I have 3 or 4 pairs of older and good quality re-buildable pedals picked off ebay. Half of the time, at least one of the shafts is bent and this is No Bueno. I take the chance anyway if the pics show them to be good shape, but the bent shafts ruined my investment. I ran into a thread on
The Cabe that addresses different ways to do it, some of which are mentioned above. I found this technique to work the best so far. I have tried it all, including the wham-o-bam-o technique with a hammer, vices, bars, etc. but there is a more precise and intelligent way to do it, as well as very effective.
1.) Get yourself an old bent 1-piece 1/2" crank you must have laying around.
2.) Clamp the pedal onto your bench like below.
Leave it clamped to the bench.
3.) Spin the bent pedal shaft and find the
exact spot the threaded end runs high, then mark it with a black felt tipped pen.
4.) Thread your old crankshaft lever almost all the way onto the pedal still clamped to the bench(have a pedal wrench handy) Find the high spot. Position the crank arm exactly perpendicular to your mark on the shaft.
5.) Gently push or pull (don't be shy) on your long crank lever the opposite direction of the mark, depending on the direction of the bend.
6.) Unscrew the crankshaft lever from the pedal shaft and spin it to check if it worked. Repeat.
Make sure the play is taken out of the bearing cones before doing this! You may damage the races and/or cones if the play is not taken out first. Smacking the pedal hard with a mallet
WILL damage the bearings, races or cones as well. This is why the slow-go pry method works so well. Incredibly effective way to do it...SKPC