Are your drop outs horizontal? Is your bike a single speed or does it have a derailer and multiple speeds?
Let's start there and see if we can't get you on the road without a tensioner. Sometimes due to frame design the tensioner is a necessary evil. Other times it can be eliminated. It depends on your bike/frame.
Tom
Unfortunately I have vertical drop outs, and the wheels are quick releases. It is not a fixie bike, it has gears.
Here is my current to-do list:
-Break Chain
-Install Chain
-Figure out if I need tensioner or not
-Adjust my brakes (They aren't functioning very well right now)
-Somehow adjust throttle (because my throttle line is so long I had to loop it around my seat which = friction, which = throttle sticks open.) << This is a big one.
-Possibly align wheels. I have a spoke tool, so I can do this.
If you don't mind me asking, how do I trim my throttle cable? As you can see I have an after-market carb but on both end of the cable there are the stoppers, so I can't exactly trim it like I can did with my clutch cable, which was suffering the same problem (or can I?).
Thanks for the support guys, you are an awesome community.
Here are pics btw: