Topeak Prepstand Elite Workstands


  • Average Rating: 4/5
  • MSRP: $
  • # of Reviews: 1

Where To Buy


BicycleBuys

Product Description

The PrepStand Elite is a super workstand that folds up to become extremely portable as well. It holds your bike securely while you work and features a handy small-parts bin that keeps the parts you need close at hand. Plus, the PrepStand rotates 360-degrees to make repairs easier than ever.

A great all-purpose repair stand built using lightweight aluminum with an ultra stable tripod base. Quick release, 360 degree rotating clamp opens wide for oversized frames. Folds down easily to fit in the included carrying bag for storage.


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Reviews 1 - 1 (1 Reviews Total)

User Reviews

Overall Rating:4
Value Rating:3
Submitted by HauntedMyst a Recreational Rider from

Date Reviewed: February 27, 2007

Strengths:    Able to hold a bike in any position
Able to hold a bike higher than a lot of other portable work stands.
Nicely portable!


Weaknesses:    Not quick clamping (aka Park style clamps)
Included parts box is useless if you attach your bike to the seatpost.


Bottom Line:   
This is a portable workstand, second in line to and identical to Topeaks PrepStand Pro with the only differences being the Elite has a small parts box where the Pro has a scale built into the main arm.

After finding a killer price on this on ebay, I picked this up to do a couple of rebuilds this winter. It's nicely portable and having the included bag makes it easy to pop in the car. Its a medium heavy workstand and seems well built. Despite its weight, it folds down nicely and fits into a bag about 4 feeet long. Its nicely stable provided you make sure you tighten all the locking rings, which brings me to one of my only real complaints about the functionality - the lack of lever clamps.

Instead of Park style clamps, the prep stand uses locking rings to tighten the clamps. While they work well, they aren't as fast or convenient to work with as lever clamps. It may seem trival but I found I wanted to make an adjustment, take the bike down and put it back and this becomes a more laborous process than it might seem using locking rings instead of a lever clamp.

My other complaint about the unit is the the parts box placement. It would be fine if everyone in the world had steel frames and mounted their bikes by the top tube but given that mine is aluminum, everyone recommends mounting it by the seatpost, which turns the parts box to a 90 degree angle where all the parts would fall to the floor, rending it useless (and really a non feature) to everyone who has a carbon or aluminum frame.

So is this workstand a value for the money? While its worked out well though I can't imagine paying the retail price of $229 for it. It simply seems like way too much for what it is. If they had included the optional tool tray or handlebar stablerizer with the stand, I can see it being a good value at a $179 retail. But they didn't and its $229 retail and doesn't have enough to differentiate it from the rest of the stands on the marke. My advice, if you don't need portability, get a Park Home Mechanic workstand for less.

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Purchased At:   ebay

Similar Products Used:   Park stands
Performance stands





Reviews 1 - 1 (1 Reviews Total)

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