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#31
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Jeff Liebermann wrote:
:I want to know why it works at least twice as good as the others on :the list. My experience is that it doesn't. That's just one of the reasons no one puts it in a can and sells it commercially. I read the original article, a long time ago, and as I recall the testing method was about as scientfic as drawing lots. Commercial penetrating oils are far superior. -- sig 14 |
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#32
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![]() wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:11:45 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:02:27 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 1:14:21 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: "Theodore Heise" wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 11:08:20 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 1/7/2017 8:33 PM, Theodore Heise wrote: Hi all, I have an early 1990s Rodriguez tandem with a rear bottom bracket in serious need of overhaul. The cranks flop severely. I've pulled the cranks and the lock ring on the left side, but the adjustable cup won't come out. It turns about a quarter turn, but then gets too stiff to turn further. It has no flats for a wrench instead having holes for turning with a pin spanner--so I'm unable to put a lot of force on it. I've soaked it with WD40, but still no joy. Any advice for me? Delco 10.4020 penetrant is the best, PC Blaster is good. Warming with a heat gun can help. If no other path, flats can be cut on the cup with a disc grinder to allow a wrench instead of those brittle expensive pins. p.s. Try the right side cup too. If that moves, you can easily deal with the left one after disasssembly. Thanks for the added tips. Off to get penetrating oil and new pins now. Grinding on it is beyond my abilities, so if I'm not able to get things off with the addition of penetrating oil and time, I'll be hauling it off to my LBS. At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way. Once I had to shift a seized in pedal shaft, after snapping a couple of spanners - I welded on the biggest nut I had a spanner for. Quenching the hot steel with penetrating oil did slightly more than just spraying it on cold. The same approach would probably work with a BB cup. It is extremely bad practice to hammer a pin spanner. Who said anything about hammering a pin spanner?!!! If you can't be bothered reading a post - don't bother answering it either. I might suggest "At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way." sounds an awful lot like hammering on a pin spanner. Are you supposing we're discussing removing pedals from a crank? Sorry - I forgot you were that thick. I'll draw pictures next time. So you meant something other than what you wrote. Well that makes sense. Its so simple it just never occurred to me that anyone could **** it up - but somehow you always seem to manage. |
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On Monday, January 9, 2017 at 10:47:48 AM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:11:45 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:02:27 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 1:14:21 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: "Theodore Heise" wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 11:08:20 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 1/7/2017 8:33 PM, Theodore Heise wrote: Hi all, I have an early 1990s Rodriguez tandem with a rear bottom bracket in serious need of overhaul. The cranks flop severely. I've pulled the cranks and the lock ring on the left side, but the adjustable cup won't come out. It turns about a quarter turn, but then gets too stiff to turn further. It has no flats for a wrench instead having holes for turning with a pin spanner--so I'm unable to put a lot of force on it. I've soaked it with WD40, but still no joy. Any advice for me? Delco 10.4020 penetrant is the best, PC Blaster is good. Warming with a heat gun can help. If no other path, flats can be cut on the cup with a disc grinder to allow a wrench instead of those brittle expensive pins. p.s. Try the right side cup too. If that moves, you can easily deal with the left one after disasssembly. Thanks for the added tips. Off to get penetrating oil and new pins now. Grinding on it is beyond my abilities, so if I'm not able to get things off with the addition of penetrating oil and time, I'll be hauling it off to my LBS. At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way. Once I had to shift a seized in pedal shaft, after snapping a couple of spanners - I welded on the biggest nut I had a spanner for. Quenching the hot steel with penetrating oil did slightly more than just spraying it on cold. The same approach would probably work with a BB cup. It is extremely bad practice to hammer a pin spanner. Who said anything about hammering a pin spanner?!!! If you can't be bothered reading a post - don't bother answering it either. I might suggest "At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way." sounds an awful lot like hammering on a pin spanner. Are you supposing we're discussing removing pedals from a crank? Sorry - I forgot you were that thick. I'll draw pictures next time. So you meant something other than what you wrote. Well that makes sense. Its so simple it just never occurred to me that anyone could **** it up - but somehow you always seem to manage. Then perhaps you can explain how you didn't say to hit it with a hammer after writing for everyone to see you suggest hitting the pin spanner with a hammer? Did you mean that unless you vocalize it, that it doesn't count? |
