Your stem there, check the stem diameter because it’s an early one. Earlier stems for head clip headsets are 22mm compared to the usual 22.2mm and you won’t be able to use it in a fork with a conventional headset. Apologies if you already knew that!
This is a problem I have noticed (the size difference). I guess this may be another of those metric to imperial cock ups.
I suspect the difference may cause a potential danger, because If you use a 22mm stem in a steerer intended for 22.2mm you may cause undue stress on the steerer by overtightening the headclip bolt and crushing the steerer slot down onto the stem.
I have had a steerer fail (see photo below) and I feel very lucky to have escaped without injury - I was going uphill rather slowly when there was a click and suddenly no connection between the handlebars and the front wheel. Ninon at Bicycle Workshop told me that when headclips were common this type of failure wasn't all that rare.
I'd be most interested to hear what others think about this
Your stem there, check the stem diameter because it’s an early one. Earlier stems for head clip headsets are 22mm compared to the usual 22.2mm and you won’t be able to use it in a fork with a conventional headset. Apologies if you already knew that!
This is a problem I have noticed (the size difference). I guess this may be another of those metric to imperial cock ups.
I suspect the difference may cause a potential danger, because If you use a 22mm stem in a steerer intended for 22.2mm you may cause undue stress on the steerer by overtightening the headclip bolt and crushing the steerer slot down onto the stem.
I have had a steerer fail (see photo below) and I feel very lucky to have escaped without injury - I was going uphill rather slowly when there was a click and suddenly no connection between the handlebars and the front wheel. Ninon at Bicycle Workshop told me that when headclips were common this type of failure wasn't all that rare.
I'd be most interested to hear what others think about this