I bought an ordinary socket for my Fox 38 for a few pounds and ground it flat with a hand-held grinder. I was surprised how quick it was to do. Then I smoothed if off on some Emery cloth (but any 180-grit abrasive will do).Flat socket is for the air spring side , normal sockets can chew up the cap as there's very little to get a hold of ...........
I bought one of these off ebay last yearI bought an ordinary socket for my Fox 38 for a few pounds and ground it flat with a hand-held grinder. I was surprised how quick it was to do. Then I smoothed if off on some Emery cloth (but any 180-grit abrasive will do).
Lay the emery cloth on a flat hard surface and then rub the socket across in a figure of eight motion. Turn the socket by 90 degrees or so every 30 seconds. Then remove any burrs inside and out; (they will be slight).
Only saved myself about a fiver, but it was the principle of the thing.
and in an emergency if oil is dripping from that crush washer, some people literally make a temporary one out of a milk carton with a hole punch.You will need oil for the fork. Not much but still. If you're in it for the long term, then buy a litre or so & then it's always on hand for when you need it. Essentially, if you stick to the recommended 50 hour servicing intervals, you'll be cleaning the internals, swapping the wiper seals & renewing the oil. Strictcly speaking, you should renew crush washers & fork seals but in reality, you'll find they nearly always need doing less often unless they're obviously damaged etc.
That's an interesting tool for sure!I bought one of these off ebay last year
Comes in handy for all the different size nuts it's aluminium on the suspension top
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That's what it's made for, haven't broken it yet but saying that I've tempted fateThat's an interesting tool for sure!
Can you really put 40Nm through that without damage?
I thought they were 28nmThat's an interesting tool for sure!
Can you really put 40Nm through that without damage?
That sounds like a correct figure to me. However, I remember clearly that it was 40Nm on the Pike that I first removed the top cap. I remember it because I thought it was a stupidly high figure. 40Nm is the same as for a bottom bracket or the cassette lock ring, but they well designed for the spanner/lock ring to get hold of, not thin alloy flats!I thought they were 28nm
This is what I work from SteveThat sounds like a correct figure to me. However, I remember clearly that it was 40Nm on the Pike that I first removed the top cap. I remember it because I thought it was a stupidly high figure. 40Nm is the same as for a bottom bracket or the cassette lock ring, but they well designed for the spanner/lock ring to get hold of, not thin alloy flats!
I was bricking myself at my first attempt to remove the cap. It sure felt like it could have been 40Nm. I made no attempt to retighten it back to 40Nm, just to what felt to be "tight enough". But I slowly gained sag over the next few rides, so it wasn't tight enough! I didn't have a torque wrench big enough so I just increased the tightness a little bit. That stopped the leakage, but I have no idea how tight it was.
That's why I bought that thing with all the sizes on it, saves grinding down socketsWell I only have 27mm sockets and need 26mm. I reckon I’ll end just using an adjustable spanner and going FT.
That is a risk too far for me. I reckon the top cap has such small flats that all six flats are required to loosen them. Two flats is 2/3 too few.Well I only have 27mm sockets and need 26mm. I reckon I’ll end just using an adjustable spanner and going FT.
I’m a plumber. A 6” Bahco adjustable is like an extension of my arm! I’d get it off and back on no problem. Just not sure I’d torque it up enough without marking it.
I take it the threaded rod decided to loose itself in the lowersSo the bike is almost back together. Rear shock is serviced, although it didn’t look like it needed it. Those white washer are a pain in the arse! Frame is back together and motor/electrics back in. Rear wheel has had new wheel bearings and I’ve just topped up the tubeless sealant. It was done over a year ago but it’s also never been topped up and I read cleaning the old stuff out is messy!
Just the forks to go but I’ve hit a problem. I can’t get the air spring out. I know, I didn’t need to take it out, I was just being nosy, but now the air spring has pushed back and is stuck. Now I have the circlip out of the bottom, can I just put some air in the top again and pop it out?
It came out by hand in the end as I was scared to put too much pressure in there! Some air definitely helped though.I take it the threaded rod decided to loose itself in the lowers
Just pump it up very slowly and it should work it's way back out
Jus put a cloth over the end to catch it
Forks are back on the bike but the damper side wouldn’t torque up as the damper just spins? Will keep an eye on it to see if it leaks.
Only put in fresh oil in the end. Seals and crush washers all looked good so will keep the ones I bought for another day.
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