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• #427
Ultra Torque is actually dreamy to fit, super easy, just a 10mm hex key. BUT you need a very long one as the bolt is quite deep inside the crank
The short end on normal 10mm hex aren't long enough to get to it, and using the long side obviously doesnt give enough leverage.
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• #428
Yup, I use a 10mm Allen key (long bit) inserted into the crank bolt, 10mm socket and extension bar on the stubby bit to provide leverage.
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• #429
Agreed it was super easy, fitting that bearing retainer clip was fiddly as hell tho with my shit eyesight and sausage fingers.
And also I was a bit confused at first about the wavy washer, I thought the previous owner had fucked up a normal washer removing it or something, but its supposed to be like that :)
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• #431
Becoming more persuaded by the minute the guy who told me about UT tools (who worked in a bike shop) just wanted me to take my bike there to get it serviced rather than me just buying a cheap tool/using a 10mm allen key and doing it myself.
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• #432
Are you confusing Ultra Torque with Power Torque? The latter definitely needed an array of expensive proprietary tools.
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• #433
That sounds the most likely explanation.
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• #434
The campag ultra torque Allen key I found much easier to use as regular Allen keys were too slim to keep centred.
Power torque is easy to fit but a pain to get out.
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• #435
The bearing puller is pricey, and necessary if you plan to swap bearings
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• #436
A generic gear puller won’t work?
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• #437
This is the wanted ad I've just put up.
WANTED,
A left hand Campagnolo Brifter lever 10 speed suitable for a triple set up. Anything considered, if it's a pair fine.Bits or non working The only parameters are Campag, 10 speed and triple.
Bit up a creek atm. Thanks!
I only actually need the shifting lever, (that broke on me the other day, which is another story) for a 2008 Centaur triple Brifter. If any has one or Brifter(s) to suit or know of any leads please do let me know.
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• #438
I got a cheapo ice tools puller. Works fine, and long as you remember to remove the circlip.
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• #439
You used to be able to just buy those as spares, the shifter lever on the Record ones is just plastic not like the carbon of the levers. I snapped this lever once when the hood rubber had torn and got wedged between the 2 levers and when I went to shift it just snapped in half.
I bought a spare lever at the time from SJS but just checked their website and they don't have any. The Cycle clinic guy has a right lever one but not a left.
I would have thought the shifter lever itself would be the same for all the 10 speed Centaur/Chorus/Record as they are separate from all the ratchety gubbins that differentiate the doubles and triples, but I'm not sure.
BUT LOOKY HERE...this looks to be exactly the thing you need, I'd contact this guy and beg and plead and make him an offer for a quick sale.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/225414459639?hash=item347bbfb0f7:g:3eUAAOSwzbFj52Pg&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAAsIQgx45nEBV8%2FsnGnrztL%2BmTsywDim%2FwJMhWXGa2cyvSPBs%2FwbvYns1mUYnoJ%2B6JTm1ZMI1GLLrE%2Bn2cvwvpOjWcschlAYdLcU4W25q2%2Bg8U4XNFr37LbMpenYhCQSGXh23F39uPMDnwyfC7FvrKKeuk40o0jtrroLlnFHVBbqRu7TMd%2FtaUFFS7wbXWQIflcgZ4D%2B7G%2B%2BWzRdcsgs6gYbnyz4%2BVIIk6lscVsjy9d1V6%7Ctkp%3ABk9SR-rYu-rLYQ -
• #440
If its just the brake lever bit you need I have a left Record lever, left over from me smashing into the back of a van on the Aldwych, all the other bits of the shifter were destroyed or recycled so I don't have them, just the lever, but free if any use to you.
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• #441
You can buy a new one here if you have no luck : https://www.velozone.co.uk/products/campagnolo-ec-ch329-complete-left-shifting-lever
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• #442
If he doesn't want this, I'd be interested in taking it.
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• #443
Hi folks.
Giving my bike a clean yesterday I realised my rear rotor has a bit of play in it. It looks like the actual rotor part (rather than the black spider), is shifting a few mm in all difrections, as if it's not completely bonded to the spider. The spider is solid, no movement, so it's not a case of the lockring not being tight enough.
Front rotor doesn't have the same problem. Is this a death trap/warranty issue?
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• #444
This kind of play is normal with semi-floating rotors. From Campagnolo manual - section 2.2 - pg 8
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• #445
Ahh gotcha. Thanks very much!
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• #446
The float happens at the buttons - the round pieces joining the spider to the rotor. A floating rotor normally gives the most stopping power. When you grab the brake lever it squeezes the brake pads onto the rotor which has the ability to move and conform to the brake pads giving maximum rotor to pad contact.
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• #447
That's really interesting, i wasn't aware of that. Does that also mean, generally speaking, floating rotors will be quieter than non-floating rotors?
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• #449
Does anyone know if a 12 speed front mech will work on 11 speed 2015> shifters
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• #450
The float as designed to accommodate tolerance differences in manufacture, for example pads moving at different rates as seals have different stiction. If the calpiers are misaligned then to a certain degree the misalignment may be nullified, but that'll create noise the same as a fixed rotor. Pad noise will still occur even with the perfectly setup system.
Solid rotors do have a place through as they're cheaper and also in continuous dust / dirt floating rotors can become none floating as the buttons can jammed with debris.
This is annoying. I was told (admittedly a while ago - and probably by a Shimano salesman, thinking about it) that you needed a special tool that cost hundreds of pounds to change Ultra Torque cranks. Is it really just a 10mm allen key?