Chris makes a great point. For someone starting out I would say go with
park tools, they are good quality and built to last, yes they are pricey
but looking at my tool box full of blue handles makes me feel less anxious
when I get to the wrenching.  The thing I cheaped out on and should have
gotten a better one is a headset wrench, the one I had left gouges in soft
metals, not fun.

On Fri, Dec 5, 2014 at 5:00 PM, Chris in Redding, Ca. <[email protected]
> wrote:

> On Friday, December 5, 2014 1:26:05 PM UTC-8, Peter M wrote: I only have
> one more piece of hard learned advice ............... get the right tool.
>
> That is a very loose edit. Cost wise tools hurt at the outset. Around here
> they hurt worse than the first several repair bills from the local shop.
> Tool wise, 'good enough' is cheaper but 'very good' can add up, and it adds
> up. This list of musts and optional tools might be interesting to the OP.
>
> Smooth Tracks,
> Chris
> Redding, Ca.
>
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