T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2700.1 | | JURA::PELAZ::MACFADYEN | All you have to do is ask | Tue Nov 02 1993 04:05 | 13 |
| > how snug should a seatpost be
What you want to avoid is a seatpost that can't be tightened enough to stop
it slipping.
Yours sounds to me like it might be too big - it shouldn't be that difficult
to get it in (we're still talking about seatposts btw). But perhaps the
inside of the frame tube isn't smooth. You could get a bikeshop to ream the
seat tube, a frightening operation but one that might make seatpost insertion
a lot easier.
Rod
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2700.2 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Nov 02 1993 06:20 | 8 |
| A little trick I use...
Reverse the seatpost binder screw and place a butter knife or putty
knife (narrow) into the split where there screw passes. You can turn
screw and spread the down tube. Of course, you need to go slow but
it sure take the wraslin' outa pulling and inserting a seatpost.
My Merlin is tough in this category too...
|
2700.3 | | ISLNDS::SCHWABE | | Thu Nov 04 1993 11:04 | 3 |
|
Is the bike frame French? I seem to recall my Motobecane Grand Record
has a 26.8mm seat post.
|
2700.4 | | STRATA::HUI | | Thu Nov 04 1993 12:54 | 4 |
| Did you also grease the seat post with White Lithium grease befire inserting
it? How did you know it was a 27mm. Did you measure the old one with calipers?
Dave
|
2700.5 | grease | REPAIR::CARTER | | Fri Nov 05 1993 03:18 | 6 |
|
Dave,
Why should the seat post be greased with white lithium grease ?
....Simom
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2700.6 | | MOVIES::WIDDOWSON | OpenVMS engineering, Ecosse | Fri Nov 05 1993 03:37 | 1 |
| Ever tried freeing a siezed seatpost ?
|
2700.7 | answers | GALVIA::STEPHENS | Hills are just flats at an angle | Fri Nov 05 1993 03:51 | 6 |
| It's an English manufacturer (an inexpensive Raleigh). 27mm is written on the
seatpost. And no, I didn't use lithium grease, but in retrospect it wouldn't
have been a bad idea. Next time I feel like some tough exercise and it's raining
outside I'll attempt to remove the seatpost and grease it up :-)
Thanks for the advice, all.
|
2700.8 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri Nov 05 1993 05:58 | 12 |
| Let's follow on the lithium grease question a little further...
When inserting something or putting a screw/bolt back in always
put some grease on it - lithium or other anti-sieze product...
I never grease a BB spindle, but the rest is open game. I don't
mean don't do the crank bolt (always do that one).
With Ti stuff the problem is exacerbated. It will bond with other
materials so over the year I do a few of the goodies over to avoid
this...
|
2700.9 | Grease = less work | CARTUN::VINCENT | | Fri Nov 05 1993 08:12 | 14 |
| Grease the Seatpost!!!! I once cleaned the seatpost (and the frame seat tube)
on a MTB. A few months later, I tried to adjust the seat height and it was
frozen solid. After trying a few hours myself to free it (heat, pipe wrench,
hammer, cursing), I brought it to a bike shop.
They were still at it when I went to pick it up (it was a slow day and it
became a personal challenge - they didn't want to get beat by something as
"simple" as removing a seatpost! They tried penetrating oil, a BIG pipe
wrench (with a 4' extension on the handle) a BIG hammer, etc. By this time,
the seatpost was looking like it went through a bomb blast, but still stuck
solid.
Took the bike home and had to cut the seatpost out with a Sawsall (sp?).
I now grease Everything......
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2700.10 | | STRATA::HUI | | Fri Nov 05 1993 10:47 | 5 |
|
If you don't GREASE, you will get GREASED ($):-)
Dave
|