Spinalot, it isn't actually that hard once you've tried a few times. If you are right handed, then keep your spanner nearby to pick up with that hand. I don't have my bike here right now so have to try remember what I do ...
Just use your left hand (with axle nuts just tight enough on both sides to still be moveable) to pull the tyre towards you. I kneel down when doing this. Put your fingers through the spokes if you want to get a decent grip. Be firm. Then when chain is tight pick up spanner & do up each nut progressively till the wheel holds firm. You can still reset the wheel before tightening. Remember which way they turn before you start - else you'll wind up loosening the one you just got right !
On the tyre/mudguard clearance, I have masses of clearance (think the frame might be larger or longer on C11 so not an issue for me). But if I had that problem I'd just deflate the tyre and pump up when wheel set. It only takes a minute or so after all.
I tried to get QR wheels out of my mum's small MTB - wouldn't come out without removing the v-brakes or deflating the tyres as tyres too wide to go through the brakes. Bikes do have their quirks !
Before you get to the next quirk btw ... hub gears mean you can't clean chain by rotating pedals backwards with chain cleaner device clamped. So unless you have someone hold the back wheel up you need the bike up on a stand ideally to clean the chain. I wound up buying one - other methods all well & good but on a heavy eBike it was the obvious solution. You need a decent one. Can give you a link if you need it to one which works great.
I've also read the comments about local dealers and once again smiled - many of us are nowhere near a dealer - and I don't have a car either. Plus no local dealers anyway within a walking radius so completely pointless worrying how far they are away. Just learn to maintain yourself.
Just use your left hand (with axle nuts just tight enough on both sides to still be moveable) to pull the tyre towards you. I kneel down when doing this. Put your fingers through the spokes if you want to get a decent grip. Be firm. Then when chain is tight pick up spanner & do up each nut progressively till the wheel holds firm. You can still reset the wheel before tightening. Remember which way they turn before you start - else you'll wind up loosening the one you just got right !
On the tyre/mudguard clearance, I have masses of clearance (think the frame might be larger or longer on C11 so not an issue for me). But if I had that problem I'd just deflate the tyre and pump up when wheel set. It only takes a minute or so after all.
I tried to get QR wheels out of my mum's small MTB - wouldn't come out without removing the v-brakes or deflating the tyres as tyres too wide to go through the brakes. Bikes do have their quirks !
Before you get to the next quirk btw ... hub gears mean you can't clean chain by rotating pedals backwards with chain cleaner device clamped. So unless you have someone hold the back wheel up you need the bike up on a stand ideally to clean the chain. I wound up buying one - other methods all well & good but on a heavy eBike it was the obvious solution. You need a decent one. Can give you a link if you need it to one which works great.
You'll never get that wheel back on right in a month of Sundays unless the bike is upside down or up on a bike stand. So not sure how you'd sit on the rack !I would do this:
Pump up the tyre then sit on the rear rack. Your weight wil keep the chain under tension.
Use your left hand to center the wheel, use the other hand to tighten up the nuts.
I've also read the comments about local dealers and once again smiled - many of us are nowhere near a dealer - and I don't have a car either. Plus no local dealers anyway within a walking radius so completely pointless worrying how far they are away. Just learn to maintain yourself.
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