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Other uses?
The pedal threads stripped out of the cranks on my sons bike. I guess both the pedal and crank threads were weak and now both are shot. Are there any uses for old ds crank arms? They're decent record alloy cranks and I hate to just toss em.
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I've seen some older campy hubs where someone flattened one side of the flange and put an angled cut through the flanges on the other side to turn them into a business card holder that looked pretty cool. Not sure if there's an analogous thing you can do with a crankset. Maybe somehow turn them into bookends after removing the rings and polishing?
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You can have a threaded insert installed and reuse them.
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Is that a DIY or an lbs job?
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diy for sure. If you can find the Kit.
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i bought a drive-side campy gs crank arm for its rings, and now it's hanging on the kitchen wall. it looks great, and is a nice conversation piece.
it can also serve as a mace-like weapon, an eggbeater, or maybe a terribly performing spatula. |
Originally Posted by notenoughdaylig
(Post 16871415)
Is that a DIY or an lbs job?
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If the average guy at the bike shop can properly do a Helicoil, I'd be surprised. Ask around if they have any experience.
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Originally Posted by Kidd69
(Post 16871491)
diy for sure. If you can find the Kit.
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Originally Posted by rootboy
(Post 16871835)
If the average guy at the bike shop can properly do a Helicoil, I'd be surprised. Ask around if they have any experience.
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Clock.
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At the co-op we used busted NDS cranks as drawer pulls for the workshop drawers.
http://tampabikecoop.files.wordpress...pg?w=600&h=600 |
Wouldn't one of those make a heck of a weapon?
I could see slicing through a zombie horde with a crank arm attached to some razor sharp chainrings... |
Handle for a chain whip.
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Originally Posted by Bledfor Days
(Post 16872939)
Handle for a chain whip.
http://i273.photobucket.com/albums/j...s/1f48b4be.jpg |
[QUOTE=WNG;16872998]Like mine? :)
Ha ha. Something like that. Ok. Exactly like that. |
Originally Posted by WNG
(Post 16872998)
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this is what happened to me today: stripped threads on a beautiful, shiny campy nr 3-hole fd cable anchor arm. it made me sad. i got another on ebay afterwards for $20. so it goes.
but here's a post-purchase dilemma: should i spend another $15 to fix the stripped derailleur using loctite form-a-thread? i just read about it. it sets up in minutes, and is supposed to be strong enough for this type application. what i really want to know is: can loctite form-a-thread be used multiple times after months of storage of unused product? for me, it would make sense if i could use it again and again. and i wonder if it would be strong enough for crank threads. |
Loctite® Form-A- Thread® Stripped Thread Repair - Henkel
says it allows for up to 128 ft/lbs of torque. but i have little frame of reference for this. |
128 lbs-ft of torque is more than a car wheel nut should be be tightened to. Typically around 100 lbs-ft. Of course this is steel on steel not like many bike parts which are often steel on aluminium. should work fine base on this spec.
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