Help I ruined my hub..freewheel went on wrong
#1
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Help I ruined my hub..freewheel went on wrong
OK, so I fear I doomed my rear hub. 126mm old school 5 speed new freewheel cam today I began to screw it on went well them tight then..........it was was off kilter....threads now Ifear ruined.......canit be fixed or do I need to buy new rear wheel...
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We are going to need more info as to the type of hub and threading type (if you know or its indicated) and the freewheel brand and any markings on the back especially if it is a Regina.
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How far on did you screw it? I would take it off and thread it back on and see how it holds up.
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If you can remove it, you might be able to clean up the buggered threads a bit with a triangular jeweler's file. Enough to get it threaded properly, perhaps.
#5
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I hate to admit, but I did this recently. Use your freewheel removal tool and a solid bench vise to remove the freewheel slowly. If you're lucky, the threads won't be (too) buggered, and a bit of careful work with a tiny file (the triangular jeweler's type is, indeed, perfect). I was lucky and very little file work was required.
Then check the freewheel threads. In my case, I went with a new freewheel.
Good luck!
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1959 Hilton Wrigley Connoisseur (my favorite!)
1963 Hetchins Mountain King
1971 Gitane Tour de France (original owner)
* 1971 Gitane Super Corsa (crashed)
* rebuilt as upright cruiser
1971 Gitane Super Corsa #2 (sweet replacement)
1980 Ritchey Road Touring (The Grail Bike)
1982 Tom Ritchey Everest
(replacing stolen 1981 TR Everest custom)
1982 Tom Ritchey McKinley (touring pickup truck)
1985 ALAN Record (Glued & Screwed. A gift.)
#6
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Yes, are you trying perchance to thread an Italian freewheel onto an ISO hub, or vice-versa?
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"Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing." --Theodore Roosevelt
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#7
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Don't feel bad. This mistake is easy to make, because the diameter-to-thread-pitch ratio is so big. In cases like that, I often screw it on backwards and wait for it to "click" before screwing forwards. That gives me a clue as to whether it's straight.
If you're over 40 years old, you may need a jewelers loupe. I have one in my workshop.
If you're over 40 years old, you may need a jewelers loupe. I have one in my workshop.
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#8
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^ this. Starting the thread on fasteners backwards and waiting for the click is a really good trick and one I have used for years to ensure you are not crossthreading. +1 on magnification... I have a pair of the highest power Optivisors which I use both for bike work and electronics work.
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BTW, 126s are for 6 and 7 speeds. 5 speed freewheels were for 120 mm hubs.
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I will see if my shop can repair it....if I need to buy a new hub and or wheel I will.
I was very excited to ride her..
#12
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The threading is the same, other than the ISO/Italian threading issue. Italian threaded freewheels/hubs should be pretty rare.
See https://sheldonbrown.com/freewheels.html
For the 5 speed freewheel on a 126 hub, you might want a washer or spacer behind the freewheel for spacing to get chainline better. No idea if LBS' have these around anymore.
Do you have the correct freewheel remover for this freewheel? If so, I would do as many here have advised and remove the freewheel and take a close look at the threads. Your LBS will probably want to sell you a new bike cuz they can't get a threaded hub, yada yada
See https://sheldonbrown.com/freewheels.html
For the 5 speed freewheel on a 126 hub, you might want a washer or spacer behind the freewheel for spacing to get chainline better. No idea if LBS' have these around anymore.
Do you have the correct freewheel remover for this freewheel? If so, I would do as many here have advised and remove the freewheel and take a close look at the threads. Your LBS will probably want to sell you a new bike cuz they can't get a threaded hub, yada yada
Last edited by Pars; 08-11-12 at 08:23 AM.
#13
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I hate to admit, but I did this recently. Use your freewheel removal tool and a solid bench vise to remove the freewheel slowly. If you're lucky, the threads won't be (too) buggered, and a bit of careful work with a tiny file (the triangular jeweler's type is, indeed, perfect). I was lucky and very little file work was required.
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Wow, that's cool. I think I've seen these but didn't know what they were.
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I was just going to post a pic of one of those. I have used them with great success on wheel studs (auto).
There was a need for one this week and I didnt have one but somehow or other I found one at a flea market. Talk about a needle in a haystack.
There was a need for one this week and I didnt have one but somehow or other I found one at a flea market. Talk about a needle in a haystack.
#20
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I did the same thing and took it to my LBS and he placed the freewheel in a vice and held the wheel. The large diameter allowed a better feel for how level the wheel was while threading it on.
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Still cant get how it can go fine at the beginning and then the user assumes it went to hell later on. When you screw that half way in pretty much there is no way to thread it wrong afterwards. If you put an ISO freewheel in an Italian threaded hub (or backwards) it will feel tight at the end but it will thread just fine as long as you dont change the the freewheel every single week like for year.
Had to google the word kilter because i did not know what it was. The freewheel actually changed the angle or something? if not then you should be ok but the only way to know is to take the freewheel out. Do not harm to ask this questions ok? You just say what happened (lightly described) but no details about anything... so we can only assume things.
1 did you clean the threads before putting the new freewheel?
2 Did you grease the threads really well?
3 are you sure the hub and the freewheel threads were compatable? there is italian, english/bsa and who knows what else moving around. Regina made them all. You can mix iso, bsa and italian. But well you can have something else in there.
4 what brand of hub are you talking about??
5 the freewheel actually changed the angle half way in? never seen such a thing ever...
6 the freeewheel just got tight half way in or something?
7 good luck
Had to google the word kilter because i did not know what it was. The freewheel actually changed the angle or something? if not then you should be ok but the only way to know is to take the freewheel out. Do not harm to ask this questions ok? You just say what happened (lightly described) but no details about anything... so we can only assume things.
1 did you clean the threads before putting the new freewheel?
2 Did you grease the threads really well?
3 are you sure the hub and the freewheel threads were compatable? there is italian, english/bsa and who knows what else moving around. Regina made them all. You can mix iso, bsa and italian. But well you can have something else in there.
4 what brand of hub are you talking about??
5 the freewheel actually changed the angle half way in? never seen such a thing ever...
6 the freeewheel just got tight half way in or something?
7 good luck
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Or are you referring to "wobble" when the freewheel rotates on its hub? If so, this is normal.
#23
十人十色
#24
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Once you get the FW off and clean up the threads, I would take a bottom bracket lockring, oil the hub threads, and screw the lockring on and off a few times to make sure the threads are good. Then grease the threads well and carefully thread the FW on by hand only. If it starts to bind, use the removal tool right away to remove it, and start over.
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well fellas I had the shop take a look at my mess and they were able to get it on. I amso excited to ride it....
14-24 5 speed freewheel I put thewheel on and will ride it this weekend...
14-24 5 speed freewheel I put thewheel on and will ride it this weekend...
Last edited by thehammerdog; 01-02-17 at 01:39 PM.