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Basically he said that no mechanic can hand tap a crank arm perfectly perpendicular.
Baloney. Your mechanic should be able to tap threads perfectly square to the bore with his eyes closed. When used properly, taps are self-correcting. You should find a better mechanic.
Oh, and...
I had a guy who works for SRAM look at my bike and he said helicoiling was the problem.
Was his solution to purchase a shiny, new SRAM crankset by any chance?
I have never tapped any threads in my life, but even I can reason that if the tap wasn't square, the pedal would be slanted/not horizontal, not farther out or in.
One question though, how is it that taps are self correcting? Not trying to be sarcastic, just wondering.
Thanks!
Michael Perz said:Basically he said that no mechanic can hand tap a crank arm perfectly perpendicular.
Baloney. Your mechanic should be able to tap threads perfectly square to the bore with his eyes closed. When used properly, taps are self-correcting. You should find a better mechanic.
Oh, and...
I had a guy who works for SRAM look at my bike and he said helicoiling was the problem.
Was his solution to purchase a shiny, new SRAM crankset by any chance?
Aaarrrggghhh!!! The more I think about it, the more I become convinced that the guy forgot to (or didn't know he had to) break off the tab. Remove your pedal and look inside the bore. If you see a piece of the Helicoil at the bottom jutting toward the center, that would be your culprit. It is crimped at the base and should easily snap off by resting the tip of a flat blade screwdriver against it and giving it a light whack.
I'm putting my money on the insert not being installed far enough.
We need to get the crank arms for science.
Michael Perz said:Aaarrrggghhh!!! The more I think about it, the more I become convinced that the guy forgot to (or didn't know he had to) break off the tab. Remove your pedal and look inside the bore. If you see a piece of the Helicoil at the bottom jutting toward the center, that would be your culprit. It is crimped at the base and should easily snap off by resting the tip of a flat blade screwdriver against it and giving it a light whack.
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