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headset press
ok, well we all know how rediculously priced this tool is, so i was trying to find the topic on the the home made ones. Couldn't find it, so i'm just wondering if anyone has the link to the topic on the homemade headset press that was on this forum sometime earlier this year..
(the one that was made up of a really big bolt and some nuts and washers) |
I actually just took mine to the LBS, the guy didn't charge me, I stuck a few bucks in the tip jar.
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I wouldn't call ~$50 for a headset press ridiculously priced.
http://www.pricepoint.com/detail/146...p=325%20SETHP5 |
I don't have the link but I made mine with a piece of all-thread, a couple nuts, and some big washers...easy peasy and it works just fine.
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I couldn't find the one here on BF but Dave Moulton has a similar style. I just used my own version of it to good affect a few days ago when swapping in a Tange unit.
http://davesbikeblog.blogspot.com/20...placement.html |
I made one exactly like Brock describes it above. Under $10, and no waiting for a mail order.
And here's a pic: http://www.fivenineclimber.com/image...dset_press.jpg |
what about installing the crown race on the fork? what do you guys usually use for that?
i know that theres and install tool from park tools but if you don't have one then what do you guys use to improvise |
I concur with the above post. I have used a piece of all-thread and some washers, and nuts to fit on several installs this year.
For the Crown race I have been using a piece of PVC pipe that fits, so far so good. Cheers, Chris |
Originally Posted by bigbossman
(Post 13183887)
I wouldn't call ~$50 for a headset press ridiculously priced.
http://www.pricepoint.com/detail/146...p=325%20SETHP5 http://www.niagaracycle.com/product_...ucts_id=430405 but then again there's this one which looks pretty much like that homemade one, it just has longer handles one both sides. http://www.niagaracycle.com/product_...ducts_id=19840 but the homemade one looks like it would cost under 10 bucks...that's a +1 for me |
I've installed a crown race using a mallet and a length of aluminum pipe that was once the shaft of an old cafe umbrella. Worked like a charm.
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I have the home made setup and I found it difficult to keep centered. What I've been doing recently, though, is using a copper/brass or whatever it is fitting from the home made setup to hammer each cup in individually. I find that slowly tapping around the fitting in a circle gets the headset in quite easily and quickly, you just have to be careful to not jam it in lopsided, and for that reason to be careful initially until it's going in straight and you can hit it harder.
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Well.
I posted the pic of the $10 solution above, but I also use my Campagnolo headtube facing tool equipped with the supplied bushings to install head sets on worthy frames. There's a soft (aluminium?) washer under the cutter. http://i739.photobucket.com/albums/x...adsetpress.jpg |
+1
I'm using a piece of aluminum tubing and dead blow mallet. |
Originally Posted by mapleleafs-13
(Post 13183974)
that's cause that one is on sale......
I had a home made press similar to those posted here. It worked well enough, I suppose - but the right tool for the job works so well it isn't even a contest. For $50, it was a no-brainer to me. I'm all for DIY solutions, especially when the proper tool is prohibitively expensive. This one isn't, but it's your money. :) |
Originally Posted by jan nikolajsen
(Post 13183922)
I made one exactly like Brock describes it above. Under $10, and no waiting for a mail order.
And here's a pic: http://www.fivenineclimber.com/image...dset_press.jpg I made one just like the one Jan uses here. On mine I put one roller thrust washer under each nut. |
Originally Posted by mazdaspeed
(Post 13184167)
I have the home made setup and I found it difficult to keep centered.
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The Price Point tool works well for me. For the crown race I use pvc pipe with duct tape over the end.
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Originally Posted by mazdaspeed
(Post 13184167)
I have the home made setup and I found it difficult to keep centered. What I've been doing recently, though, is using a copper/brass or whatever it is fitting from the home made setup to hammer each cup in individually. I find that slowly tapping around the fitting in a circle gets the headset in quite easily and quickly, you just have to be careful to not jam it in lopsided, and for that reason to be careful initially until it's going in straight and you can hit it harder.
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Originally Posted by jan nikolajsen
(Post 13183922)
I made one exactly like Brock describes it above. Under $10, and no waiting for a mail order.
And here's a pic: http://www.fivenineclimber.com/image...dset_press.jpg |
Most of my "big tools" have come from craigslist scores - I think I paid ~$90 for this haul, complete with aluminum case
http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._3575624_n.jpg here it is broken down http://a3.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot...5_181116_n.jpg Here's another, I think I paid~$30 for - http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._4138314_n.jpg All it takes is one or two key tools to be included to make it well worth the purchase! |
Originally Posted by gbalke
(Post 13184957)
Mine is identical to the one pictured by Jan
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I'd never use the 2 washer method....never. I couldnt tell you how many thousands of headsets I've removed and installed and nothing beats the proper tool.
The cheap 2 washer setup has 2 major flaws...at least in my trained mechanics eyes...... 1: Sooner or later your going to mess up the edge of the cup 2. Because there's nothing to prevent the cup the cup rocking to side your much more likely to start a cup crooked. Nothing good comes from a crooked cup in a frame. Either buy the proper tool or have your local shop do it. |
Originally Posted by norskagent
(Post 13185105)
Most of my "big tools" have come from craigslist scores - I think I paid ~$90 for this haul, complete with aluminum case
http://a1.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._3575624_n.jpg here it is broken down http://a3.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot...5_181116_n.jpg Here's another, I think I paid~$30 for - http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._4138314_n.jpg All it takes is one or two key tools to be included to make it well worth the purchase! |
Originally Posted by jan nikolajsen
(Post 13183922)
I made one exactly like Brock describes it above. Under $10, and no waiting for a mail order.
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Originally Posted by RavingManiac
(Post 13185205)
Just out of curiosity, were those tools listed in the bikes category or tools? I never see anything like that listed in the bikes category up here in Maine.
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What about a vise and a couple of blocks of 1"x wood? That's what I use on mine. Just start it slow and watch what you are doing. The key to this method is a third hand(second person). If you want a 1 person tool rig up something out of a x-large C clamp.
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http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread...o-Dave-Moulton
Probably not necessary anymore, but this is probably the thread you were looking for. |
+99 to the one Jan posted. I made the same thing, used large nylon washers below the nuts so as not to damage the cups/races.
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Originally Posted by miamijim
(Post 13185179)
I'd never use the 2 washer method....never. I couldnt tell you how many thousands of headsets I've removed and installed and nothing beats the proper tool.
The cheap 2 washer setup has 2 major flaws...at least in my trained mechanics eyes...... 1: Sooner or later your going to mess up the edge of the cup 2. Because there's nothing to prevent the cup the cup rocking to side your much more likely to start a cup crooked. Nothing good comes from a crooked cup in a frame. Either buy the proper tool or have your local shop do it. You can choose between cobbling something together for ~$10, or buying the right tool for ~$50. I guess it really depends on what you're working on or how often you'll use it. If I were working on a gas-pipe bike, I'd just pound them in with a mallet and a block of wood and be done with it. For something I care about (De Rosa, Palo Alto, etc) I'll use the proper tool. I've used the press enough times that it really has paid for itself. So smooth, so effortless. |
ill keep using my $10 one until it ruins something. At the rate I'm going I might die first.
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