05-04-2012, 02:03 AM
Hello,
I work at Wal-Mart. I recently changed my position from cashier to assembler. According to the assembler's job description, he assembles bicycles (among other things) according to a supplied instruction manual for each item to be assembled. I thought as a cashier that job description sounded straightforward and represented an interesting change of pace.
I got a significantly greater change of pace than the job description suggested. The true nature of a Wal-Mart assembler is to act as an apprentice bicycle mechanic, but there's no one to teach me at my store. I therefore have no choice but to learn my job largely on my own time and money. I started this position at zero bicycle knowledge about a month ago. I can now assemble most children's bikes and single-speed cruisers without a hitch but brakes, chains and especially derailleurs are still problems for me.
My first step was to buy a book called The Bicycling Guide to Complete Bicycle Maintenance & Repair for Road & Mountain Bikes. I found it generally informative about bicycles but alarmingly inscrutable when I tried to learn how to actually perform a basic task, such as make both brake pads move instead of just one.
My second step was to join this site and subscribe to its video collection. I'd like to post questions here a few times a week as they occur to me in the course of my work. If this site gives me the knowledge and skill I need to survive in my position I intend to post in this forum for as long as I work as an assembler.
I work at Wal-Mart. I recently changed my position from cashier to assembler. According to the assembler's job description, he assembles bicycles (among other things) according to a supplied instruction manual for each item to be assembled. I thought as a cashier that job description sounded straightforward and represented an interesting change of pace.
I got a significantly greater change of pace than the job description suggested. The true nature of a Wal-Mart assembler is to act as an apprentice bicycle mechanic, but there's no one to teach me at my store. I therefore have no choice but to learn my job largely on my own time and money. I started this position at zero bicycle knowledge about a month ago. I can now assemble most children's bikes and single-speed cruisers without a hitch but brakes, chains and especially derailleurs are still problems for me.
My first step was to buy a book called The Bicycling Guide to Complete Bicycle Maintenance & Repair for Road & Mountain Bikes. I found it generally informative about bicycles but alarmingly inscrutable when I tried to learn how to actually perform a basic task, such as make both brake pads move instead of just one.
My second step was to join this site and subscribe to its video collection. I'd like to post questions here a few times a week as they occur to me in the course of my work. If this site gives me the knowledge and skill I need to survive in my position I intend to post in this forum for as long as I work as an assembler.