I wish there were more good 1-day matches. For normal people, with jobs/families/businesses/lives/etc... 2-days can be a bitch.
I'm in TN, so I'm a bit spoiled compared to some with 1-days at K&M for $90 (I can even sleep in my own bed as long as I'm willing to wake up early and bend a few traffic laws). 2-days there are the usual $295-305.
I don't have any problem with the fees other than maybe not taking the Friday before off and signing up for the Friday tune-up day at K&M means your choice of t-shirt will be extra-small or extra-small. For ~$300, I would actually like a t-shirt instead of another shop rag for once lol.
Want a tee shirt, wear large or extra large (I hate tight fitting clothes) come on down to Louisiana, Been a cycling competitor for a decade and a half. Every blasted race yu get a tee shirt. Some really nice, great material. some, jsut plain ole cotton with some writing on it. Got Drawers full of the things. Enough to wall paper a room, maybe two rooms. Can’t find places to put al the darned things. Anyway, me, I could use a couple good shop rags. Brenda gets a bit tired of me stealing her towels.
Now for building bikes, good quality paper towels are really necessary. Takes me an entire roll to put one (a child’s bike) back together, with all bearings, and their is a bunch, have to be greased. The bottom brackets on many use the old individual ball bearings in the cup. Takes lots of grease, and it goes everywhere. like I said, takes an entire roll. Now firearms, can’t use paper on them, need a good cloth.
The little blue one was my all time favorite.
Before covid got things crazy, i could dumpster dive and find lots of usable bikes that were thrown away. Kept everyone I found and used the ones too bad to rebuild for spare parts. Brenda hated it because we had junk bicycles every where (my parts store) But once done, stripping down to bare metal, replating, or repainting everything that was repairable and replacing all those parts that weren’t, left me with some pretty nice bikes to give to families that could not afford to buy a bike for their young child. Now, the market is flooded and no one rides anymore anyway. Anyway, spent hours polishing chrome, and getting the paint just right,, all the time knowing it would be neglected again, but just to know that some little fellow would have something to be proud of, for just a moment, was worth every second, minute, hour and week.
Brenda had one rule I had to follow, if the restoration cost more than going to Walmart and buying new, i was not allowed to rebuild it. makes perfect sense.