T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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364.1 | chain letter | RDGENG::MACFADYEN | | Mon Jun 29 1987 08:35 | 19 |
| First, gear slipping. Assuming that you didn't have the rear derailleur
out of adjustment (in which case you'd hear it clattering all the
time) your problem may be that the 5th gear sprocket has become
worn: is it the gear you use most? If you take a close look at that
gear, and compare it against a gear you use less (eg 1st), you might
see that the gear teeth are worn down. If so, no option but
replacement! If you do replace it, you might need to replace the
chain as well.
Second, your back-pedalling problem might have been caused by having
the rear derailleur slightly out of adjustment, in which case nothing
to worry about - just move the gear-change lever slightly.
Finally, chains are best cleaned by removing them and giving them
a scrub with white spirit or something similar, old toothbrushes
are good for this. Lubricate it well when you put it back on - I
believe you can get specialist chain lubricants which don't pick
up dirt as much as ordinary bike oil. You can also buy gadgets to
clean chains without removing them.
Rod
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364.2 | Chain Cleaning gadgets?? | CONTRL::DOOLITTLE | Grape mimes think alike | Mon Jun 29 1987 14:34 | 10 |
| Re: < Note 364.1 by RDGENG::MACFADYEN >
> You can also buy gadgets to clean chains without removing them.
Any experience with these? I've seen them, but do they work?
thanks
andy
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364.3 | Chains- covered previously | MIST::IVERSON | There's a seeker born every minute | Mon Jun 29 1987 15:56 | 8 |
| re: .2
>chain cleaning gadgets
The subject of cleaning and lubricating chains has been covered
more thoroughly than you would think possible in topic 182.
Thom
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364.4 | Do you need that gear ? | EUREKA::REG_B | N_ew E_ngland C_onservatory disks ? | Tue Jul 21 1987 12:17 | 3 |
|
By "5th gear" do you mean, "smallest chain ring, second to smallest
cog" ?
|
364.5 | PM, NOVICE STYLE | MPGS::BRIGHTMAN | | Thu Jun 16 1988 09:29 | 7 |
| I need to clean my freewheel. What is the "best" cleaning solution to
use.
Also, I've never done this, so (as a novice) is there a special tool to
remove the freewheel. I was able to remove an outer nut and a spacer,
but there was another nut, that was square with rounded corners, inside
the freewheel that I could not reach with the wrenches I had.
|
364.6 | Get the tool.... | NAC::CAMPBELL | | Thu Jun 16 1988 13:34 | 13 |
| re .5
Somewhere in this file is a note on how to remove the freewheel,
I can't remember where I saw it.... Oh well...
Don't remove the nut that you couldn't reach. Sounds like that's
on the axel. You need a special freewheel tool, and they're different
for the different types of freewheels. The freewheel tool (usually)
looks like a cylinder and fits inside the inner most point on the
freewheel. Put a BIG wrench on the freewheel tool and turn it in
the opposite direction that the freewheel would turn when you peddle.
-Stew
|
364.7 | Thinner | ASIC::CRITCHLOW | | Thu Jun 16 1988 13:59 | 14 |
| Paint thinner.
If you do get the tool, use a bench vise to hold the tool then twist the
wheel. The wheel diameter provides a much better lever. It usually takes
a lot of force to get the freewheel off.
I usually use a rag soaked in thinner. Then I pull the rag back and forth
through each of the gears. The racheting action of the freewheel causes
the gears to spin. It works pretty easily.
JC
|
364.8 | Trick to avoid stripping freewheel. | NOVA::FISHER | Keep 'em rollin' | Fri Jun 17 1988 09:06 | 13 |
| If the freewheel is a suntour (or one with the same type of remover)
and the connection between the freewheel and the remover looks like
2 or 4 small teeth, there is not much to hold the tool to the freewheel
while you're applying all that torque. What works well is to insert
the quick release so that it is through the axle and the tool but not
tight. Now apply wrench or vise to tool to break the thread bind.
After it gives a little loosen the quick release about a turn, unscrew
the freweheel a bnit more and then remove the quick release.
Now, if your freewheel is a Maillard Helicomatic or any of the cassette
types, ignore all of the above.
ed
|
364.9 | Thanks! | MPGS::BRIGHTMAN | | Fri Jun 17 1988 14:12 | 16 |
| I got out of this easy. I call my local bike shop Franklin (MA)
bicycle shop and asked if he sold freewheel wrenched. He told me to
bring it in and he removed it for me.
