battered
Guru
I'm having a frame blasted and powder coated, so I'm stripping down. All OK, done it before. The BB was difficult. So with the special socket held in with a crank bolt to it wouldn't pop out, I got the socket clamped in the big vice. This is not my first rodeo. Been here before, and all that. First up, the lockring disintegrated. It's some plastic affair stamped "Made in Slovakia". OK, try the other side. Same again, the bit that normally unscrews has disintegrated, more black plastic. Normally they are steel, bizarre. Obviously it was some junk that was intended to be used on a "leisure bike" that would be thrown away after a few years of riding to the shops, so nobody was bothered about dismantling it in years to come.
I know which way each side is handed so I was going the right way.
So these are my choices, in ascending order of cost and pain:
1. The bearing still works, the cranks will go back on. Clean it all up, tape over the moving bits, get it blasted and coated and simply reassemble it. It will work. If the BB ever wears out, worry about it then. This might take a while, I use the bike a fair bit but it's local stuff.
2. Take it to a shop.
3. Get the engineering tools out and start drilling and chiselling, replace the BB.
Have I missed anything? How much pain and angst is involved in removing a square taper BB when the bit where the spline socket engages is no longer present? At the moment Option 1 is looking attractive. If the bearing were done, I'd have started on Option 3 already, but I don't want to risk trashing a frame that I just enjoy using.
I know which way each side is handed so I was going the right way.
So these are my choices, in ascending order of cost and pain:
1. The bearing still works, the cranks will go back on. Clean it all up, tape over the moving bits, get it blasted and coated and simply reassemble it. It will work. If the BB ever wears out, worry about it then. This might take a while, I use the bike a fair bit but it's local stuff.
2. Take it to a shop.
3. Get the engineering tools out and start drilling and chiselling, replace the BB.
Have I missed anything? How much pain and angst is involved in removing a square taper BB when the bit where the spline socket engages is no longer present? At the moment Option 1 is looking attractive. If the bearing were done, I'd have started on Option 3 already, but I don't want to risk trashing a frame that I just enjoy using.