

Abbey The Truing Stand Cheap
$3,550.00 $1,810.50
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Description
Abbey The Truing Stand
ABBEY TOOLS THE TRUING STAND Pre-orders now for delivery in September/October There’s a truing stand and then there is The Truing Stand. What’s long been a bike shop staple isn’t always the most glamorous tool in the shop, in fact it’s usually a pretty basic device. But the work that comes off the truing stand is often the thing bike shop hero’s are made from, the legendary perfectly built wheel. So what if we revisit the lowly truing stand, approach it like a piece of metrology equipment instead of something that does little more than hold a wheel? There’s so many ways to ‘hack’ a truing stand, if you’re going to make a proper tool why not go all out? We set out to make a truing stand like no other, something that had a stable base as a foundation for precision and repeatability. We wanted the stand to reliably mirror on a centerline so it would always be in dish regardless of hub or rim width. We needed a good thru axle solution that didn’t require adapters. In the disc brake era we wanted to be able to straighten rotors while the wheel was in the stand. We wanted a stand that was equally at home truing wheels for a general tune up as it was building wheels worthy of elite competition. We added the ability to run dial indicators for radial and lateral deviation and you can run one for the rotor if you’d like. Design is all about compromise and we spent nearly 6 years thinking and tinkering this one, the results do not disappoint. The Islandix System How does Islandix work? The system turns live measurements into visualizations for wheel work. Visualization overcomes traditional problems with quantitative truing: eliminating the need to zero indicators, remembering alignment around the wheel, and scaling to work quantitatively right from the start or knock out gnarly repairs. Visualization combines data from multiple sensors, helping find the shortest path to perfect alignment. Data supercharges wheel building but respect for the craft remains at its center. Digital functions are controlled by foot pedal so the muscle memory of working with your hands remains the same |
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