So I want to swap bars, the new bars are just a tad small. When fully tightened on, they move up and down pretty freely(thankfully not left and right). Anyway, I tried using a beer can as a shim but it isn't quite working unless I'm not using enough, I used the whole damn can. Any other home remedies vs. buying a shim worth trying out or ones that are known to work?

Views: 1197

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

as much as it sucks to pay for a little piece of metal, I'd always be worried about them shifting at an unopportune moment if I hacked up something. You probably have 25.4mm (1 inch) bars in a 26 mm clamp? If you search on amazon I noticed some of those shims for less than $10. Harris Cyclery has some nitto brand ones for $13 or so, I think.

Before you buy anything I'd stop by some bike shops, maybe they'd hook you up if they have some parts lying around. You might stop by and talk to the working bikes folks, because they seem to accumulate lots of random parts in the process of stripping and restoring various bikes.
Piece of an inner tube? Might work.
I've made shims from a piece of hose clamp, found in the plumbing department at Home Depot/Menards/Ace etc. Definitely thicker than a beer can shim, and it's round already.

ive had bad experiences with shims for handlebars. Bar shifted while track standing waiting for a light. I fell on my face in front of a bunch of traffic. My pride and ego were hurt pretty bad. I shelled out the money for new handle bars that fit the next day!
good luck
Get a shim, its bike specific. Better safe than sorry. What kinda bars are you using? threadless or threaded stem(does it have a face plate?)?
Just set up a set of Wald handlebars (25.4mm) into a 26mm stem using the Nitto shims. $12 for steel shims that are super solid - beer can aluminum doesn't work most of the time. How much time struggling with the beer cans is $12 worth?
You could be a Hodgepodgen bodger. Just drill a hole through the entire mess and "Screw it".
Is the stem meant for 26.0 mm O.D. bars or 31.8 mm O.D. bars? Most modern road and touring bikes like mine use a 31.8 OD bar. If you're using a 25.4 mm bar, you may have a tough time finding a shim that can make up the difference.
I have an aluminium seatpost that was stuck in the frame of a bike, found in the trash, It is no longer a seatpost, because I had to cut it from the inside to release it from the frame. It is great shim material. I've already used some of it for that. I'll bring some to midnight marauders saturday night. Maybe I will see you there. Alan
I measures my post wall, It is 2.2mm thick.
Next thickness up from beer can is a little bit of aluminum flashing. Remember to never overlap the ends or your shim, as that reduces the effective clamp area to the little bit of overlap (where it's thicker).

RSS

© 2008-2016   The Chainlink Community, L.L.C.   Powered by

Disclaimer  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service