Seatstay shock bolt

PsyMac

New Member
Jul 16, 2023
5
0
DK
Perplexed: I tried to remove the bolt connecting the seat stay to the shock link on my Occam 2022. It loosened but would not come out, even with pliers (trying to pull it out). The same for the other side.
Making things worse, when I try to tighten them again, they won't tighten! The bolts just turn round, right round, like a record...
What the...?

Is it just a matter of persistence and pressure on the bolt while screwing in until it grabs? That's what I've been trying, still no progress - but will continue
Just wondering if anybody out there has, by any chance, had a similar experience.

Any ideas? Feeling right incompetent
20230805_181142.jpg
 

Mikerb

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
May 16, 2019
6,565
5,055
Weymouth
I would guess you need to take all pressure off the bolt by removing the rear wheel and with the bike on a stand allow the rear triangle to hang. You can then manually raise the seat stay a little whilst pulling the bolt.
 

theremotejuggernaut

Active member
Aug 2, 2022
383
276
UK
I had a nightmare with these too.

Best way I found was to disassemble the rear triangle. Take out the bolts for the rear dropouts and then start off with the bolts you've pictured. Once those are in, do the driveside rear axle bolt and lastly, the non drive side.


Is it just a matter of persistence and pressure on the bolt while screwing in
Definitely not. The bolts are soft and the thread is easily damaged. Found that out the hard way...
 

theremotejuggernaut

Active member
Aug 2, 2022
383
276
UK
Another thing that I found helped, once you've got the metal spacers in place (blob of grease to hold them), use a 10mm allen key through the hole to make sure everything is aligned properly. You should be able to thread it right through the seatstay and linkage. Then fit the bolt.
 

PsyMac

New Member
Jul 16, 2023
5
0
DK
Another thing that I found helped, once you've got the metal spacers in place (blob of grease to hold them), use a 10mm allen key through the hole to make sure everything is aligned properly. You should be able to thread it right through the seatstay and linkage. Then fit the bolt.
Thanks, but can you explain which metal spacers you mean?
Good idea about the 10mm to help with line-up.
I guess it's just a real bugger getting them lined up :/
 

theremotejuggernaut

Active member
Aug 2, 2022
383
276
UK
There are 2 metal spacers, one either side of the linkage.

Highlighted in yellow below. It can be a bit fiddly to get them to stay in place while you slot the linkage arm into the seat stay. A blob of grease on either spacer helps keep them in place. Having the other end of the seat stay loose helps with getting everything aligned.
Screenshot_20230829-173801_Drive.jpg

Thanks, but can you explain which metal spacers you mean?
Good idea about the 10mm to help with line-up.
I guess it's just a real bugger getting them lined up
 

EMTB Forums

Since 2018

The World's largest electric mountain bike community.

555K
Messages
28,046
Members
Join Our Community

Latest articles


Top