check your nuts!
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member

Joined: Feb 2004
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From: The Poconos, PA
Bikes: Converted 1997 Trek Singletrack 930 singlespeed and a Kona Lavadome singlespeed, fixed Dahon folding bike, fixed 27" Miyata road bike, early 70's Raleigh Chopper
check your nuts!
Always check your nuts before you ride. You too girls! I was just coming back from a lunchbreak ride on my fixed folder to the local Barnes & Noble and noticed a slight wobble with my left pedal/crank. Turns out the crank bolt somehow loosened itself off. Perhaps from riding in my trunk and absorbing all the road bumps and potholes? Luckily my crank decided to loosen itself off once I got back to work and I only had to pedal one-footed for about 50 feet.
So don't forget to check your nuts!
So don't forget to check your nuts!
#3
Gone, but not forgotten
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 4,508
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From: Toronto
Bikes: spicer fixie, Haro BMX, cyclops track, Soma Double Cross, KHS Flite 100
This happned to me when I was drunk and working on my bike. I took the bike for a test ride and forgot to put the crankbolts back in past finger tight. About halfa block down the street my left crank falls off onto the road and I realize I'm an idiot. It was ISIS splined too so the splines on the bb and cranks are totally mangled. It wasn't a huge loss though. I also discovered the right crank bolt on my speedy bike comes loose after a few weeks. I was told this is because I'm doing trackstands on it but it also happened constantly on my BMX which is freewheel and ridden by my room mate who has no skills.
The problem with crank bolts is its really hard to tell how hard to torque them.
The problem with crank bolts is its really hard to tell how hard to torque them.
#5
Originally Posted by lyledriver
You mean bolts right?
some older cotterless cranks use nuts that attach to threaded spindles, but those are pretty rare (and getting rarer). if you have cottered cranks, by all means check the nuts on the and of the cotters. but yeah, in general, to be on the safe side, you should probably check your nuts and your bolts before riding.
#6
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Joined: Feb 2004
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From: The Poconos, PA
Bikes: Converted 1997 Trek Singletrack 930 singlespeed and a Kona Lavadome singlespeed, fixed Dahon folding bike, fixed 27" Miyata road bike, early 70's Raleigh Chopper
Originally Posted by lyledriver
You mean bolts right?
#7
Thread Starter
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Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,002
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From: The Poconos, PA
Bikes: Converted 1997 Trek Singletrack 930 singlespeed and a Kona Lavadome singlespeed, fixed Dahon folding bike, fixed 27" Miyata road bike, early 70's Raleigh Chopper
Originally Posted by No_Minkah
Edit: reading comprehension, folks
#9
ogre
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 399
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From: arlington, va
Bikes: surly steamroller fixie, '90 cannondale SR 800
Originally Posted by Shiznaz
The problem with crank bolts is its really hard to tell how hard to torque them.
Originally Posted by na975
thats why i tighten all my shiit til its about to strip.
#10
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From: Long Beach, CA
Bikes: Bianchi Advantage Fixed Conversion; Specialized Stumpjumper FS Hardtail
But you can screw up the cranks if you overtighten them. If you get them too tight, the nuts/bolts will bottom out and you will forever have crank wiggle. Just use blue loctite or grease ( i prefer loctite here because once the bolt starts to loosen, it gets worse very quickly and most of us don't carry a wrench big enough to fix it) and torque it to 35lb*ft. Borrow a torque wrench from someone to get the feel for the right amount of pressure. Tightening a fastener until its about to strip is a bad idea.
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#11
<2<wheel<<REWIND<
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 46
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From: Toronto
Bikes: Cervelo 2010 RS (for fun) - Specialized '06 Langster fixie (for commuting)
same happened to me! not on a fixie tho...
my singlespeed-modded 90s Specialized Allez Carbon had just gotten lifted, so my bro leant me his Rocky Mountain he wasn't using much (usually on his Al. Fetish Fixie) so that I could go riding with my girl. halfway out on paved trails i feel the left pedal start to give - look down and crank go bye-bye. had to hand-tighten it until i could find someone with the right sized allen key.
and to think i was gonna lower the seat on the Rocky so that my girl could ride the lighter bike that day, she said "don't bother". with only about 3 rides under her belt all year (the first year she's ridden in over 10 years) i don't think she would've been too keen to ride again after having that happen to her.
joe
my singlespeed-modded 90s Specialized Allez Carbon had just gotten lifted, so my bro leant me his Rocky Mountain he wasn't using much (usually on his Al. Fetish Fixie) so that I could go riding with my girl. halfway out on paved trails i feel the left pedal start to give - look down and crank go bye-bye. had to hand-tighten it until i could find someone with the right sized allen key.
and to think i was gonna lower the seat on the Rocky so that my girl could ride the lighter bike that day, she said "don't bother". with only about 3 rides under her belt all year (the first year she's ridden in over 10 years) i don't think she would've been too keen to ride again after having that happen to her.
joe
#12
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 3,959
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From: Davis CA
Bikes: Surly Cross-Check, '85 Giant road bike (unrecogizable fixed-gear conversion
I had just brought home a used Surly Crosscheck. It needed work. I removed the crank bolts, and discovered that they were Shimano Octalink and I lacked the tool to remove the cranks.
So I got on the bike and headed to the LBS to see if they had the right tool.
Notice any step missing?
I was almost there, about to cut through the Borders parking lot, when suddenly the right crank gave way under my foot. The next thing I know, I was standing in the road, with the right crank clipped to my foot, but not attached to the bike. Ever try to walk with a 53/39 crankset clipped to the bottom of your foot? Ever try to bend over to remove a 53/39 crankset from your foot while standing the other foot? Ever have this happen to you in the middle of the Borders parking lot at lunch time?
Note: If you live in Davis and were witness to this spectacle, please do not let it affect your opinion of Surly bicycles. They are fine pieces of machinery.
So I got on the bike and headed to the LBS to see if they had the right tool.
Notice any step missing?
I was almost there, about to cut through the Borders parking lot, when suddenly the right crank gave way under my foot. The next thing I know, I was standing in the road, with the right crank clipped to my foot, but not attached to the bike. Ever try to walk with a 53/39 crankset clipped to the bottom of your foot? Ever try to bend over to remove a 53/39 crankset from your foot while standing the other foot? Ever have this happen to you in the middle of the Borders parking lot at lunch time?
Note: If you live in Davis and were witness to this spectacle, please do not let it affect your opinion of Surly bicycles. They are fine pieces of machinery.
#13
...and check axle nuts too. I once forgot to tighten the nuts on my front wheel beyond finger-tight, then went bombing down a hill at 30+ mph. I got to the bottom unscathed (and completely unaware), but when I got home and realized what I'd done, I about sh*t myself.





