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Home > Do It Yourself - Tech Tips - Thread Repair
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| Thread
Repair - by
Wes White, Four Aces Cycle |
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This
writeup by Wes White of Four
Aces Cycle original appeared on ChopCult.
Wes goes over a simple way to repair damaged threads
on your hardware. Reading this can get you out of
a jam, especially with hard-to-find-locally Whitworth
hardware.
Lets
say you have a weird Whitworth thread on your bike
(or a weird American or metric thread for that matter).
The threads look good, but your nut will only start,
it won't finish. You are sure it is the correct nut
for the bolt or stud so there must be a burr on it
or something. Once I had this problem with the axle
nut on a sprung hub rear wheel. It also is a great
fix for a fork tube cap on a British bike. I am not
sure a die exists that can fix those these days.
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| You
tried to find a die to run over it and maybe you could
not get it to start without chowdering the other threads.
Your thread file only helped a little. What to do? |
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| Here
is a pretty good fixer for that problem, but the nut
has to start just a little. Take some valve grinding
compound and put a little on the male threads of the
offending fastener. Run the nut onto the fastener until
it stops, then back it off. |
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| Then
repeat a buch of times until you start getting the nut
to fit. You may have to clean and re-apply the compound
if it gets too dry, but you can do that no problem.
You can feel the nut going a little further and further
each time you turn it. |
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| At
the end you should get the burr off the thread and be
able to tighten the nut down without hurting any more
threads. |
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