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• #2502
All,
Can anyone out there help?
I'm looking at a pair of wheels on eBay. They would be an ideal second pair for my best bike but they come with a Planet X 11 speed Campag-compatible freehub. I ride on Shimano.
I have contacted Planet X in search of a replacement freehub but they've told me they're now discontinued.
Does anyone recognise the freehub and might anyone have an 11-Shimano replacement?
Thanks.
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• #2503
Not sure they're worth over £300 with postage and a new freehub if you can find one, bit of wear on what looks like a metal rim with carbon faring.
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• #2504
yes, these are worth half of asking price
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• #2505
My tubus duo rack is supposed to only be used with forks with inner and outer eyelets. My new forks I bought to go with this rack only have outer mid eyelets. Will I die?
Edit: doesn't fit anyway
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• #2506
My frame has a 31.6mm diameter seat tube, I usually run 27.2mm seatposts.
I'm looking at buying a carbon seatpost and I was looking to increase comfort/flexibility. My initial thought was that a 27.2mm seatpost with a shim would be more flexible than a 31.6mm seatpost, but the retailer seems to think a 27.2mm seatpost would be stiffer.What do you guys think?
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• #2507
The retailer has watched too much youtube. A 27.2 will be more flexible than a 31.6
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• #2508
Yeah that^
If the wall thickness stays the same, a larger diameter tube will be stiffer.
I don't expect the wall thickness to come down much between seatpost sizes so it's probable that the 27.2 is more flexy -
• #2509
I thought so! Cheers for confirming guys.
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• #2510
I need a pair of 1" road forks threads extended to fit a shorter frame and I would like to do it myself...
Ive heard its pretty physical...any advice? or is it best to go to a local framebuilder/shop?
also, all Dies I have found online are 25mm whereas the forks will be 25.4mm? is that an issue?
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• #2511
Maybe because you're looking at metric taps? Or maybe that's the diameter of the cut threads.
Either way, I'd just look for an inch die to be safe
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/124469794032And yeah it won't be easy. You'll want cutting fluid, a vice and a big die holder
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• #2512
You won't be able to tell the difference.
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• #2513
Thanks alot!
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• #2514
@brommers can I borrow your difficult crank tool- could you make me one?
Glad you got it sorted. I no longer have my Difficult Crank Tool - I left it with Cycliste when I retrieved my stuff from Switzerland recently. I only use it to remove crank lockrings, and in the UK I can use a bench vice instead, so I thought it would be of more use to her than me.
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• #2515
I love my Fichtel und Sachs one speed coasters, but a couple of times when I’ve opened one up to change the grease (I currently have a NOS one from 1951 that likely needs new lube) I’ve damaged the bearing cap/retainer/seal thing.
This video has been extremely helpful but his technique for removal of that bastard hasn’t worked very well for me. Any ideas on something more likely to produce a good result, maybe akin to a bearing puller setup?
Start watching from 5.45 for a quick demo.
Thanks!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XeVlrM4o9U&t=328s
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• #2516
Here’s another one: I have a full size frame that matches bmx OLD, anything preventing me from using such a hub for a SS build? I understand that some bmx hubs come as cassettes, does that mean the chainline is easily adjustable?
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• #2517
matches bmx OLD
120?
If the axle is the same thickness it might be possible.
Cassette hubs in the bmx world are sprockets complete with the pawl/spring part of of the drive integrated. Different to HG splines with some adjustment in the chainline.
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• #2518
110mm oln.
Axle diameter will be the biggest issue with most bmx hubs being 14mm. Of course it’s possible to file flats on a 14mm axle to fit it into a 10mm dropout (some hubs came like this bitd) but could be a lot of work.
On the bearing cover thing, I’ve misshapen Shimano ones when removing them but been able to reshape them with various tools to get them fitting well again.
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• #2519
Haven't bought a bmx frame in a few years but mine are all 120
edit: that's a lie, I have a Redline race frame that's 110
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• #2520
BMX is pretty much always 110 ain't it?
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• #2521
Yeah the last frames I got were 110. Vaguely remember having 120 on older cassette hub, probably something silly.
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• #2522
Thanks for this - some manufacturers offer different axle diameters so in that case it might be a go? Chainline is generally akin to 43?
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• #2523
I noticed a few offer the ability to run Shimano HG cogs.
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• #2524
More common on race hubs like Shimano DXR
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• #2525
Race BMXs have all sorts of weird stuff.
Anyone got any ideas about a replacement for this little fucker of a bolt, it is a ickle 6mm one, from a fork not a crankset. I can't find source for buying one online in the UK
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