tire than the tube that is meant to go on the range of 23 to 25 mm tires, depending on manufacturer of course.

But with a relatively thin road bike tire you really can’t be in a huge hurry or get too carried away. 

Because both the best thing as well as the worst thing about the Crankbrothers Speedier Lever Tool is how easy and quick it is to use. 

Putting a tire on is just as easy, but just as easy to catch the tube if there’s not a lot of space.  Install one side of the tire, maybe using the hook of the tool for the last bit of the bead (if it’s tight you can use the tool on the first bead like you would below on the other side).

The install end slips down over the edge of the rim, right against it with it’s little ridge holding it on.  You slip your hand into the tool and start sliding it around, which slips that last bead on.  The last bit, as always, is harder but goes on quickly with this tool for most tires.  But see below.

I did a bit of a test after a gigantic piece of beer glass went through a tire and the liner while riding (what kind of person throws their beer bottles onto the side of the road to break anyway?).  

After I got home and maybe hurrying a bit but still being careful with the tube it only took 2:52 minutes to take the tire off, replace the tube and tire and re-inflate with a hand pump.  Not something I am going to do all of the time in the ‘hurrying’ department but it was fun seeing just how fast I could do it with this new tool.

I also tried the lever on a friend’s carbon aero wheels (I was installing some tire liners for my friend).  This worked almost exactly the same though after putting the tire back on the last bit of getting the bead on was extra tight on both tires.  Past what I felt was safe to just push on. I didn’t want to damage tire or the new tool so used the Speedier Tire Lever more as a traditional bike lever and finished the last bit quite quickly in this way, not in the way the tool was maybe mostly intended to be used (sliding) but it still worked great for this purpose too.  I think I could have muscled it on, but my philosophy with bikes is that pretty much nothing should be muscled on or something is going to break or be damaged in some way, unless it’s the bottom bracket or something.
 
One thing that I have noticed after trying the tool on a number of test tire changes is that there is a bit of wear and tear along the places where you slide the tool around the rim.  Not much, just a bit of wear around the plastic.  Likely it would take a long, long time to actually wear out but it is there, and might be something to keep in mind if you are constantly changing tires or something.  Maybe this is just my experience with it.  There is the lifetime warranty though.

In the photos below you’ll see that the first photo is of a removal of an old tire and the technique to do so, the second and third is the install end in use putting on a brand new wire bead tire.  The other two are a few examples of other tires I used it on like my friend’s carbon aero rims.

[See image gallery at randombitsbytes.com]
BTW, on an amusing side note…  I dictated a fair amount of this review, as I do sometimes, using Google’s voice recognition within a Chrome browser window on my phone.  In this case while walking around my little hiking trail around my property.  It works great normally though there is a bit of correcting from it mis-hearing me or stupid auto-corrections.  In the case of this review I noticed that every time I mentioned “tire lever” it replaced it with “tired lover”.  Every.  Single.  Time. 

It made me laugh afterward, but annoying to change while walking.

I’m still on the fence about the Speedier Tire Lever myself, when it comes to replacing my existing seat bag tire levers.  It does seem to work flawlessly for the most part and indeed does replace multiple levers.  But I feel that I really need to give it some more tests and time.  But as a new garage tool it is excellent, and I highly recommend it.

So, in conclusion, the Crank Brothers Speedier Tire Lever works quite well as long as you use a little care and common sense and don’t go crazy with speed.  A little wear after some use but pretty hardy otherwise.  Again, am I going to replace the tire levers in my bike bag right now with it?  No, not until I am absolutely sure of it’s durability over time.  But it is a very good addition to my biking tools for the garage, and I think if you are a cyclist you are going to need this at some point, so give it a try.  And let me know in the comments how you like it, and any additional info.

The post Review – Crankbrothers Speedier Lever Tool appeared first on Random Bits & Bytes Blog.



This post first appeared on Random Bits & Bytes Blog – The Random Bits & Byt, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

Review – Crankbrothers Speedier Lever Tool

×

Subscribe to Random Bits & Bytes Blog – The Random Bits & Byt

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×