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The lock ring is now unnecessary.

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Singlespeed & Fixed Gear "I still feel that variable gears are only for people over forty-five. Isn't it better to triumph by the strength of your muscles than by the artifice of a derailer? We are getting soft...As for me, give me a fixed gear!"-- Henri Desgrange (31 January 1865 - 16 August 1940)

The lock ring is now unnecessary.

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Old 03-27-06 | 04:49 PM
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The lock ring is now unnecessary.

https://204.73.203.34/fisso/eng/schpignone.htm

this is terrifying....

Oh, and it doesn't work. Or rather it works just fine till you need to stop really hard.

and then you will, real hard.
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Old 03-27-06 | 04:53 PM
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I guess if you never put back pressure on your pedals, the lockring is not necessary.
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Old 03-27-06 | 04:55 PM
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Holy ****.

That is really sketchy. Really, really sketchy : /
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Old 03-27-06 | 04:55 PM
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perfectly serviceable way of getting your cog on nice and tight before attaching your lockring
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Old 03-27-06 | 04:57 PM
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Originally Posted by eddiebrannan
perfectly serviceable way of getting your cog on nice and tight before attaching your lockring
Agreed. Ive used this technique a few times in the last month where I would have otherwise been high and dry (Changing wheels at my girlfriends house, switching cogs at the velodrome)
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Old 03-27-06 | 04:58 PM
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lockring or chainwhip useless?
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:00 PM
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it's been discussed at length before; do a search for 'rotafix' to find the threads
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:01 PM
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that's all it is, making your chain and bb shell into a chainwhip.
one less car, one less tool… you get the pic
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:04 PM
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yea, i agree with this until the last sentence. thats when it goes all wrong. yea, EB has got it right, the keyword is BEFORE.
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:05 PM
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Bikes: I built the Bianchi track bike back up today.

I use this method with a lockring. The latest time that I put them on, I used anti-seize instead of grease, because one cog simply WOULD NOT come off. Couldn't reverse the process, two wrenches with a chainwhip and a cheater bar, NOTHING...

Eventually we put it in a vice with this little tool that was like two metal blocks with pins coming out the top that went into the teeth of the cog to secure it. Then two of us were able to (eventually) use the wheel for leverage to get it off.

So yeah, the lockring would have been unnesseary. But I still use one...
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:05 PM
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This ingenious technique - a trick pulled straight from the magic hat of track legend GIOVANNI PETTENELLA

street= stopping abruptly often
track= stopping rarely
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:07 PM
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I need to see another thread about this like I need another hole in the head.
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:08 PM
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i have always wondered how good this is for the bb shell or the chain.
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Old 03-27-06 | 05:12 PM
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It's suicide
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Old 03-28-06 | 02:16 AM
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Next week I'll post a thread that I invented a kind of bicycle that can stop without the use of brakes...

Then the week after that, I'll post that I discovered a wonderful new trick of standing still on the bike. I will call it crank-stand...




Oh, and it does work wothout a lockring. Otherwise half of Italy would be dead by now.
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Old 03-28-06 | 02:24 AM
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i met a guy who had been running this method on a road wheel brakeless everyday for a year and a half with no problems
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Old 03-28-06 | 11:27 AM
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Originally Posted by jacobpriest
i met a guy who had been running this method on a road wheel brakeless everyday for a year and a half with no problems
you only need to have a problem once, then you will appreciate using a lockring
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Old 03-28-06 | 11:41 AM
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Originally Posted by vomitron
I need to see another thread about this like I need another hole in the head.
How many have you got now?
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Old 03-28-06 | 12:05 PM
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Has dude never heard of a cheater?
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Old 03-28-06 | 12:16 PM
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I don't use a lockring on my colnago. I have a lockring but the first time I rode these hubs I was at the track. When I tried to change my cog it just wouldn't budge even rotafixing it didn't work and I used all the methods hereNT did (except the one he used to get the cog off) but nothing so I just put a bigger chainring on and have ridden ever since without the lockring. I'll put a lockring on once I finally get that cog off.
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Old 03-28-06 | 12:34 PM
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Originally Posted by LóFarkas
Next week I'll post a thread that I invented a kind of bicycle that can stop without the use of brakes...

Then the week after that, I'll post that I discovered a wonderful new trick of standing still on the bike. I will call it crank-stand...




Oh, and it does work wothout a lockring. Otherwise half of Italy would be dead by now.
half of italy already is dead
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Old 03-28-06 | 12:37 PM
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His physics are a bit off. He says that the force is applied at the outer rim diameter instead of the cog diameter. The force is actually applied at the diameter of the outermost wrap of chain. The more times you can wrap the chain around the cog, the more you can tighten the cog. The rim just works like a cheater bar.
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Old 03-28-06 | 04:26 PM
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The point is that this is a bad idea, we all know it is a bad idea and yet it is being promoted by a slick website, thus gaining credibility among those who don't know any better. This is happening more and more often.

Yes, a cog will stick if applied dry and cranked down hard (another bad idea), the point of a lock ring is to make sure that when friction is overcome by force, there is something to hold it in place.

Despite your constant existence in the grace of St. Jude, some things are simply a bad idea even if done regularly without problems. He (GP) is a track racer, and isn't as worried about stopping as going.

How many italians ride track bikes?

Italy is one of the big places for high end bikes but the same is true for cars, that doesn't mean everyone drives a Lambourghini.
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Old 03-29-06 | 02:00 PM
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"you only need to have a problem once, then you will appreciate using a lockring"

sounds like my argument for brakes.

18 years without a lockring.
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Old 03-29-06 | 05:51 PM
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isn't there a hub somewhere that the rear cog bolts on instead of threading? THAT would make lockrings useless if it ever took off.
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