Now I have to decide if I want to just replace it the freewheel or
clean and use what I have. I would would like buy a new bike by this
time next year so I don't want to put to much money into what I have,
but I will be ride alot (to me its alot) this summer and will be riding
in the Pan-Mass Challege and don't want to have trouble with the bike.
BTW, the bike is about 12 yrs old. Its a Schwinn Le-Tour that has kept
my happy.
Thanks for the advise.
TimB.
|
364.10 | Bike Maintenance Questions | IAMOK::WESTER | | Tue Jan 10 1989 12:44 | 28 |
| I'm going through my first annual "bike overhaul." Things are coming
off easily, but I wonder how easy it's going to be to put everything
back together again! Please excuse the part descriptions, I don't
have a manual and I'm a rookie at repairing these things.
My first question has to do with the gear shifter for the front
derailler (sp?). The thing just won't come off. It has a D ring
on it, but it doesn't move. The lever itself moves normally, but
I don't see how I can get it off. Any ideas how I can free up the
D ring to unscrew it. Is it even necessary to take it off and clean
it up? The rear derailler had a slot for a screwdriver so that's
how I got that off.
2nd question regards the headset. The fork crown race (?) is quite
pitted, and lower steering tube cup (?) is pitted to a lesser degree.
The upper parts of the headset are in good shape. It's Shimano
600 and I can't find shops that carry individual parts (except for
Campy). When assembled, I didn't notice any "notching" or recentering
of the fork. So, can I just put no bearings in, regrease and go
another season? Is there any potential danger that could arise?
I know it's only $20 or so to replace, but the upper parts are in
good shape so I don't want to buy a whole new unit.
Thanks,
Dave
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364.11 | Derailleur levers and headsets - suggestions | SMURF::BINDER | And the quarterback is *toast*! | Wed Jan 11 1989 13:52 | 62 |
| Re: .10
> The [adjuster for the front derailleur] just won't come off. It has a
> D ring on it, but it doesn't move. The lever itself moves normally,
> but I don't see how I can get it off...
If you can't turn it by the D ring, and there's no screwdriver slot,
then you're in trouble. You don't really *have* to take the lever
apart, but if the adjuster is frozen you probably should. Since you
can't, it may be time to replace the entire lever assembly. If you
let it go, the friction will gradually diminish as things wear, and soon
your derailleur will shift all by itself. But only in one direction...
The first thing to try is some Liquid Wrench, available at hardware
stores.
If all fails and you decide that you're *willing* to replace the whole
thing, you can at least try to save it by applying extra leverage to the
frozen part by inserting a screwdriver through the D ring. You may
break it, but then again you may not.
> 2nd question regards the headset. The fork crown race (?) is quite
> pitted, and lower steering tube cup (?) is pitted to a lesser degree.
> The upper parts of the headset are in good shape... When assembled, I
> didn't notice any "notching" or recentering of the fork. So, can I
> just put no bearings in, regrease and go another season?
It depends on whether the pitting is rust pitting or the evenly-spaced
pits made by brinnelling, which is the process of beating the balls
against the races until the races take little depressions that match the
balls. If it's rust pitting, you're not likely to suffer fatal injury
if you don't replace the headset. If it's brinnelling, then you could
find that it will "notch" - called commutating - at a most inopportune
time, when a subtle steering adjustment is needed, and you could stack
the bike up.
The fact of life with headsets is that the crown race and lower head
tube race wear out first. (The steering tube is the part of the fork
that passes through the head tube, for the stem to clamp into.)
Headsets are pretty cheap - you cited a $20 figure to replace yours -
and it's probably good practice to replace a worn or brinnelled one.
If you want to save the bucks, though, you can try knocking either the
crown race or the lower head tube race loose, turning it half the
distance between two of the ball pits, and resetting it. This is a
fairly exacting operation; it's easier to do the crown race. Get a
piece of iron pipe that fits closely over the steerer tube, have one end
of it milled true, and seat the race using this pipe as a slide hammer.
Or you can pay Bike Nashbar $8.50 or so for their headsetter tool, which
includes a pipe like this and also a threaded rod with some slightly
modified nuts and washers, suitable for resetting races in the head
tube.
