- Joined
- Sep 17, 2013
- Messages
- 4,290
- Reaction score
- 9,465
Find a 2 and a quarter inch carriage bolt that fits your slide out threads. Two inch might also work. Mine was 1/4 by 20 TPI. Screw it in all the way to make sure it's good. If you use a used carriage bolt and it is slightly bent it won't thread into the slide outs on the bike.
Put the bolt head in a vice so that you can follow the square on the carriage bolt head with your hack saw. Saw off one side, the opposite side and then the last two sides. File smooth.
Put the part you made square in a drill press. Turn on the drill press to make sure it doesn't wobble. They never wobble in my press but I always check. Put on nuts and tighten them finger tight until just enough for the thin end you want to make protrudes past the nuts. You can use washers between the nuts if you need to fine tune it.
Turn on the drill press and use a file to go back and forth, using the bottom nut as a guide to hold the file against. This prevents the file from jumping around and lousing up your threads. The nuts get tighter if you hold the file on the right side. You will need to use a wrench and vice to remove the nuts as they become locked a little tight. Removing the nuts straightens out the threads where you filed them off.
Finished product.
3/16 open end wrench fits. It's a little loose but works.
Finished, quick and inexpensive.
Put the bolt head in a vice so that you can follow the square on the carriage bolt head with your hack saw. Saw off one side, the opposite side and then the last two sides. File smooth.
Put the part you made square in a drill press. Turn on the drill press to make sure it doesn't wobble. They never wobble in my press but I always check. Put on nuts and tighten them finger tight until just enough for the thin end you want to make protrudes past the nuts. You can use washers between the nuts if you need to fine tune it.
Turn on the drill press and use a file to go back and forth, using the bottom nut as a guide to hold the file against. This prevents the file from jumping around and lousing up your threads. The nuts get tighter if you hold the file on the right side. You will need to use a wrench and vice to remove the nuts as they become locked a little tight. Removing the nuts straightens out the threads where you filed them off.
Finished product.
3/16 open end wrench fits. It's a little loose but works.
Finished, quick and inexpensive.
Last edited: