Love the imagination of all your work so far. This bike is turning out so very cool.
Or you could take a scrap pedal and see whether you can drill and thread the central shaft, then hold that washer/inner race on with a thin headed hexagonal set screw. The questions are how hard is that inner bar, is there enough metal on that inner bar to fit a set screw with a broad enough head, and can you find or make the right kind of set screw? Then with some decent loctite it should stay together.I have disassembled such a pedal in the past, and the results were not pretty. Fortunately in my case, I did not intend to preserve the outer shell, which you're likely to find is actually two cups and a cylinder. (I only wanted the spindles for "poor man's thread chasers.")
If you were to mill or grind away the shoulder indicated, the pedal should come apart and might leave enough material to permit a tack weld when re-assembling. That's the best advice I can offer.
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My Romets usually have a thick, specially made washer in between those two, especially since the top of the bearing holder is usually a bit dished.As you can see, the steer tube is pretty tall.
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The lock nut is too short, which is why it had a stack of spacers… which I hate. (It looks like it was cobbled together, not designed that way.)
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I tested the tall lock but I have for my other Eliminator.
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But I don’t have an extra, just short ones. So now I’m on the hunt. Got one?
If I can’t find one, option B is cutting the steer tube down. We’ll see.
That's pretty much what I suspected, and it's tough to be consistent holding it by hand. I'm trying to think of a simple jig that can help with that and is easy to make.@RustySprockets asked me to describe in more detail what I did the first time around with the tape measure band.
I wound it very tight, then held it with a tightened down zip tie, exposing one side to sand. I then held it against a belt sander. The problem was, I had no way to keep it perfectly level to the other side of the tape measure. So one one side gets lower then the other and you stretch out the tape, it shows warps on one side.
I was thinking of the same type of fixture, but start with a hole saw close in size to the rolled up tape, cut through something as thin or thinner than you want it to end up, and then screw a plate behind it to hold the tape in place. I’m probably not explaining it correctly but I can see it in my head…it looks just like that red thing but roundThat's pretty much what I suspected, and it's tough to be consistent holding it by hand. I'm trying to think of a simple jig that can help with that and is easy to make.
How about something like this, where the coiled tape can be wedged inside. The interior depth is the same dimension you want the tape width to be. Now, you can hold this assembly against the sander until the abrasive just kisses the sides, and no farther. Anything proud of the box sides should be ground away while that which is inside gets protected, no? Well, that's the theory, anyway. You could probably try this on the tape that is already ruined, just to test it out.
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Nah...I get what you're saying. A forstner bit might be an even better choice--create a flat-bottomed hole, the size of the tape coil, to the desired depth, then run the belt sander across the whole surface. Brilliant!I was thinking of the same type of fixture, but start with a hole saw close in size to the rolled up tape, cut through something as thin or thinner than you want it to end up, and then screw a plate behind it to hold the tape in place. I’m probably not explaining it correctly but I can see it in my head…it looks just like that red thing but round
That's pretty much what I suspected, and it's tough to be consistent holding it by hand. I'm trying to think of a simple jig that can help with that and is easy to make.
How about something like this, where the coiled tape can be wedged inside. The interior depth is the same dimension you want the tape width to be. Now, you can hold this assembly against the sander until the abrasive just kisses the sides, and no farther. Anything proud of the box sides should be ground away while that which is inside gets protected, no? Well, that's the theory, anyway. You could probably try this on the tape that is already ruined, just to test it out.
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Basically, the same suggestion that I described a couple of weeks ago (post #78). Just drill an appropriately sized hole in a piece of plate steel to hold the tape and serve as a level surface to gauge the uniform depth.I was thinking of the same type of fixture, but start with a hole saw close in size to the rolled up tape, cut through something as thin or thinner than you want it to end up, and then screw a plate behind it to hold the tape in place. I’m probably not explaining it correctly but I can see it in my head…it looks just like that red thing but round
My guess is that the downward pressure of the sander should keep it in place. But again, a magnetic chuck would be ideal. Just drill a hole in a piece of 3/8" steel, set it up on the chuck and you're set.I'm hoping that the pressure from the tape measure wanting to unwind will be enough to hold it inside, but I'm concerned it may spring out.
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