bottum bracket issues?
#1
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Joined: Jun 2009
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bottum bracket issues?
i have an se 08 draft and have recently spend 400 dollars on a new messenger 46t crank set pedals clips straps grips bottom bracket and adapter, the upgrade is amazing! but the the cranks still flex just a tad! all of my friends bikes are super spotless and cranks dont wiggle at all, mine wiggles just the tiniest of tads but still its that little tad of a wiggle thats always in the back of my head that i was trying to get rid of in the first place! so my question is, is this normal? i didnt feel it the first day i got my bike serviced but now i do! did they gip me on the service?? cause if its unusual for the crank not be spot on perfect im ganna have them replace it and service again
#3
this probably won't help, but my roommates crank wiggles too. it's pretty bad. i took a look at it and he just needs a new crank and bottom bracket because where the crank fits onto the taper of the bottom bracket, they don't fit as perfectly as they once did, no matter how much you tighten the crank bolt. this is mainly due to a cheap bottom bracket and crank though...and yours are not cheap
so, yeah +1 to bringing it back to where the work was done
so, yeah +1 to bringing it back to where the work was done
#11
King of the Hipsters
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 2,128
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From: Bend, Oregon
Bikes: Realm Cycles Custom
I think the OP refers to "flex" and not to "wiggle."
All bikes flex as a function of the frame, and some crank arms and spindles flex more than others.
"Wiggle," to me, means one can, standing beside the bike, reach down with his or her hand and by pulling and pushing on the pedal cause the spindle (the shaft that connects the two crank arms) to "wiggle."
This type of wiggle usually comes as the result of loose bottom bracket cups, and one can remove this type of wiggle by properly adjusting the cups.
As for "flex," which refers to the bending of the frame, the crank arms and the spindle, one can reduce this flex by throwing money at it, but, in the end, a little bit of flex (especially in a steel frame) has some advantages; and, besides, not enough money exists to get rid of all flex (especially with a strong rider).
All bikes flex as a function of the frame, and some crank arms and spindles flex more than others.
"Wiggle," to me, means one can, standing beside the bike, reach down with his or her hand and by pulling and pushing on the pedal cause the spindle (the shaft that connects the two crank arms) to "wiggle."
This type of wiggle usually comes as the result of loose bottom bracket cups, and one can remove this type of wiggle by properly adjusting the cups.
As for "flex," which refers to the bending of the frame, the crank arms and the spindle, one can reduce this flex by throwing money at it, but, in the end, a little bit of flex (especially in a steel frame) has some advantages; and, besides, not enough money exists to get rid of all flex (especially with a strong rider).
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bigvegan
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12-20-09 01:48 AM








