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Old 02-16-2003, 02:38 AM   #16
Skunks
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*bump*

What do I do about bent derailler cage, if that's what it is?
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Old 02-16-2003, 06:59 AM   #17
Griff
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You won't find the cage to be terribly flexible. I've never had to bend one but if I was going to I'd hold the top pulley securely maybe in a vise and slip a pipe over the other end. The pipe would give you a lot of mechanical advantage so be gentle. I hope you're still having fun with it bro.
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Old 02-19-2003, 02:43 PM   #18
Skunks
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I'm feeling pretty good about the bent-ness. I think I can get it to a reasonably working angle with a little work.

I picked up a new cable, 'cause the old one was frayed and badly de-twisted twards the end. (I needed pliars to pull it through the housing.)

I'm not having much luck threading the new one into the shifter, though. I have a gripshift, and the angle it has to take from the little clamp hole to get out through the bit where the adjuster is is pretty sharp. Any tips? There're no further parts I can take it apart, and it seems to be threading through a different path most of the time--I can put a good 6" of cable into it without seeing it at the other hole, which is only 2" or so away from it.
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Old 02-19-2003, 04:15 PM   #19
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Er, actually. I made some progress, in that I figured out how I can pull it apart and actually maybe thread it. I'm still not clear on the path the cable should take, though.
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Old 02-19-2003, 04:28 PM   #20
Griff
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I've never had grip shift on any of my bikes so I'm not too familiar with the cable run. Some setups allow you to make the cable run first then you connect the cable end. That way you are not crimping the cable. I don't know what your setup looks like though.
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Old 02-19-2003, 09:55 PM   #21
Skunks
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Hmm.. I don't think that would have been possible. The Parent seems to have threaded it while I was sleeping, however.
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Old 02-19-2003, 11:52 PM   #22
Skunks
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I'm feeling pretty good about the rear alignment. It doesn't squeak while actually in any of the gears, shifts smoothly, and only squeals a little when it's slow going from gear to gear.

Redid breaks, too. I think they'll be pretty good, as well. The real test will be when I go down my street tomorrow morning. There's a fairly sharp turn at the bottom, if I intend to avoid hitting houses/cars.
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Old 02-20-2003, 03:01 PM   #23
Griff
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Ride fast, take chances. [lawyertalk]not to be taken as authorization to be stupid, griffcorp takes no responsibility for anything[/lawyertalk]
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Old 02-20-2003, 03:19 PM   #24
Skunks
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It's been raining pretty hard all day, and I'm lazy. I figure I'll try it before class on Monday, but I'd rather do it when I can actually see if the breaks are okay, and not just guess based on surrounding water.

But, yeah. The thing I like about this town are all the hills. Particularly, going down them.
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Old 02-20-2003, 04:41 PM   #25
Skunks
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I watched the last half or so of Mad Max on FX, which filled me with a desire to do stupid things at high speeds. And it wasn't raining that much, and I don't really need to stop at the bottom of my hill, so long as nobody's driving past...

Shifters are 100% perfecto++ gold. Brakes _work_, but squeak. Feh. Maybe I should oil them.

I think I'll realign them (again), but keep the toe-in spacer rubberbands on a little longer. I'm pretty sure the pads are flat against the rim, which could maybe explain the intermittent squeaking...?
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Old 02-21-2003, 12:30 PM   #26
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Bikes suck

Bikes squeak. They make noise. They squeal. You try to fix one thing, and another breaks. You keep trying to fiddle the same piece, and metal fatigue sets in and it snaps. Eventually you give up and get used to the idiosyncracies.

Like the bike I rode at college. I got tired of constantly replacing bent wheels so I just opened up the brakes so the bent wheels went through and stopped it by dragging my feet.

There's a reason bicycles aren't a cost-effective alternative to cars, and its not weather, traffic, sweat, or any of those other disadvantages -- it's that including maintenence costs, cost of ownership is about the same for a bike and a car.

Thus endeth my rant.
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Old 02-21-2003, 12:48 PM   #27
Skunks
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I find that hard to believe. Thousands have gone into the ancient Volvo my sister drives (it was ancient when we got it; my mother's not so skilled at the 'buying cars' gig), vs the...$11 I've put into fixing my bike (rear brakepads + shifter cable). Well, another $15-20 for headlight/rear blinker, and I could _use_ a rear tire, but that's a fair sight less than the equivalent parts for a car.

Also, you don't have to pay for gas. Or as much oil.

As far as the squeaking goes, I'm a perfectionist. And it's loud, damnit.
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Old 02-21-2003, 02:52 PM   #28
Griff
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Yep, toe those brake pads in Skunk.

You usually get what you pay for R.
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Old 02-22-2003, 02:03 PM   #29
Skunks
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Quote:
Originally posted by Griff
Yep, toe those brake pads in Skunk.
Consider them toed. The literature on the subject that I found initially suggested using a rubber band to get the alignment right; it probably worked, but I removed the rubber band before squeezing the lever, so they ended up flat and, thus, squeaky as hell.

This time, I had them both rubberbanded and aligned before seating them, and it worked perfectly. Despite my best efforts, I could not get them to squeak _once_, regardless of how many hills I went down.

Of course, the real test will be going down <a href="http://skunko.damnsw.net/photos/16th.jpg">16th Street</a> after class on Monday.
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Old 02-24-2003, 06:33 AM   #30
Griff
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I think you need to go to Cornell or Ithaca College. This topo should explain why.
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