Or you can use a hammer and a fairly good sized screwdriver, tapping the
race into position little by little as you work around it. If you get
too enthusiastic with this method, you can jam the race on cockeyed, and
that will deform bo the race and the seat for it on the crown. Take it
very easy!
- Dick
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364.12 | headset poiing | TALLIS::JBELL | Ceci n'est pas une pipe. | | Thu Jan 12 1989 11:18 | 9 |
| If it's the matter of just a few pits in the headseat and yours came with
caged bearings, you might be able to get another 6 months out of it by
using loose balls. The balls will be spaced differently; they won't all be in
a pit at the same time.
I think I read somewhere that loose ball bearing last longer in general.
Something about more contact points.
-Jeff
|
364.13 | 'nother trick | BANZAI::FISHER | BMB Finisher | Thu Jan 12 1989 14:00 | 15 |
| Another way to squeeze a few more months out of a pitted headset
is to tatero (that's 'rotate' rotated) two of the cups so the pits
don't line up with each other anymore and then spin the bearings
so they don't continue to roll on their flat sides.
If there's, say, 12 bearings, you would want to rotate the cups
1/24th (15 degrees). I see how that's done for the bottom cup.
Whether or not the top cup and race continue to line up depends
on the tightening.
For anyone who wants to come up around Nashua, I have a set of
headset tools that you may use to seat a headset or remove an
old one.
ed
|
364.14 | is there a better way...?? | SALEM::ORRIS | | Wed Aug 07 1991 12:43 | 12 |
|
My bike is a mess... Got caught on some gravel roads and it started to
rain... I need to clean the whole bike, but thge rear sprocket /
rear derailer is full of mud and grit... I went to a bike shop and
the salesman recommended going to a car wash a blasting it with the
high pressure soap spray for a couple minutes... Before I get out my
quarters, does this sound like good advise...
thanks
jim
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364.15 | y | DANGER::JBELL | Zeno was almost here | Wed Aug 07 1991 12:47 | 7 |
| > ....the salesman recommended going to a car wash a blasting it with the
> high pressure soap spray for a couple minutes...
If you do this, try to avoid spraying sideways at the freewheel and hub;
spray from the edge. You don't want to fill your freewheel with water.
-Jeff
|
364.16 | do it the Walden way | USMRM4::MREID | | Thu Aug 08 1991 07:23 | 11 |
| Re:.4 pressure spraying the bike
A friend of mine used the pressure hose at a carwash on his Pinarello
(SL frame) and washed the paint right off his frame!
Don't do it; pressure is too high and may 'blast' some paint off.
A regular hose should do the trick, along with a brush and bucket
of soapy water.
Regards,
Mark
|
364.17 | ...but omit the Crest Tartar Fighter!! | CTHQ1::FRERE | Ellas Danzan Solas | Thu Aug 08 1991 09:50 | 4 |
| ...and of course if you are a Virgo, you would want to use a
toothbrush.
Eric (Sept 20)
|
364.18 | 4 out 5 recommend.. | SALEM::ORRIS | | Thu Aug 08 1991 12:12 | 14 |
|
Hummm... Ill have to talk to my dentist to see what kind of
toothbrush he recommends.... ;-) I was aso thinking of
using a degreaser instead of soapy water.. whats that
stuff called... Gunk???
I saw some degreaser in a bike shop made from lemon juice...
can said " spray it on and spray it off.." no toothbrush
required.. Anyone use these cleaning agents yet....???
thanks
|
364.19 | DO IT RIGHT IF IT NEEDS IT... | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Wed Aug 21 1991 08:09 | 12 |
| What kind of bicycle is it? Any sealed components you know
of?
Spraying it off with a garden hose will generally not hurt it.
The is not the end, however. It would need to be wiped down.
If we're talking serious cleaning, hosing it is good only for
the big crappy stuff. You'll need some serious disassemby action
to do it right, plus some stuff like thinner or some other degreaser
and re-lube all the right stuff to avoid unwanted oxidation...
Chip
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364.20 | I loved it... | SALEM::ORRIS | | Wed Aug 21 1991 10:50 | 15 |
|
Thanks... I ended up doing it the hard way... Garden hose, assortment
of brushes (even a toothbrush ... no kidding) and gease cutting soaps...
What a mess... grease everwhere....
Big diffence tho... Rear derailer is alot quieter... Bad news is
after I removed all the crud, I saw just how bad the rear gears are worn...
Looks like its time to spend some more money....
jim
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