Look the same to me, but what do I know?Thanks Irie. I think I missed your post. Are the new ones made of a different material do you think?
PS - I didn't fit the 'O' ring.
Look the same to me, but what do I know?Thanks Irie. I think I missed your post. Are the new ones made of a different material do you think?
Hold it with your left hand.Any good tip, how to hold the left side crank still when torquing this nut?
Imagine that been the case on the old plastic bigger ones !! I gotta be honest i think there no more effective than spacers or washers minus treads.if your chainring and crankarm can tighten up against the chainring id bet it would keep it held but id put as much torgue as the bolts that hold it on onto them,try a Yamaha locknut now thats up in the 50'snm atleast ive seen the opposite side snap the outter piece that a chainring would fit on and it was placed in a strong vice and the pedal put back on the side that gets clamped to the vice but on them there square taper so wouldnt he have been better clamping the actual crank? maybe it would spin sorry for going off topic but there was reason as a extremely tight lockring can cause alot of headache and it was just to change a 20euro casing bearing a job that ive to do but ive a better plan i hopeAfter following Bosch instructions (grease don't loctite) the chain ring lockring nut to 25 to 30 NM and having it fall off 3 times I was pretty annoyed and about to start looking into drilling it out and using safety wire. I even went to the local Trek Dealer and had them torque it down in case my torque wrench was to blame. Most local Trek dealers just state the Torque is 25 to 30 NM (as printed on the part) - when you call Bosch if you are lucky you will get someone who will read an outdated manual and confirm the old torque spec. However, what Bosch consumer support and most Trek folks don't know is a Technical Service Bulletin was issued by Bosch that stated the spec on the lockring is actually 40 NM to 45 NM. When my wife and I dropped both chain rings while riding on vacation, thankfully we found a local mechanic who actually cared about solving the problem and informed me of the change in torque spec - he torqued the lockrings on both our Trek Rails to 45 NM and so far after 300 miles they have not moved.
V
Or go oldschool if motor still on the bike lean the pedal on a curbHold it with your left hand.
No please!
same as removing a stubborn pedal...........get the non drive side pedal up against a worktop bench leg or similar.
fyi Bosch increased over the years the torque for tightening the lockring - think this was mentioned somewhere in this forum before.
Yes, probably best way is to mount wheels, take the bike down from stand for tightening.No please!
This is the simple way to do it:
Good to have a quality nut and fyi Bosch increased over the years the torque for tightening the lockring - think this was mentioned somewhere in this forum before.
Some men on a big island between atlantic and the north sea are able to do it with simples stones along the road!
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