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Date: 07 Jun 2007 13:36:35
From: sschoe2
Subject: Bending ultegra callipers
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Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this and had a worst case scenario?
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 16:35:16
From: Ozark Bicycle
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 8, 11:21 am, gill...@cs.ubc.ca (Donald Gillies) wrote: > What's the point of bending calipers when in 500-1000 mi the pads will > wear flat again no matter what ?? "in 500-1000mi"?? Do you use your brakes *alot*? > > If you must have toe-in on your calipers, why not buy the koolstop > pads & holders with radial adjustment (about $20/set, sometimes on > sale for $10/set). Then you can toe-in and toe-out to your heart's > content, although, always on a temporary basis. > > - Don Gillies > San Diego, CA
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 10:41:44
From: Donald Gillies
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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Ozark Bicycle <bicycleatelier@ozarkbicycleservice.com > writes: >On Jun 8, 11:21 am, gill...@cs.ubc.ca (Donald Gillies) wrote: >> What's the point of bending calipers when in 500-1000 mi the pads will >> wear flat again no matter what ?? >"in 500-1000mi"?? Do you use your brakes *alot*? About once/mile while I am commuting. Do you imagine that you never use your brakes ?? All you have to do is wear through ~ 1 mm of pad until they are parallel again. - Don Gillies San Diego, CA
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 08:50:42
From: sschoe2
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 7, 3:36 pm, sschoe2 <loach_lo...@hotmail.com > wrote: > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > and had a worst case scenario? Well, thanks for all the replies. I don't think I'll try bending them. For now I'll leave them alone. They seem to stop the bike fine and I have them set at a reasonable distance and they don't rub the rim. Eventually I'll just buy some new holders and put the old one's on my commuter which is straight without the toe adjustability.
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 09:21:37
From: Donald Gillies
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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What's the point of bending calipers when in 500-1000 mi the pads will wear flat again no matter what ?? If you must have toe-in on your calipers, why not buy the koolstop pads & holders with radial adjustment (about $20/set, sometimes on sale for $10/set). Then you can toe-in and toe-out to your heart's content, although, always on a temporary basis. - Don Gillies San Diego, CA
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 05:45:21
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 7, 2:48 pm, landotter <landot...@gmail.com > wrote: > On Jun 7, 3:45 pm, landotter <landot...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 7, 3:36 pm, sschoe2 <loach_lo...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > > > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > > > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > > > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > > > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > > > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > > > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > > > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > > > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > > > and had a worst case scenario? > > > Get pads with adjustable toe-in. Even a set of Tektro cartridges + > > holders should work and cost around $12. Kool-Stop holders probably > > offer this feature as well. With the nut slightly loose, pushing the > > cartridge forward will toe in the pad. Alternately, shape the pad with > > some sandpaper, razor blade, or a small box plane. > > > I've bent dual pivots slightly--a set of $20 Tektros, but I'd not > > think of trying with something like an Ultegra caliper. > > Come to think of it, don't Ultegras have a conical washer on the cart > fixing bolt to adjust toe-in? 6600 do, 6500 and older do not.
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Date: 08 Jun 2007 05:44:39
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 7, 2:36 pm, sschoe2 <loach_lo...@hotmail.com > wrote: > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > and had a worst case scenario? mmmmm, what we used to do on any caliper than needed a toe in...just don't gorilla it back and forth, it'll be OK. Take the pad out, a openend wrench into the hole...bend a wee bit.
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Date: 07 Jun 2007 20:33:35
From: jim beam
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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sschoe2 wrote: > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > and had a worst case scenario? > it's not a good idea, but from the sound of it, it's already been done to yours. look out for damage. if i couldn't afford new calipers, i'd go with the adjustable pad holder solution.
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Date: 07 Jun 2007 18:41:13
From: John Forrest Tomlinson
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Thu, 07 Jun 2007 13:36:35 -0700, sschoe2 <loach_lover@hotmail.com > wrote: > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. >I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one >pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe >adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how >dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to >correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty >risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, >snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say >that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this >and had a worst case scenario? I haven't done it but I have gotten brake pad holders that have a concave or convex spacer that allows some toe-in adjustment. I think they were Kool Stops. -- JT **************************** Remove "remove" to reply Visit http://www.jt10000.com ****************************
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Date: 07 Jun 2007 13:48:08
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 7, 3:45 pm, landotter <landot...@gmail.com > wrote: > On Jun 7, 3:36 pm, sschoe2 <loach_lo...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > > and had a worst case scenario? > > Get pads with adjustable toe-in. Even a set of Tektro cartridges + > holders should work and cost around $12. Kool-Stop holders probably > offer this feature as well. With the nut slightly loose, pushing the > cartridge forward will toe in the pad. Alternately, shape the pad with > some sandpaper, razor blade, or a small box plane. > > I've bent dual pivots slightly--a set of $20 Tektros, but I'd not > think of trying with something like an Ultegra caliper. Come to think of it, don't Ultegras have a conical washer on the cart fixing bolt to adjust toe-in?
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Date: 07 Jun 2007 13:45:43
From: landotter
Subject: Re: Bending ultegra callipers
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On Jun 7, 3:36 pm, sschoe2 <loach_lo...@hotmail.com > wrote: > Hi all I have a question regarding bending of ultegra calipers. > I have a set and the pads are skewed. Particuarly the rear where one > pad has about a 1.5mm toe out. There is no provision for toe > adjustment, I see that newer models have them. My question is how > dangerous or structurally compromising would it be to attempt to > correct them with an adjustable wrench. Park tools says It is pretty > risky unless they are really cheap thin callipers, which they are not, > snapping the calliper is a distict possiblity. Other sources say > that this is fine and even routinely done. Has anyone ever tried this > and had a worst case scenario? Get pads with adjustable toe-in. Even a set of Tektro cartridges + holders should work and cost around $12. Kool-Stop holders probably offer this feature as well. With the nut slightly loose, pushing the cartridge forward will toe in the pad. Alternately, shape the pad with some sandpaper, razor blade, or a small box plane. I've bent dual pivots slightly--a set of $20 Tektros, but I'd not think of trying with something like an Ultegra caliper.
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