#34
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![]() wrote in message ... On Monday, January 9, 2017 at 10:47:48 AM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:11:45 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:02:27 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 1:14:21 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: "Theodore Heise" wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 11:08:20 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 1/7/2017 8:33 PM, Theodore Heise wrote: Hi all, I have an early 1990s Rodriguez tandem with a rear bottom bracket in serious need of overhaul. The cranks flop severely. I've pulled the cranks and the lock ring on the left side, but the adjustable cup won't come out. It turns about a quarter turn, but then gets too stiff to turn further. It has no flats for a wrench instead having holes for turning with a pin spanner--so I'm unable to put a lot of force on it. I've soaked it with WD40, but still no joy. Any advice for me? Delco 10.4020 penetrant is the best, PC Blaster is good. Warming with a heat gun can help. If no other path, flats can be cut on the cup with a disc grinder to allow a wrench instead of those brittle expensive pins. p.s. Try the right side cup too. If that moves, you can easily deal with the left one after disasssembly. Thanks for the added tips. Off to get penetrating oil and new pins now. Grinding on it is beyond my abilities, so if I'm not able to get things off with the addition of penetrating oil and time, I'll be hauling it off to my LBS. At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way. Once I had to shift a seized in pedal shaft, after snapping a couple of spanners - I welded on the biggest nut I had a spanner for. Quenching the hot steel with penetrating oil did slightly more than just spraying it on cold. The same approach would probably work with a BB cup. It is extremely bad practice to hammer a pin spanner. Who said anything about hammering a pin spanner?!!! If you can't be bothered reading a post - don't bother answering it either. I might suggest "At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way." sounds an awful lot like hammering on a pin spanner. Are you supposing we're discussing removing pedals from a crank? Sorry - I forgot you were that thick. I'll draw pictures next time. So you meant something other than what you wrote. Well that makes sense. Its so simple it just never occurred to me that anyone could **** it up - but somehow you always seem to manage. Then perhaps you can explain how you didn't say to hit it with a hammer after writing for everyone to see you suggest hitting the pin spanner with a hammer? Did you mean that unless you vocalize it, that it doesn't count? I didn't say hit the pin spanner with a hammer - you did. |
#35
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#36
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On Sun, 8 Jan 2017 14:59:56 -0800 (PST),
DATAKOLL MARINE RESEARCH wrote: On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 12:59:14 PM UTC-5, Theodore Heise wrote: On Sun, 8 Jan 2017 08:56:40 -0800 (PST), wrote: Ted, I don't quite follow. You are talking about using a pin spanner and then say that you need to get the adjustable cup off first. Isn't that what we were talking about? The lock nut on the adjustable side and the fixed cup do not use pin spanners as far as I know. Sorry. I have the lock ring off on the left, non-drive side, and am left with an adjustable cup that will only turn partway. The fixed cup is still in place too (on the other side), so the spindle is in place and blocks putting in the bolt and nut that Sheldon describes. For what it's worth, the fixed cup also seems to be pretty stuck. It's an aluminum frame, so presumably the shell is aluminum too and there may be some corrosion in the interface between the two different metals of the shell and the cups? if you search on aluminum/steel frame/shells/cups install or remove there should be an avalanche of umbrage. if your system shows white material in joints then poss an ionic binding occurred between steel and aluminum. Andy Muzi is an expert on this. Blaster does not dissolve the white material. Uneeda torch and another pin tool. expanding aluminum with torch or heat gun will remove the cup. Okay, I will try heating too. -- Ted Heise Bloomington, IN, USA |
#37
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On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 17:01:01 -0800,
Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 16:31:15 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: (...) Yet another untested idea... Use an induction heater on the steel cup. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyZEaPQinO0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJElT9xK3bk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uimEZKrVNO0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3u1IBgefNDs [1] http://www.theinductor.com You'll need various size coils for different bolts, cups, seat posts, etc. There are induction heater kits on eBay: http://www.ebay.com/itm/1000W-ZVS-Low-Voltage-Induction-Heating-Board-Module-Flyback-Heater-Brass-Coil-/282317713643 The steel cup gets hot and not so much the rest of the bicycle, including the aluminum bottom bracket which sucks away much of the heat. However, you can get the steel hot enough to melt the aluminum, so please use an IR thermometer to keep the temperatures down. Aluminum melts at 660C. Yikes! -- Ted Heise Bloomington, IN, USA |
#38
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On Monday, January 9, 2017 at 1:46:39 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote:
wrote in message ... On Monday, January 9, 2017 at 10:47:48 AM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:11:45 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 2:02:27 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: wrote in message ... On Sunday, January 8, 2017 at 1:14:21 PM UTC-8, Benderthe.evilrobot wrote: "Theodore Heise" wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 11:08:20 -0600, AMuzi wrote: On 1/7/2017 8:33 PM, Theodore Heise wrote: Hi all, I have an early 1990s Rodriguez tandem with a rear bottom bracket in serious need of overhaul. The cranks flop severely. I've pulled the cranks and the lock ring on the left side, but the adjustable cup won't come out. It turns about a quarter turn, but then gets too stiff to turn further. It has no flats for a wrench instead having holes for turning with a pin spanner--so I'm unable to put a lot of force on it. I've soaked it with WD40, but still no joy. Any advice for me? Delco 10.4020 penetrant is the best, PC Blaster is good. Warming with a heat gun can help. If no other path, flats can be cut on the cup with a disc grinder to allow a wrench instead of those brittle expensive pins. p.s. Try the right side cup too. If that moves, you can easily deal with the left one after disasssembly. Thanks for the added tips. Off to get penetrating oil and new pins now. Grinding on it is beyond my abilities, so if I'm not able to get things off with the addition of penetrating oil and time, I'll be hauling it off to my LBS. At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way. Once I had to shift a seized in pedal shaft, after snapping a couple of spanners - I welded on the biggest nut I had a spanner for. Quenching the hot steel with penetrating oil did slightly more than just spraying it on cold. The same approach would probably work with a BB cup. It is extremely bad practice to hammer a pin spanner. Who said anything about hammering a pin spanner?!!! If you can't be bothered reading a post - don't bother answering it either. I might suggest "At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way." sounds an awful lot like hammering on a pin spanner. Are you supposing we're discussing removing pedals from a crank? Sorry - I forgot you were that thick. I'll draw pictures next time. So you meant something other than what you wrote. Well that makes sense. Its so simple it just never occurred to me that anyone could **** it up - but somehow you always seem to manage. Then perhaps you can explain how you didn't say to hit it with a hammer after writing for everyone to see you suggest hitting the pin spanner with a hammer? Did you mean that unless you vocalize it, that it doesn't count? I didn't say hit the pin spanner with a hammer - you did. Then exactly how is it that you can't explain your posting: "At that stage; I'd turn it as far as the tight spot and give it a few strikes with a hammer. sometimes you can ease it out bit at a time that way." Are you suggesting he was turning it out with his fingers? |
#39
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![]() "Theodore Heise" wrote in message ... On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 17:01:01 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 08 Jan 2017 16:31:15 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: (...) Yet another untested idea... Use an induction heater on the steel cup. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyZEaPQinO0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJElT9xK3bk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uimEZKrVNO0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3u1IBgefNDs [1] http://www.theinductor.com You'll need various size coils for different bolts, cups, seat posts, etc. There are induction heater kits on eBay: http://www.ebay.com/itm/1000W-ZVS-Low-Voltage-Induction-Heating-Board-Module-Flyback-Heater-Brass-Coil-/282317713643 The steel cup gets hot and not so much the rest of the bicycle, including the aluminum bottom bracket which sucks away much of the heat. However, you can get the steel hot enough to melt the aluminum, so please use an IR thermometer to keep the temperatures down. Aluminum melts at 660C. Yikes! An electric heat gun is safer than a blowtorch - but I think you still have to be a bit careful. The heavy duty paint strippers aren't too bad, but some heat guns are designed for lighting solid fuel cooking ranges. |
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